Hugo Chávez

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Jump to: navigation, search
Important: This article is becoming very long. Please consider transferring content to subtopic articles where appropriate.

See Wikipedia:Long article layout and Wikipedia:Longpages for more information. To propose reduction methods, please post on this talk page.


Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías

President of Venezuela
Order 53rd President
Affiliations MVR
Terms in office * February 2, 1999April 12, 2002
* April 13, 2002Present
Vice President José Vicente Rangel
 

Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías (born July 28, 1954) is the 53rd and current President of Venezuela. A member of the governing MVR, Chávez is best known for his democratic socialist governance, his promotion of Latin American integration together with anti-imperialism, and his radical critique of both neoliberal globalization and U.S. foreign policy.

Born into a poor family and later earning a record of distinguished military service, Chávez's formal political career began when he founded the Movement for the Fifth Republic (MVR) in 1994, immediately after his pardoning for an abortive 1992 coup d'état. Chávez was elected in 1998[1] to the presidency on promises of aiding Venezuela's poor majority. Chávez again led the MVR to victory in the controversial[2] 2000 presidential election. Chávez and his backers later won landslide victories[3][4] in the 2004 recall referendum and the 2005 municipal elections. Chávez's political alliance has won the vast majority of elected municipal, state, and national posts, while filling the supreme court and the CNE with pro-Chávez appointees. Chávez has used these presidential mandates to advance the radical socialist policies now mandated by the new 1999 Bolivarian Constitution and at the core of both Bolivarianism, the Bolivarian Missions, and the "Bolivarian Revolution". Domestically, Chávez has dramatically increased the role of the welfare state in Venezuela by supporting numerous massive Bolivarian Missions that combat malnutrition, illiteracy, disease, and other social ills. In his foreign policy, Chávez has acted against both capitalism and the Washington Consensus while promoting alternative models for economic development and multilateral cooperation among the world's poor nations, especially those in Latin America.

The Chávez administration is vigorously opposed by Venezuela's small middle and upper classes, including Fedecámaras, the CTV, and private news media. This opposition has lodged severe criticisms against the Chávez government, including reports of electoral fraud, human rights violations, political repression, and censorship. Their consistent opposition to Chávez's policies resulted in a 2002 coup d'état, general strike/lockout, and the recall referendum. All of these ultimately failed to remove Chávez from the presidency. Nevertheless, whether he is viewed as a socialist liberator or an authoritarian demagogue, Chávez remains one of the most complex, controversial, and high-profile figures in the history of Latin America and the early 21st century.


Contents

Early life (1954 — 1975)

For more details on this topic, see Early life of Hugo Chávez.

Chávez was born in Sabaneta, Barinas on July 28, 1954. The second son of schoolteachers Hugo de los Reyes Chávez and Elena Frías de Chávez, Chávez numbers among the mestizos and mulattos that live in central Venezuela's llanos. Hugo Chávez himself was raised together with six brothers and sisters in a thatched palm hut. At an early age, Chávez was sent to live with his paternal grandmother Rosa Inés Chávez in nearby Sabaneta. There, Chávez progressed in his education while pursuing hobbies such as painting and singing. After school, Chávez peddled his grandmother's caramelized candies.[5]

Chávez extols the anti-imperialist aspects of Bolivarianism, which were first kindled during his college years, in an address to hundreds of thousands of chavistas along Caracas's  Avenida Bolívar on May 16, 2004.
Enlarge
Chávez extols the anti-imperialist aspects of Bolivarianism, which were first kindled during his college years, in an address to hundreds of thousands of chavistas along Caracas's Avenida Bolívar on May 16, 2004.

At age 17, Chávez enrolled at the Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences. He graduated — 8th in his class — on 5 July 1975 as a second lieutenant with master's degrees in military science and engineering. Chávez did further graduate work in political science at Caracas's Simón Bolívar University, but left there without a degree. Over the course of his college years, Chávez and fellow students developed a strongly left-nationalist doctrine that they termed Bolivarianism. Chávez also participated heavily in sports and cultural activities during these years. Notably, Chávez played both baseball and softball with the Criollitos de Venezuela and with them went on to the Venezuelan National Championships in 1969. Chavez also wrote poems, stories, and theatrical pieces for submission and publication.[6]

Military career (1975 — 1992)

For more details on this topic, see Military career of Hugo Chávez.

Upon completing his studies, Chávez entered active-duty military service. Chávez's career as a professional soldier would last 17 years, during which time he held a variety of post, command, and staff positions. Chávez would eventually rise to the rank of lieutenant colonel. Notably, he held a series of positions at the Military Academy of Venezuela, where Chávez first began to be recognized for his fiery lectures with a uniquely radical critique of Venezuelan government and society. Afterward, he rose to fill a number of high level and sensitive positions in Caracas. Throughout his career, Chávez has been heavily decorated.[7]

In conjunction with his professional duties, Chávez kept up his passions for baseball, softball, and literature. He went to the National Baseball Championships, held in Barinas, in 1976. Chávez also played in military baseball tournaments, such as those held in Cumaná in 1977, the Dominican Republic in 1980, and the University League Chamionships held in Caracas through 1984 and 1985. Chávez was also in charge of all patron saint's feasts held in Elorza, Apure between 1987 and 1988. In his literary endevours, Chávez authored numerous collections of stories and poems, including Vuelvan Caras (Turn Faces), Mauricio, and lastly El Genio y el Centauro (The Genius and the Centaur). El Genio y el Centauro eventually won 3rd prize in 1987 after being performed at the Teatro Histórico Nacional (National Historical Theater) in Cañafístola. Chávez also sculpted extensively, producing such works as Sombra de Guerra en el Golfo (Shadows of War in the Gulf) in 1980.

