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http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/6210/1/243/

Workers witness Venezuela's
Bolivarian Revolution     

Author: Beatrice Lumpkin
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 
12/09/04 14:05 
 
  
In late November, Chicagoans Beatrice Lumpkin and her husband Frank, a retired 
steelworker leader, traveled to Venezuela. 


The mountains of Venezuela rise steeply out of the warm Caribbean Sea. We drink 
in the startling beauty of this South American country as the bus starts its 
steady climb up to Caracas, the nation's capital. 


"Look at how the people live in such a rich country!" Eddie Brown exclaims. He 
points to shacks that cover the mountainsides. Brown is the translator for the 
U.S./Cuba Labor Exchange, the sponsor of our worker-to-worker visit with 
Venezuela trade unionists. "Venezuela has only 25 million people. It is the 
third largest supplier of oil to the United States. And they have iron, 
aluminum and gold." Then we heard the key to understanding the politics of 
Venezuela. Of $54 billion in oil revenues in 2001, only $14 billion reached the 
government to use for the people of Venezuela. The rest was diverted for 
private gain. Managers of the state-owned oil company ran the company like 
their personal estates. 

The mountainside shantytowns barely cling to the steep slopes. This area had 
witnessed a terrible disaster a few years earlier. A great storm swelled the 
mountain streams, triggering mud slides. Thousands of people, still in their 
homes, were swept out to sea. Still we found the people optimistic. They were 
rebuilding the flooded areas to create a beautiful new tourist town. Soon we 
passed what had been the president's summer palace, and were told that Hugo 
Chavez had donated it as a school for the town. "The president does not need 
two palaces," Chavez said. 


The revolution will not be televised 

Our first meeting in Caracas was with the subway workers. Their union hall was 
right on the grounds of the state-owned subway system. On our way we passed the 
sites made famous in the movie "The Revolution Will Not be Televised." The 
movie was made by 
an Irish film crew that witnessed the neo-fascist coup of April 11, 2002. They 
filmed the kidnapping of President Hugo Chavez by a few army generals. These 
generals installed a dictatorship that 
lasted only six hours. That was long enough for the United States 
to expose its hand and recognize the coup. The coup "president" 
was Pedro Carmona, head of the Employers' Association. Their 
first act was to dissolve the National Assembly and the Supreme Court. It 
looked like Chile of 1973, all over again. 


But the people rose up and reversed history. They came by the hundreds of 
thousands until over a million people surrounded 
the presidential palace. That was the cue for the Palace Guard 
to retake control. They detained the coup leaders and brought 
back President Chavez in triumph. The third person to return 
to the palace was Jacobo Torres de Leon. The U.S./Cuba 
Labor Exchange group was very lucky to have Torres as our
guide in Venezuela. 


Jacobo Torres de Leon 

"Venezuela has a long history of labor struggles," Torres told 
us. He gave the example of his own family. His grandmother 
was a founder of the Venezuelan Communist Party. His father 
was a commander of guerilla forces under Communist 
leadership. When his father was killed in an auto accident, 
Torres was only 5. The family moved to Caracas where 
Jacobo became a revolutionary at the age of 12. Torres is now 
the national coordinator of the Bolivarian Force of Venezuelan Workers. They 
belong to the National Union of Workers (UNT), 
the new labor federation organized on April 5, 2003. 

In between he made a lot of friends, including a young military officer, Hugo 
Chavez. In 1998, the people elected Chavez to lead them out of misery. In this 
oil- and mineral-rich country, over 80 percent lived in poverty and the school 
dropout rate was 60 percent. Torres told us a poor family used to live all day 
on a loaf of bread and large bottle of Pepsi. "Pepsi?" we asked. "Because it is 
filling," he replied. 


Hugo Chavez and Simon Bolivar 

Chavez' first act was to hold a constitutional convention to 
draw up a new, progressive constitution. The new constitution 
and government are called "Bolivarian" because they were 
inspired by Simon Bolivar, the Venezuelan who led the Wars 
of Independence against Spain. The new constitution was 
widely discussed and approved by referendum in 1999. This 
was the third of eight votes the Chavez government won by 
wide margins. Land - including oil fields and mines - was 
declared public property that can never be privatized. 
Labor's right to organize and civil liberties were protected. 


When the Parliament passed laws protecting social security, 
the directors of the state oil company began to plan the 
violent overthrow of the Chavez government. The employers' 
organization, Fedecamaras, called a national "strike" on 
December 10, 2001, to wreck the economy. Workers were 
sent home by their private employers. In the public sector, oil 
industry management offices, including the computers, were 
shut down. Oil production fell drastically. The old-style union 
in the oil fields had not held elections for 20-30 years. It was 
headed by management types who fully supported the 
company in the December 2001 "strike." However, this union 
was only one of five oil unions. Labor was divided. 


In time, the oil production workers were able to substitute 
manual controls to replace the computers. Oil production resumed and the 
employers' 63-day stoppage was defeated. The lack of fuel had forced some 
Venezuelans to burn their furniture to cook their meals. Four thousand 
businesses had gone bankrupt. Still, people's support for their government 
remained strong. 


