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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Thursday,
December 1, 2005
COHA Statement
While trumpeting claims about Venezuela’s ebbing democracy, the opposition has proven itself to be far more guilty of eroding the country’s democratic structures than any grab for power by the chavistas. In essence, the opposition is prepared to sacrifice the nation’s democratic system to serve its immediate objective of ousting the government by any means, on the false grounds that the authorities cannot guarantee free and fair elections. Every election that has been held in Venezuela since Chávez came to power has been extensively monitored, and even the U.S. State Department has been forced to grudgingly validate the authenticity of past results, as their legitimacy was unimpeachable.
Justifying the Unjustified
The opposition parties, led by Acción Democratica (AD), Proyecto
Venezuela and Copei (Christian Democrats),
at first based their protests on concerns over the use of
an electronic voting system, which they claimed would make
it possible for election officials to obtain the identities
of opposition voters. After their complaints succeeded in
convincing the national electoral council (CNE) to refrain
from implementing a fingerprinting system, the opposition
parties subsequently declared that the removal of the fingerprint
scanners was insufficient and that the CNE could not be trusted:
in essence the opposition is crying fraud before a single
vote has been cast. Under these rules, the Democrats would
have been justified in dropping out of the 2000 U.S. presidential
election after their candidate, Al Gore, had assumed that
the Bush campaign would be stealing the election before that
ballot was even staged.
By choosing this truly undignified and undemocratic tactic, the Venezuelan opposition has only weakened its position in the eyes of the world. Had it participated in the election, and succeeding in documenting fraud (an unlikely scenario), it would have been able to make legitimate claims. But by refusing even symbolic participation, the opposition has chosen to court Washington alone, rather than convince the international community of its democratic bonafides. In fact, the opposition has taken this drastic move because it lacks any hope that it could prevent itself from going down before a chavista landslide victory.
Unfortunately for the opposition’s political prospects, the current premium price of oil has afforded Chávez the opportunity to win the overwhelming loyalty of Venezuela’s poor – who make up more than half of the country’s population – through meaningful programs which advanced social justice. The progress that he has made with initiatives focusing on health, nutrition, housing and sports have only widened his political success. The opposition on the other hand, despite its control of most of the major media, has remained on the sideline, more interested in beseeching their Washington backers to somehow intervene in Venezuela’s affair, than wholeheartedly participating in Venezuelan democratic procedures. In the decision to boycott the elections rather than face the embarrassment of a crushing defeat, the opposition has proven itself, in the British sense of the phrase, to be the disloyal rather than “the loyal opposition,” ready to pick up its marbles and leave the game once it could be clearly seen that the vote would go against them.
Their tactic is not a thoughtless one, even though it is likely to risk having the dangerous side effect of providing Chávez-bashing U.S. policymakers a club to wield against their Venezuelan nemesis, much as they used the opposition’s refusal to participate in Haiti’s electoral process to justify the ouster of another constitutional leader, Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide.
Washington Likely
to Find the Opposition’s
Fake Rationale Irresistible
Washington is almost certain to see little reason to resist
simply parroting the opposition’s specious accusations
of democratic deterioration in the country and the impossibility
of free elections occurring, without
presenting
any evidence
to support that claim – just as they have been unable
to substantiate their cries that Chávez is “destabilizing” Latin
America or engaging in human trafficking to the U.S. The
Bush administration’s latest cabal will have the net
effect of only further tarnishing the Bush administration’s
reputation in the region, as Latin America is not likely
to buy the White House’s hollow lamentations over an
alleged flawed electoral process in Venezuela. As a result,
U.S. policy is destined to slip even farther away from comprehending
reality when it comes to serving the authentic interests
of this country both at home and abroad.
This analysis was prepared by the COHA Staff
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COHA
Statement 05.29