Coup of 1992

Hugo Chávez meets with fellow conspirator Francisco Arias Cardenas during the 4 February 1992 coup attempt.
Enlarge
Hugo Chávez meets with fellow conspirator Francisco Arias Cardenas during the 4 February 1992 coup attempt.
For more details on this topic, see Venezuelan coup attempt of 1992.

After an extended period of popular dissatisfaction and economic decline under the reformist and neoliberal Carlos Andrés Pérez administration, Chávez together with a squad of MBR-200 conspirators launched the February 4, 1992 coup d'état. Pérez survived the coup, however, and Chávez was soon forced to call upon his fellow conspirators to cease hostilities.[8] While he did so, Chávez famously quipped that he had only failed por ahora — "for now". Nevertheless, Pérez later lost the presidency to Rafael Caldera. Chávez himself was imprisoned for the coup attempt. While in prison, he developed a carnosity of the eye, which spread to his iris. The clarity of his eyesight was slowly corrupted; despite treatments and operations, Chávez's eyesight was permanently weakened.[9]

Rise to the presidency (1992 — 1999)

For more details on this topic, see Venezuelan presidential election, 1998.
Chávez has used his charismatic aura and rhetorical skill to invigorate supporters of the Bolivarian Revolution during both electoral campaigns and rallies. Here Chávez addresses a fiery lecture to tens of thousands of red-shirted chavistas at the Worker's Day march on January 05, 2005 in downtown Caracas.
Enlarge
Chávez has used his charismatic aura and rhetorical skill to invigorate supporters of the Bolivarian Revolution during both electoral campaigns and rallies. Here Chávez addresses a fiery lecture to tens of thousands of red-shirted chavistas at the Worker's Day march on January 05, 2005 in downtown Caracas.

After serving two years of a prison sentence related to his coup attempt, Chávez was pardoned by Caldera in 1994. Immediately upon his release, Chávez reconstituted the MBR-200 as the Movimiento Quinta República (MVR) — the V representing the Roman numeral five. Later, in 1998, Chávez announced that he would seek the presidency. In working to gain the trust of voters, Chávez drafted an agenda that drew heavily on Bolivarianism. Chávez thus campaigned on an anti-corruption and anti-poverty platform, while pledging to dismantle puntofijismo, the traditional two-party system of political exclusion and patronage. Chávez also utilized his own considerable charisma and renowned oratory skills on the campaign trail, and he thereby won the trust and favor of a primarily poor and working class following. Chávez won the 1998 presidential election on December 6, 1998 by 56.2% of the vote.

Presidency (1999 — present)

For more details on this topic, see Presidency of Hugo Chávez.

1999—2002

Newly elected to the presidency, Chávez takes the oath of office on February 2, 1999. Former president Rafael Caldera stands in the background.
Enlarge
Newly elected to the presidency, Chávez takes the oath of office on February 2, 1999. Former president Rafael Caldera stands in the background.

Chávez took the presidential oath of office on February 2, 1999 with a mandate to reverse Venezuela's economic decline and strengthen the role of the state in ensuring distributive social justice. Chávez's first few months in office were dedicated to dismantling puntofijismo. In addition, Chávez immediately freed more government funds for social programs and spending. Yet, as a recession triggered by historic low oil prices and soaring international interest rates rocked Venezuela during 1999, few resources for Chávez's promised massive anti-poverty policies were available from the shrunken federal treasury. As a result, in April 1999 Chávez was forced to set his eyes upon the one Venezuelan institution that was costly for the government but did little for the systematic social development that Chávez desired: the military. Chávez immediately ordered all branches of the military to devise programs that would combat poverty. Chávez also demanded that their programs work to further civic and social development in Venezuela's vast slum and rural areas. This civilian-military program was launched as "Plan Bolivar 2000", and was heavily patterned after a similar program enacted by Fidel Castro during the early 1990s, while the Cuban people were still suffering through the depths of the Special Period. Projects under Plan Bolivar 2000's purview included road building, housing construction, and mass vaccination. These programs were widely criticized by Chávez's opposition as corrupt and inefficient. On the other hand, Chávez defended them by stating that the program was one of the only means in effecting his social agenda, in the face of a state bureaucracy dominated by a recalcitrant opposition.[10]

In his economic policy, Chávez immediately terminated previous administrations' practice of extensively privatizing Venezuela's state-owned holdings. Nevertheless, Chávez faced a profound dilemma in that, while he wished to improve living standards through redistribution, increased regulation, and social spending, he did not wish to discourage foreign direct investment (FDI). Chávez attempted to shore up FDI inflows in an attempt to stem a crisis of chronic capital flight and monetary inflation. Chávez also worked to reduce Venezuelan oil extraction in hopes of garnering elevated oil prices and, at least theoretically, elevated total oil revenues and thereby boost Venezuela's severely deflated foreign exchange reserves. He also extensively lobbied other OPEC counries to cut their production rates as well. Stemming from these actions, Chávez was thus known as a “price hawk” in his dealings with the oil industry and OPEC. Chávez also attempted a comprehensive renegotiation of 60-year old royalty payment agreements with oil majors Philips Petroleum and ExxonMobil.[11] These agreements pays as little as 1% of the tens of billions of dollars in corporate oil revenues to Venezuela. Afterwards, a frustrated Chávez stated his intention to complete the nationalization of Venezuela's oil resources. Lastly, Chávez notably succeeded in improving both the fairness and efficiency of Venezuela's formerly lax tax collection and auditing system, especially in regards to taxes payable by major corporations and landholders.

