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Judi Lynn

(161,918 posts)
Tue Jun 25, 2024, 11:00 PM Jun 25

Why Venezuela's Coup Plotters Came Up Short

Why Venezuela’s Coup Plotters Came Up Short
ALVARO LOPEZ
06.25.2024

In 2019, a coalition of conservative forces responded to Nicolás Maduro’s authoritarian turn and Venezuela’s ongoing economic crisis by launching a coup. Despite backing from the US and Venezuelan capital, the conspirators failed. A new book explains why.

Review of Corporate Coup: Venezuela and the End of US Empire by Anya Parampil (OR Books, 2024).



The political project of neoliberalism in Latin America is dead. Peddling austerity, privatization, and deregulation is no longer a straightforward task for political elites. In response, politicians like Luis Abinader, the recently reelected president of the Dominican Republic, have successfully employed a strategy centered on culture wars, crime, and anti-immigrant sentiments. Meanwhile, a new wave of young politicians has emerged, touting “post-ideology” narratives that span from anarcho-libertarian fantasies to crypto-bro outsiderism, both sharing an authoritarian core with fascist undertones. These politicians have managed to steal from the Left the sentiment of “anti-elite” populism and channel the discontent of the informal working class toward market-oriented solutions. Nonetheless, neoliberalism has lost its stride, and the nations that defy it continue facing pressure.

Latin America’s Pink Tide populist revolt emerged in response to the Washington Consensus, which had privatized extractive commodities, deindustrialized and fragmented industrial workers, gutted social services, and perpetuated stark economic and social disparities across the hemisphere. The birthplace of the resistance against neoliberalism was in the mass uprisings in Venezuela in 1989 against then president Carlos Andrés Pérez’s paquetazo, a neoliberal economic package that included cuts on government salaries and spending, eliminating subsidies for farmers, removal of price controls and liberalization of the price of petroleum, elimination of tariffs and liberalization of imports, and the easing of foreign capital into and out of the country. The results were disastrous, with poverty increasing by 44 percent and extreme poverty by 20 percent.

The Caracazo, or Sacudón, was a massive urban uprising that shook Venezuela in 1989, driven by the urban poor, informal workers, students, and ex–guerrilla fighters. The brutal government crackdown, which targeted leaders and militants in their homes, left a trail of blood and deepened the polarization between the wealthy oligarchs and the general population. The rebellion and its aftermath also split the armed forces, with some soldiers refusing to continue slaughtering Venezuelans fighting for national sovereignty. This pivotal moment, as argued in the modern classic We Created Chavez: A People’s History of the Venezuelan Revolution by George Ciccariello-Maher, gave rise to grassroots movements and neighborhood assemblies that would play a crucial role in the rise of Hugo Chávez and the cementing of the Bolivarian Revolution.

Hugo Chávez’s 1998 ascension to the Miraflores Palace marked a watershed moment in Venezuela’s struggle for national sovereignty and self-determination. This followed years of resistance against the oppressive government of Rómulo Betancourt, who had reversed Venezuela’s progressive agenda, and the urban struggles of the 1970s and 1980s, which gave birth to the Party of the Venezuelan Revolution (PRV) and its revolutionary brand of Latin American nationalism, known as Bolivarianism. This ideology emphasizes political and economic sovereignty, including control over national resources. The rise of community organizations like 23 de Enero and collectives like La Piedrita, which successfully eradicated drug trafficking in their neighborhoods through collective action and community support, was crucial in defending the Bolivarian Revolution’s gains and advancing its ideals.

In a direct rebuke to US bids for political and economic hegemony over Latin America, the 1999 Bolivarian constitution enshrined fundamental rights, including free public education and health care, environmental protection, and indigenous rights. Additionally, it introduced two new branches of government — the electoral and citizens’ branches — and paved the way for the growth of cooperatives, small businesses, and nationalization of key industries to combat oligopolistic control. The Bolivarian Revolution, and the mass movement that sustains it, has been continuously undermined and attacked ever since, most recently on January 23, 2019, when National Assembly (AN) president Juan Guaidó declared himself president of Venezuela.

More:
https://jacobin.com/2024/06/venezuela-corporate-coup-2019/

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