To reclaim the oil profits for the people and prevent further chaos, the 
government replaced the board of directors of the oil company. The ousted 
managers called another strike but fewer supported 
them. UNT writes of this strike, "It continued because it was a smokescreen to 
cover a military coup that was developed a few 
hours after the strike started." That coup, as described above, was reversed by 
an uprising of people who demanded democracy. 


The subway workers of Caracas 

The subway workers of Caracas are very proud of their beautiful, 
state-owned subway system, less than 20 years old. Carlos Diaz, 
a subway worker, told us they are also very proud to be 100 
percent union. He belongs to the Association of Professionals 
and Technicians of the subway system. They have just negotiated 
a three-year contract that includes medical benefits and holiday 
incentives for outstanding workers. The minimum wage is $152 
a month but subway workers can earn up to $550 a month. 
Their dues are 5 percent of their wages. We were honored to 
accept their invitation to join the subway workers in a plain but 
delicious lunch. 


Under the new government, the unions, community and 
government managers work together. They suggest new projects 
and ways to improve service. The subways connect to bus routes 
operated by workers who buy their buses or vans. Most have 
received government loans to buy their vehicles. They pay back 
their loans in five years. These worker-owners also belong to a 
union. Passenger fares are among the items negotiated. 


It seemed to this writer that class lines are not always drawn as 
sharply in Caracas as in Chicago. For example, Venezuela has 
3 million people who work in the public sector, 1.5 to 2 million in 
the private sector and 7 million who are "self-employed." The 
self-employed category includes many unemployed who try to 
survive as street vendors. Less than one-quarter million work 
the land. 

This subway workers union is an affiliate of the UNT federation. A committee of 
three from another subway workers union joined our discussion. We asked what 
differences divided the two unions. The 
answer was vague. "Not much. We work together." Differences in 
unions are apt to be political in Venezuela. UNT supports the 
Bolivarian Revolution led by President Chavez. The old CTV 
supported the coup and was made up of members of the old 
capitalist political parties. 


UNT is different, Eduardo Renate explained to us the next day. 
UNT admits all workers, regardless of political affiliation. Its 
largest affiliate is the new Bolivarian Workers Force, a social 
and political organization of workers committed to the Bolivarian 
Revolution. 


Many unions have left the old CTV to affiliate to UNT. The new 
federation has three main tasks. The first is to grow the union 
by organizing another 60 percent of the labor force in the next 
18 months. Only 20 percent are now organized. Second, UNT 
wants to mobilize the workers to pass new laws, including a new 
labor code, strengthened social security, and a law to improve 
working conditions. Their third task is to unify the splintered 
labor movement. 


Renate said they were going beyond the anti-imperialist to the 
anti-capitalist. "But not yet socialist," Renate added. The new 
movement must be led by workers and it must unify. "We need 
a new political organization," Renate said. "We are discussing 
the subject with other forces." 


Health and education 

Improvements in the living standards of the Venezuelan people
are most evident in terms of health and education. Formerly over 
40 percent lacked any access to health care. The Chavez 
government has built health clinics in the underserved areas. 
They are operated by 10,000 Cuban doctors. In addition, these 
doctors are educating hundreds of Venezuelan medical students. 


We were able to get an up-close view of the new education 
programs. Elem-entary and pre-university education are 
available free of charge to students who want to continue. 
Two classes we visited were by television, held at night in 
classrooms used by children in the day. Teachers volunteer 
their time, after a day's work, to help students. One mother 
of five said she worked for a doctor half days and came to 
class five nights a week. Another mother of six worked full 
time. A man volunteered that he wanted to become an 
engineer. 


The free education does not stop there. Students can enter 
the new "Bolivarian University of Venezuela." The university 
is a network of people's universities with at least one in each 
of the 22 states. They provide student dining halls and child 
care for students with children. Fittingly, the Caracas campus
was housed in the ultra-deluxe offices of the former oil 
executives. It was more deluxe than any corporate 
headquarters I ever visited. 


The academic dean at the Bolivarian University of Venezuela 
told us that illiteracy, which until recently afflicted 1.3 million 
people, was eliminated in a few months, following the Cuban
model. 


Electric power workers 

Our last visit was with the power plant workers union, housed in 
the state-owned electric company building. The building looked 
like big business, and that's what the electric company used to 
be. Publicly owned, it had been milked by the former directors to 
the point of near-bankruptcy. For 10 years, nothing was invested, 
nothing updated. Wages were below average. The workers saved 
the company from privatization. They have started a "refoundation" process to 
update the power network and decommercialize 
electricity. 


"Electricity is a human right, not a market commodity!" That is 
the principle the electrical workers union is fighting for. They 
are training 5,000 young workers to give service to the people, 
fight corruption and build full participation. They do not want to 
shut off electric service to the many thousands who have not
paid their bills. They want a state subsidy for the new 
investment that is needed and to extend service to all. 


Finally, they asked us about our experience with "co-management 
of workers and management." Time had run out so we searched 
for a short answer of how "co-management" had worked between
big, greedy companies and unions. "It's like the lion and the lamb,"
we replied. They laughed. We thought, "How wonderful to have the 
key sectors of the economy nationalized! Under a democratic 
government, too!" All they have to fear is the pressure from the 
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Bush 
government. With 70 percent of the vote in their recent elections, 
they are confident that they will win. 


Beatrice Lumpkin is a leader of the South Chicago chapter of 
the Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees. She can be 
reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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