Nevertheless, by mid-1999, Chávez was thoroughly incensed by his administration's setbacks in enacting the much promised anti-poverty initiatives; the National Assembly's opposition members were forestalling his allies' legislation. Chávez thus moved to bypass such opposition by approving the scheduling of two fresh national elections for July 1999 — just months after Chávez's assuming the presidency. The first was a nationwide referendum to determine whether a national constitutional assembly should be created. The assembly would be tasked with framing a new Venezuelan constitution that would hew more closely to Chávez's own political ideology. A second election was held that would elect delegates to this constitutional assembly. Chávez's widespread popularity allowed the constitutional referendum to pass with a 71.78% 'yes' vote; in the second election, members of Chávez's MVR and select allied parties formed the Polo Patriotico ("Patriotic Axis"). Chávez's Polo Patriotico went on to win 95% (120 out of 131 seats) of the seats in the voter-approved Venezuelan Constitutional Assembly.

However, in August 1999, the Constitutional Assembly first set up a special "judicial emergency committee" with the power to remove judges without consultation with other branches of government — over 190 judges were eventually suspended on charges of corruption. In the same month, the assembly declared a "legislative emergency," resulting in a seven-member committee that was tasked with conducting the legislative functions ordinarily carried out by the National Assembly — legislative opposition to Chávez's policies was thus instantly disabled. Meanwhile, the Constitutional Assembly prohibited National Assembly from holding meetings of any sort.[12]

Chávez holds aloft a miniature copy of the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution at the 2005 World Social Forum held in Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Enlarge
Chávez holds aloft a miniature copy of the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution at the 2005 World Social Forum held in Porto Alegre, Brazil.

The Constitutional Assembly itself drafted the new 1999 Venezuelan Constitution. With 350 articles, the document was, as drafted, one of the world's lengthiest constitutions. It first changed the country's official name from “Venezuela” to the "Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela". It also increased the presidential term of office from four to six years and introduced a presidential two-term limit. The document also introduced provisions for national presidential recall referenda — that is, Venezuelan voters now were to be given the right to remove their president from office before the expiration of the presidential term. Such referenda were to be activated upon provision of petitions with a valid number of signatures. The presidency was also dramatically strengthened, with the power to dissolve the National Assembly upon decree. The new constitution also converted the formerly bicameral National Assembly into a unicameral legislature, and stripped it of many of its former powers. Provision was also made for a new position, the Public Defender, which was to be an office with the authority to check the activities of the presidency, the National Assembly, and the constitution — Chávez styled such a defender as the guardian of the so-called “moral branch” of the new Venezuelan government, thus putatively tasked with defending public and moral interests. Lastly, the Venezuelan judiciary was reformed. Judges would, under the new constitution, be installed after passing public examinations and not, as in the old manner, be appointed by the National Assembly.

This new constitution was presented to the national electorate in December 1999 and approved with a CNE-audited 71.78% "yes" vote. Elections for the new unicameral National Assembly were held on July 30, 2000. During this same election, Chávez himself stood for reelection. Chávez's coalition garnered a commanding two-thirds majority of seats in the National Assembly while Chávez was reelected with 60% of the votes. The Carter Center monitored the 2000 presidential election; their report on that election stated that, due the a lack of transparancy, lack of CNE partiality, and political pressure from the Chávez government that resulted in unconstitutionally early elections, it was unable to validate the official CNE results.[13]

Over a span of a mere 60 days, the Constitutional Assembly thus framed a document that enshrined as constitutional law most of the structural changes Chávez desired. Chávez stated such changes were necessary in order to successfully and comprehensively enact his planned social justice programs. Sweeping changes in Venezuelan governmental structure were to be made; Chávez's plan was, stemming from his 1998 campaign pledges, thus to dramatically open up Venezuelan political discourse to independent and third parties by radically altering the national political context. In the process, Chávez sought to fatally paralyze his AD and COPEI opposition. All Chávez's aims were, in one move, dramatically furthered.

Later, on December 3, 2000, local elections and a referendum were held. The referendum, backed by Chávez, proposed a law that would force Venezuela's labor unions to hold state-monitored elections. The referendum was widely condemned by international labor organizations — including the ILO — as undue government interference in internal union matters; these organizations threatened to apply sanctions on Venezuela.[14] After the May and July 2000 elections, Chávez backed the passage of the "Enabling Act" by the National Assembly. This act allowed Chávez to rule by decree for one year. In November 2001, shortly before the Enabling Act was set to expire, Chávez enacted a set of 49 decrees. These included the Hydrocarbons Law and the Land Law, which are detailed below. The national business federation Fedecámaras opposed the new laws and called for a general business strike on December 10, 2001. The strike failed to significantly impact Chávez's policies, however. By the end of his first three years of his presidency, Chavez's main policy concerns thus challenged the Venezuelan oligarchy's control over Venezuela's land and petroleum resources, and introduced reforms aimed at improving the social welfare of the population by lowering infant mortality rates, introducing land reform, and the implementation of cursory government-funded free healthcare and education up to university level.[15] These initial domestic policy steps would be dramatically furthered later in Chavez's presidency.

