Venezuela: El Libertario #67, September-October 2012 ? Editorial (ca)


As the electoral ritual granting legitimacy to the occupant of the presidential seat
approaches, we want to affirm to the country?s public opinion what the anarchists?
position has been regarding the electoral carnival as instrument for control and
submission of the collective. What follows is the El Libertario #67 Editorial, where we
clearly state our position. ---- A vote for Chavez is a vote for Diosdado Cabello [1]; a
vote for Capriles is a vote for Diosdado Cabello. The truth of this sentence is verified
when we compare the main parts of the programs offered by both candidates: the direction
the energy industry will take. Energy is the undisputed element in the country?s
developmental model since 1914 when the first oil well was dug in Venezuela. The false
polarization stands naked when one notes the consensus in doubling the production of
fossil fuels with the participation of transnational companies.

For anarchists, however, the fundamental discussion is not about who controls the
industry, whether the national or the foreign bourgeoisie, but whether this reiteration of
the extraction model goes against the promotion of an alternative developmental model that
would not feed the internal combustion engines of global capitalism and would not damage
the environment or the indigenous and peasant communities. Whoever wins on October 7 will
represent a victory for financial speculative capitalism, in tune with a world market that
has faithful servants in people such as Diosdado Cabello.

A Hugo Chavez victory will only be possible thanks to a convenient opposition candidate, a
representative of Venezuelan oligarchy who took part in the coup d??tat of April 2002. By
giving Chavez a perfect scenario for revitalizing polarization, Capriles proposes a
discourse focused on the middle class and deaf tone to the popular sectors. Despite his
pretense of a wide and inclusive program, it was never a secret the campaign decisions
were taken by the top of the most conservative and reactionary party in the country:
Primero Justicia [Justice First]. Despite the obvious unhappiness with the results of his
tenure and the sustained increase in social conflicts, kept in check by the caudillo?s
charismatic expectations, in this scenario Capriles did not convince the unhappy Chavistas
or wide sectors of the population. With this result the future would be dominated by a
strengthening of the authoritarian communal state, increased exclusion from public policy
due to party reasons and the domino effect of an October victory resulting in Bolivarian
hegemony over governorships and mayoralties in the following regional elections in December.

On the other hand, a Capriles victory would be possible only because of abstention on the
part of unhappy Chavistas and a punishment vote by large segments of the voters and not
because of the winner?s virtues. Tired of the humiliation, demagogy and the general
impoverishment of the standard of living, a vote against Chavez by those who had
previously put their faith in him would yield the numbers needed for a second electoral
defeat of the Commander-President. This would open up a scenario of conflict and the
ratification of the governorships held by the so-called ?opposition? in the next round of
elections. This result would strengthen the formation of a new bipartisanism among the
Chavista and non-Chavista blocks, who would agree on alternating tenure and so tacitly
becoming a new ?Pact of PuntoFijo?. [2]

Whatever the result there are two more important consequences. The first is the
justification of representative comprador democracy that appeared falling in the popular
explosion of the ?Caracazo? [3], a form of government that could only be fixed by a
charismatic and populist figure such as Hugo Chavez. The second, of special interest to
anti-authoritarians, is that these elections take place in the midst of the worst roll
back in history of the autonomy of the Venezuelan social movements. As shown by the
numbers from the Observatorio Venezolano de Conflictividad Social [Venezuela?s Observatory
of Social Conflict] [4], turning popular initiative into electoral matter yielded what
seemed most difficult: to stop the increase in the number of demonstrations staged in the
country, which had been on the rise since 2004. The electoral blackmail institutionalized
towards electoral channels the energy of the masses in motion, dissipating the autonomy
enjoyed by some grass roots conflicts against the established powers.

The attitude consistent with Anarchism can be no other than the denunciation of the
electoral farce and blackmail, refusal to participate in the comedy and channeling all our
energies towards recuperating and fixing the autonomy of popular social movements. The
facts of the last 13 and half years confirm it: Governmental discourse changes nothing.
Structural and revolutionary changes come from each and every one of the oppressed and
their collective initiatives.

Notes:
[1] Diosdado Cabello is the main representative of the ?Bolibourgeoisie? which arouse
during the Chavez government.

[2] See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punto_Fijo_Pact

[3] ?Caracazo? is the name given the popular revolt of February 27, 1989.

[4] See http://www.observatoriodeconflictos.org.ve

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