Coup of 2002

For more details on this topic, see Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002.
"La cual aceptó" ("Which he accepted") were the words uttered by General-in-Chief Lucas Rincón Romero while reporting in a nationwide broadcast that Chávez had resigned his presidency.
Enlarge
"La cual aceptó" ("Which he accepted") were the words uttered by General-in-Chief Lucas Rincón Romero while reporting in a nationwide broadcast that Chávez had resigned his presidency.

On April 9, 2002, CTV leader Carlos Ortega Carvajal called for a two-day general strike. Fedecámaras joined the strike and called on all of its affiliated member businesses to shut down for 48 hours. Approximately 500,000 people took to the streets on April 11, 2002 and marched towards the headquarters of Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA in defense of its newly fired management. The organizers decided to redirect the march to Miraflores, the presidential palace, where a pro-Chávez demonstration was taking place. Chávez, alarmed by these developments, took over all Venezuelan airwaves, asking for all protesters to return to their homes. The private TV stations defied Chávez by showing both his address and the protest simultaneously, via a split-screen presentation. Chávez then ordered defiant private outlets to be taken off the air in a forced blackout. This lasted until several stations began rerouting their cable TV signals so as to continue covering the anti-Chávez protests. Despite Chávez's calls for calm, gunfire and violence erupted between the two groups of demonstrators. Clashes also flared between the Caracas's metropolitan police (at that time they were controlled by anti-Chávez figures), and the Venezuelan national guard (controlled by Chávez). More than 100 casualties and 17 deaths resulted.

Then, unexpectedly, Lucas Rincón Romero, commander-in-chief of the Venezuelan armed forces, announced in an abrupt broadcast to a stunned nationwide audience that Chávez had tendered his resignation from the presidency. To this day, the events surrounding both the killings and the coup are hotly disputed. For example, General Manuel Rosendo, at the time chief of the National Unified Army Command (CUFAN), reported that he and others presented the newly deposed Chávez two options: first, Chávez could either be exiled; second, Chávez could choose to remain in Venezuela on condition that he stand trial for the April 11 killings. Chávez reportedly responded that he together with his family wished to be exiled to Cuba, on condition that Rosendo personally guarantee the safety of Chávez's relatives and that Chávez would depart via Maiquetía's Simon Bolivar International Airport.

On the other hand, Chávez himself has stated that he had negotiated an agreement to resign only after he realized that many top military leaders opposed his policies.[16] Chávez agreed in principle to resign only on the condition that his resignation would follow constitutional order: it must be tendered before the National Assembly, and Chávez's own vice-president would succeed him. Chávez stated that he was given assurances by the rebel generals that they would comply with these conditions. Based on these assurances, he stated that he instructed Rincón to announce his resignation publicly. Chávez has also stated that shortly after Rincón's announcement, the assurances were abruptly rescinded and that he was then formally taken into custody.

Chávez, surrounded by resolute supporters, makes a dramatic return to power on April 13, 2002 after the collapse of the first Latin American coup of the 21st century.
Enlarge
Chávez, surrounded by resolute supporters, makes a dramatic return to power on April 13, 2002 after the collapse of the first Latin American coup of the 21st century.

After the resignation announcement, Chávez was escorted under military guard to Fort Tiuna, were he met with representatives of the Catholic Church. Chávez was also met by army officers, who by then had determined that he was indeed not to be sent to Cuba. Instead, Chávez would be taken to the La Orchila military base, which is off of Venezuela's coast, until rebel leaders could deliberate upon Chávez's fate. Meanwhile, the rebel military leaders appointed Fedecámaras president Pedro Carmona as Venezuela's interim president.

Carmona's first decree reversed all of Chávez's major social and economic policies that comprised his "Bolivarian Revolution", including loosening Chávez's credit controls and ending his oil price quotas by raising production back to pre-Chávez levels. Carmona also dissolved both the National Assembly and the Venezuelan judiciary, while reverting the nation's name back to República de Venezuela. These events generated pro-Chávez uprisings and looting across Caracas. Responding to these disturbances, Venezuelan army soldiers loyal to Chávez called for massive popular support for a counter-coup. These soldiers later stormed and retook the presidential palace, liberating Chávez from his captivity. The shortest-lived government in Venezuelan history thus was toppled, and Chávez resumed his presidency on the night of Saturday April 13, 2002. Following this episode, Rincón was reappointed by Chávez as commander-in-chief and later as Interior Minister in 2003.[17].

2002—2004

Chavez resumed his presidency in April 2002 outraged at the events, and ordered several investigations to be carried out. The results of these investigations supported Chávez's assertions that the 2002 coup was U.S. sponsored. On April 16, 2002, Chavez reported that a plane with U.S. registration numbers visited and was berthed at Orchila Island airbase, where Chavez had been held captive.[18] On May 14, 2002 Chavez alleged that he had definitive proof of U.S. military involvement in April coup. He stated that, during the 2002 coup, Venezuelan radar images indicated the presence of U.S. military naval vessels and aircraft in Venezuelan territorial waters and airspace.[19] Chavez also repeatedly claimed during the coup's immediate aftermath that the U.S. was continuing to seek his overthrow. On October 6, 2002, for example, Chavez stated that he had foiled a new coup plot.[20] Lastly, on October 20, 2002, Chavez stated that he had barely escaped an assassination attempt while returning from a trip to Europe.[21]

Chavez toook steps to prevent future coup attempts and stabilize the government. First, Chavez fired sixty generals and completely replaced the upper eschelons of Venezuela's armed forces, replacing them with more complacent pro-Chavez personnel. Chavez also sought to deepen his emotional bond with rank and file soldiers who, like Chavez himself, came from poor and neglected segments of Venezuelan society. He boosted support programs, employment, and benefits for veterans while promulgating new civilian-military development initiatives.

Yet, after the April 2002 coup attempt and investigations, only a few months would pass before the Chávez presidency would again be crisis-stricken. Chavez, outraged by the coup and seeking more funds for his social programs, moved in late 2002 to implement total control over PDVSA and its revenues. As a result, for two months following December 2, 2002, Chávez faced a strike from resistant PDVSA workers that sought to force Chavez from office by removing completely his access to the all-important government oil revenue. The strike, led by a coalition of labor unions, industrial magnates, and oil workers, sought to halt the activities of PDVSA (Petróleos de Venezuela, Venezuela's state-owned oil corporation). As a consequence, Venezuela ceased exporting its daily former average of 2,800,000 barrels (450,000 m³) of oil and oil derivatives. Hydrocarbon shortages soon erupted throughout Venezuela, with long lines forming at petrol filling stations. Gasoline imports were soon required. Alarmed, Chávez responded by firing PDVSA's anti-Chávez upper eschelon management and dismissed 18,000 PDVSA employees. Chávez justified this by alleging their complicity in gross mismanagement and corruption in their handling of oil revenues, while opposition supporters of the fired workers stated that the actions were politically motivated. Later, allegation emerged from anti-Chávez activists that Chávez has authorized creation of blacklists to preclude employment of opposition strike participants. A disputed Venezuelan court ruling declared the dismissal of these workers illegal and ordered the immediate return of the entire group to their former posts. Nevertheless, Chávez and his allies have repeatedly stated that the ruling will not be enforced.

On January 15, 2004, Chávez gave the National Assembly a State of the Union address.[22] Since opposition parliamentarians did not attend, he spoke only to members of his own party and sympathetic diplomatic representatives. During the speech, Chávez stated that he had generated the PDVSA crisis in order to destroy the existing organization.

Putative coup of 2004

For more details on this topic, see Alleged planned Venezuelan coup in 2004.

In May 9, 2004, a group of 126 Colombians were captured during a raid of a farm near the Venezuela-Colombia border. Chávez soon accused them of being foreign-funded paramilitaries who intended to violently overthrow Chávez.[23] These events merely served to further the extreme and violent polarization of Venezuelan society between pro- and anti-Chávez forces. Chávez's allegations of a planned 2004 coup continue to stir controversy and doubts to this day.[24]

Recall vote of 2004

For more details on this topic, see Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004.
Chávez greets supporters during the August 15, 2004 presidential recall referendum.
Enlarge
Chávez greets supporters during the August 15, 2004 presidential recall referendum.

After opposition leaders submitted to the CNE a valid petition with 2,436,830 signatures that requested a presidential recall referendum, Chávez and his allies launched a massive grassroots effort to mobilize supporters and encourage rejection of the recall with a "no" vote. The recall vote was held on August 15, 2004. A record numbers of voters turned out to defeat the recall attempt with a 59.25% "no" vote.[25][26][27][28] A jubilant Chávez pledged to redouble his efforts against both poverty and imperialism, while promising to foster dialogue with his opponents. The election was overseen and certified by the Carter Center as fair and open.

2004 — present

In the aftermath of his referendum victory, President Chávez's primary objectives of fundamental social and economic transformation and redistribution accelerated dramatically. Chávez himself placed the development and implementation of the Bolivarian Missions once again at the forefront of his political agendum. Sharp increases in global oil prices gave Chávez access to billions of dollars in extra foreign exchange reserves. Economic growth picked up markedly, reaching double-digit growth in 2004 and a projected 8% growth rate for 2005. The Chávez government also passed a series of harsh media regulations that criminalized broadcasted libel, with legislation enabling prison sentences of up to 40 months for serious defamation. When asked in his October 2005 BBC interview if he would move to use the 40 month sentence if a media figure insulted him, he remarked that I don't care if they [the private media] call me names ... After all, if the dogs are barking, it is because we are working. And in his proposed land redistribution programs, Chávez finally made concrete strides. In a nation that once boasted an 80% government-defined poverty rate, where 2% of the populace owns 60% of the land, and where before Chávez a vanishingly low proportion of the $30 billion annual oil revenues are used for social programs.

Chávez considerably built Venezuela's foreign relations in 2004 and 2005. Chávez has deeply engaged Argentina's Nestor Kirchner, China's Hu Jintao, Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad particularly well in both new bilateral and multilateral agreements, including humanitarian aid and construction projects. On March 4, 2005 Chavez publicly declared that the US-backed FTAA was "dead". Chavez stated that the neoliberal model of development had utterly failed in improving the lives of Latin Americans, and that an alternative and non-capitalist model would be arrived at in order to increase trade and relations between Venezuela, Argentina, and Brazil. Chavez also stated his desire that a leftist Latin American homologue of NATO would be established.

Over 2004 and 2005, the Venezuelan military under Chávez has also began in earnest to reduce weaponry sourcing and military ties with the U.S. Chávez's Venezuela is thus increasingly purchasing arms from alternative sources such as Brazil, Russia, and Spain. Frictions over these sales have escalated, and in response Chávez ended cooperation between the two militaries. He also asked all active duty U.S. soldiers to leave Venezuela. Additionally, in 2005 Chávez announced the creation of a large "military reserve" — the Mission Miranda that encompasses a militia of 1.5 million citizens — as a defensive measure against foreign intervention or outright invasion.[29]

President Chávez and Fidel Castro of Cuba sign the documents inaugurating the ALBA trade agreement in May 2005.
Enlarge
President Chávez and Fidel Castro of Cuba sign the documents inaugurating the ALBA trade agreement in May 2005.

Chávez has made Latin American integration the keystone of his administration's foreign policy. Examples include multilateral engagements such as Mercosur, PetroCaribe, Petrosur, and Telesur — most of these were first proposed by Chávez himself. Chávez has also signed oil-for-expertise agreements with Cuba and approved of an oil pipeline built through neighboring Colombia. Chávez has also eagerly promoted multinational barter arrangements, such as an arrangement exchanging oil for cash-strapped Argentina's meat and dairy products.

In contrast, under Chávez, Venezuela-U.S. relations have declined. Chávez's own searing critique of U.S. foreign policy regarding Iraq, Haiti, the Free Trade Area of the Americas, and other areas. On 20 February 2005, Chávez reported that the U.S. had plans to have him assassinated; he stated that any such attempt would result in an immediate cessation of U.S.-bound Venezuelan oil shipments.[30] Chávez has also denounced the U.S.-backed ouster of Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in February 2004; he followed this by referring to U.S. president George W. Bush a pendejo (differing translations have been proposed [31]); in a later speech, he made personal remarks regarding Condoleezza Rice. Chávez also accuses the United States government of planning an invasion, codenamed "Plan Balboa". Chávez's own warm friendship with Cuban president Fidel Castro, in addition to Venezuela's now significant and expanding economic, social, and aid relationships with Cuba, have undermined the U.S. policy objective seeking to isolate the island. Notably, Chavez championed the ALBA (Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas). ALBA furthers Cuba-Venezuela economic and social integration and promotes a socially-oriented trade block, which Chávez states is superior to the logic of deregulated corporate profit maximization promoted by the U.S.-backed FTAA.Longstanding military, intelligence, and counter-narcotics ties between the U.S. and Venezuelan were severed on Chávez's initiative. The U.S. government has called Chávez a "negative force" in the region, and has worked to isolate Chávez both diplomatically and economically.

Hugo Chávez takes a walk with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on March 29, 2005.
Enlarge
Hugo Chávez takes a walk with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on March 29, 2005.

During Venezuela's presidency of OPEC in 2000, Chávez made a ten-day tour of OPEC countries, in the process becoming the first head of state to meet Saddam Hussein[32], since the Gulf War. Despite OPEC duties, the visit was controversial at home and in the U.S. Chávez did respect the ban on international flights to and from Iraq (he drove from Iran, his previous stop).[33] Ever since, President Chávez has consolidated diplomatic relations with Iran, including defending its right to civilian nuclear power.[34] Pat Robertson's August 2005 on-air request that Chávez be assassinated[35] drew sharp rebuke from Chávez himself, who accused him of “international terrorism”. After September 2005's Hurricane Katrina battered the U.S., Chávez was the first head of state to offer aid — tons of food and water, mobile hospital units and generators, medical specialists, 66,000 barrels of steeply discounted heating oil, and a million barrels of extra petroleum — to his "North American brothers". This offer was refused.[36]

Impact of the Chávez presidency

Domestic policy

For more details on this topic, see Bolivarian Missions.

The profound changes Chávez set in motion as president have radically altered the economic and cultural landscape of Venezuela. The Bolivarian Missions are the main vehicle of such change. Most notably, although recent economic activity under Chávez has been robust[37], per-capita GDP in 2004 has dropped over 25% from 1998 levels. There have also, as of September 2005, been significant drops since 1999 in both unemployment[38] and government-defined poverty[39], and marked improvements in national health indicators between 1998[40] and 2005[41]. Domestically, the Chávez administration has launched massive government anti-poverty initiatives[42][43], constructed thousands of free medical clinics for the poor[44], instituted educational campaigns that have made more than one million adult Venezuelans literate[45], enacted deep food[46] and housing subsidies[47], and promulgated the new progressive 1999 Bolivarian constitution. Chávez has also overseen widespread state-supported experimentation in participatory economics as well as the granting of thousands of free land titles to formerly landless poor and indigenous communities[48]; in contrast, several large landed estates and factories have been — or are in the process of being — expropriated.

Foreign policy

For more details on this topic, see Foreign policy of Hugo Chávez.

Chávez has refocused Venezuelan foreign policy on Latin American economic and social integration by enacting bilateral trade and reciprocal aid agreements, including his so-called "oil diplomacy". Chávez regularly portrays his movement's objectives as being in intractable conflict with neocolonialism and neoliberalism. As a result of his anti-capitalist and redistributive domestic policies combined with his strong relations with Cuba's Fidel Castro and other controversial figures, Venezuela-U.S. relations have deteriorated in recent years.

Economic policy

Hugo Chávez meets with Chinese President Hu Jintao on December 23, 2004. Chávez vistied China in a bid to bolster his country's oil supply contracts with the world's fastest growing large economy.
Enlarge
Hugo Chávez meets with Chinese President Hu Jintao on December 23, 2004. Chávez vistied China in a bid to bolster his country's oil supply contracts with the world's fastest growing large economy.
Venezuela is a major producer of oil products, and oil is the vital keystone of the Venezuelan economy. Chávez has gained a reputation as a price hawk in OPEC, pushing for stringent enforcement of production quotas and higher target oil prices. He has also attempted to broaden Venezuela's customer base, striking joint exploration deals with other developing countries, including Argentina, Brazil, China, and India. Record oil prices have meant more funding for the social programs, but has left the economy increasingly dependent on both the Chávez government and the oil sector; the private sector's role has correspondingly diminished. Despite the high government income, official unemployment figures has remained above 11%[49]. Associated social problems are present, such as the large informal economy and record high crime levels.[50]

Chávez has redirected the focus of PDVSA, Venezuela's state-owned oil company, by bringing it more closely under the direction of the Energy Ministry. He has also attempted to repatriate more oil funds to Venezuela by raising royalty percentages on joint extraction contracts that are payable to Venezuela. Chávez has also explored the liquidation of some or all of the assets belonging to PDVSA's U.S.-based subsidiary, CITGO. The oil ministry has been successful in restructuring CITGO's profit structure[51], resulting in large increases in dividends and income taxes from PDVSA. In 2005 CITGO announced the largest dividend payment to PDVSA in over a decade — $400 million. Yet despite massive efforts to increase production, daily oil production is still well short of the levels attained under the previous administration of president Rafael Caldera.

Cabinet

For more details on this topic, see Cabinet of Hugo Chávez.

According to the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution, Chávez is completely at leisure to alter his cabinet as he sees fit. Chávez also may establish or eliminate federal ministries by mere presidential decree. Changes in Chávez's cabinet are frequent; thus authoritative lists are difficult to maintain. Several important members of Chávez's inner government circle are not official members of the cabinet, nor even members of Chávez executive branch. Instead, they are members of the newly created citizen's branch (poder ciudadano).

Human rights violations

For more details on this topic, see Human rights violations under Hugo Chávez.

Human rights organizations Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have levied heavy criticism against Chávez's policies and governance.[52][53] Scores of deaths and hundreds of injuries inflicted during opposition demonstrations have resulted in little investigative action taken on the part of Chávez. Ill treatment of detainees, torture, and censorship are other severe criticisms against Chávez's government are levelled by such organizations. Meanwhile, relatives of victims who were killed in the April 11, 2002 clashes have filed a case against Chávez and others at the International Criminal Court, stating that Chávez is legally complicit in crimes against humanity. A ruling has yet to be reached.[54]

Media

For more details on this topic, see Media representation of Hugo Chávez.
Chávez tours a Mission Mercal supermarket in Santa Ana de Coro, Falcón during a live broadcast of Aló, Presidente! on June 26, 2005.
Enlarge
Chávez tours a Mission Mercal supermarket in Santa Ana de Coro, Falcón during a live broadcast of Aló, Presidente! on June 26, 2005.

Even before the April 2002 coup, owners, managers, and commentators working for the five major private mainstream television networks and most major mainstream newspapers have stated their opposition to Chávez's polcies. These media accuse the Chávez administration of having intimidating their journalists using specially dispatched gangs. Chávez has in turn alleges that the owners of these networks have primary allegiance not to Venezuela but to U.S. interests and to the advancement of neoliberalism via corporate propaganda. Meanwhile, private media's prominent political commentators have reported that, among other things, Chávez is mentally ill and that he harbors a "sexual obsession with Castro". Chávez, in turn, has described the four largest private television networks as "the four whores of the Apocalypse", has stated that the late Catholic Archbishop of Caracas, Cardinal Velasco is "in hell", and that his opponents resemble a "truckful of squealing pigs".

Chávez currently hosts the live talk show Aló, Presidente!. Of variable format, the show broadcasts on VTV (Venezuelan State Television) each Sunday at 11:00 AM. The show features Chávez addressing topics of the day, taking phone calls from the audience, and touring locations where government social welfare programs are active. In addition, Chávez inaugurated in late July 2005 Telesur, a proposed pan-American homologue of Al-Jazeera that seeks to challenge the present domination of Latin American television news by U.S.-based CNN en Español and Univisión. Chávez's media policies have contributed to the elevated U.S.-Venezuela tensions.

Criticisms

For more details on this topic, see Criticisms of Hugo Chávez.

Hugo Chávez is a passionately disputed personality, both in Venezuela and abroad. His most steadfast domestic opponents state that Chávez is a dangerous militarist and authoritarian revolutionary who poses a fundamental threat to Venezuelan democracy. The opposition also reports that both poverty and unemployment figures under Chávez have not seen dramatic improvements (some report that the figures have actually worsened), and that official corruption under his government is as rampant as ever.[55] Opposition figures point to the many public hospitals that lack even basic medicines and hygenic supplies. They also point to the over 25% drop in Venezuela's per-capita GDP under Chávez. Others cite his demogoguery and personality cult as pathways to achieving power and adulation. More specifically, the opposition has reported that the Chávez government has engaged in extensive electoral fraud throughout its duration, especially during the 2000 and 2004 elections. The opposition also reports that some 98% of arrestees are anti-Chávez. More sympathetic critcisms arise from reports that Chávez is not fulfilling his major campaign pledges with respect to labor and land reform.[56][57] Abroad, Western mainstream news media have reported that Chávez is a confrontational ideologue[58] who willingly harbors, funds, and trains terrorists in Venezuela and insurgents abroad.[59][60]

Personal life

For more details on this topic, see Personal life of Hugo Chávez.
Chávez with his three daughters: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Rosa Inés.
Enlarge
Chávez with his three daughters: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Rosa Inés.

Hugo Chávez has been married twice. He first wedded Nancy Colmenares, a woman of humble family originating from Sabaneta in Chávez's own native Barinas state; together, they had three children: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Hugo Rafael. At the same time, Chávez had an affair with the historian Herma Marksman, which lasted around ten years. Chávez is currently separated from his second wife, the journalist Marisabel Rodríguez de Chávez. He had his fourth child, Rosa Inés, through that marriage.

Chávez is of Roman Catholic extraction, and is currently a practicing Christian. Nevertheless, he has engaged in a series of extremely bitter disputes with both the Venezuelan Catholic clergy and Protestant church hierarchies. Although he has traditionally kept his faith private, Chávez has been increasingly discussing that both his faith and his interpretation of Jesus of Nazareth's personal life and ideology has had a profound impact on his leftist and progressive views:

He [Jesus] accompanied me in difficult times, in crucial moments. So Jesus Christ is no doubt a historical figure — he was someone who rebelled, an anti-imperialist guy. He confronted the Roman Empire ... Because who might think that Jesus was a capitalist? No. Judas was the capitalist, for taking the coins! Christ was a revolutionary. He confronted the religous hierarchies. He confronted the economic power of the time. He preferred death in the defense of his humanistic ideals, who fostered change ... he is our Jesus Christ.[61]

See also

References

Books

  • Boudin, Chesa, Hugo Chávez and Marta Harnecker (2005). Understanding the Venezuelan Revolution: Hugo Chávez Talks to Marta Harnecker. Monthly Review Press. ISBN 1583671277
  • Chávez, Hugo, David Deutschmann, and Javier Salado (2004). Chávez : Venezuela and the New Latin America. Ocean Press. ISBN 1920888004
  • Ellner, Steven and Daniel Hellinger (2004). Venezuelan Politics in the Chávez Era: Class, Polarization, and Conflict. Lynne Rienner. ISBN 1588262979
  • Golinger, Eva (2005). El Código Chávez: Descifrando la Intervención de los Estados Unidos en Venezuela. Editorial de Ciencias Sociales. ISBN 9590607233 Link to a Spanish language website
  • Gott, Richard (2001). In the Shadow of the Liberator: The Impact of Hugo Chávez on Venezuela and Latin America. Verso. ISBN 1859843654
  • Gott, Richard (2005). Hugo Chávez: The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela. Verso. ISBN 1844675335
  • McCoy, Jennifer L. and David J. Myers. (2004). The Unraveling of Representative Democracy in Venezuela. (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004) ISBN 0801879604
  • Niemeyer, Ralph T. (2004). Under Attack: Morning Dawn in Venezuela. (iUniverse, 2004) ISBN 0595662080

Documents

External links

Find more information on Hugo Chávez by searching one of Wikipedia's sibling projects:

 Wiktionary (a free dictionary)
 Wikibooks (free textbooks)
 Wikiquote (quotations)
 Wikisource (a free library)
 Commons (images and media)
 Wikinews (news stories)

Official links

Discourses

Other links

Notes


Preceded by:
Rafael Caldera Rodríguez
President of Venezuela
February 2, 1999April 12, 2002
Succeeded by:
Pedro Carmona Estanga
Preceded by:
Diosdado Cabello Rondón
President of Venezuela
April 13, 2002present
Succeeded by:
incumbent


Civil Flag of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Presidents of Venezuela Presidential Army Ensign of Venezuela
Páez | Vargas | Navarte | Carreño | Soublette | Páez | Soublette | J.T. Monagas | J.G. Monagas | J.T. Monagas | Gual | J. Castro | Gual | Tovar | Gual | Páez | Falcón | Bruzual | Villegas | J.R. Monagas | Villegas | Blanco | Alcántara | Varela | Blanco | Crespo | Blanco | López | Paúl | Palacios | Villegas | Crespo | Andrade | C. Castro | Gómez | Bustillos | Gómez | Pérez | Gómez | Contreras | Angarita | Betancourt | Gallegos | Chalbaud | Flamerich | Jiménez | Larrazábal | Sanabria | Betancourt | Leoni | Caldera | Pérez | Campins | Lusinchi | Pérez | Velásquez | Caldera | Chávez | Carmona | Cabello | Chávez

Personal tools