People Power in Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution: An Interview with George
Ciccariello-Maher

Jul 3rd 2013, by Samuel Grove/Alborada
[image: George Ciccariello-Maher at a public reading of his book (Néstor
Sánchez Cordero)]

George Ciccariello-Maher at a public reading of his book (Néstor Sánchez
Cordero)

[The author of *We Created Chávez: A People's History of the Venezuelan
Revolution*, George Ciccariello-Maher, spoke to Samuel Grove about the
historical background to Venezuela's Bolivarian Revolution, the
interventions of the popular masses that propelled Hugo Chávez to the
presidency and the results and aftermath of Venezuela’s first election
since Chávez's death in March.]

*Samuel Grove: Who is the 'we' that this book is about?*

The "we" that "created Chávez" in my title refers to the "people" of the
subtitle, but this is an answer that simply begs more questions. Namely,
who is or are the Venezuelan people? Thinkers like Paolo Virno and Hardt
and Negri insist, on the basis of European history, that "the people" is a
conservative category, one that is unitary and unifying, one that excludes
difference and upholds the state. In Latin America in general, and
Venezuela in particular, this has not been the case. Instead, while the
concept of the people has been used by some toward such ends, it has also
been mobilized by others toward the opposite. The people, or *el pueblo*,
has also served as the fundamental category for popular resistance and
combat, much more so than either strictly national or class identities,
although it involves some of both.

This double-meaning of the people, in which the *pueblo* is itself a
terrain of struggle to be fought over, is also itself doubled in the
radical resignification of the national anthem, ‘Gloria al Bravo Pueblo’
(‘Glory to the Brave People’). In Venezuela, *bravo* also means angry or
fed-up, and so as popular resistance developed in the 1970s and 1980s, the
idea of the brave people was increasingly replaced with the idea of a broad
class of poor and oppressed people unwilling to accept the status quo. In
fact, in the popular rebellion in 1989 known as the Caracazo, which was the
fundamental moment that catapulted the Bolivarian Revolution to national
prominence, graffiti appeared in Caracas reading ‘el pueblo está bravo’
(‘the people are fed-up’).

*SG: You began your history of the people's struggle with the establishment
of representative democracy in 1958; that is after the popular uprising
that brought down the Marcos Pérez Jiménez dictatorship. Why?*

In writing a history of popular struggles, there is a danger of infinite
regress, and in *We Created Chávez*, I occasionally point back to even the
first moments of colonisation and the indigenous and later slave resistance
that developed in Venezuela. But my starting point is above all 1958, which
might seem counterintuitive since it marked the beginning of stable formal
representative democracy in Venezuela. The reason is that this is still,
after all, a history of our present, a history that seeks out the basic
parameters of struggle that constitute the Bolivarian Revolution, and one
fundamental aspect of this is the critique of and resistance to a certain
understanding of democracy.

After 1958, it became perfectly clear that formal representative democracy
would not solve the problems of capitalism and imperialism that plagued
Venezuelan history, and moreover that this form of democracy soon became a
barrier to the expression of popular demands from below. As a result, many
of those who participated in the overthrow of Marcos Pérez Jiménez in 1958
found themselves within two short years in the mountains, beginning a
guerrilla war against "democracy."

*SG: Presumably also galvanised by the success of the Cuban guerrillas that
overthrew Fulgencio Batista in 1959. What was the impact of the Cuban
revolution on popular struggle in Venezuela?*

Definitely. It would be difficult to exaggerate the profound importance of
the Cuban Revolution across Latin America as an example of what a small
group of revolutionaries could accomplish without waiting for the so-called
material conditions to develop. The immediate effect in Venezuela was to
splinter the governing party, Acción Democrática, whose old guard was
increasingly anti-communist, but whose youth section (which formed the MIR)
would soon provide many of the troops for the guerrilla struggle against
that party. However, this impact was not entirely positive, as the
widespread caricature of the Cuban Revolution - especially in the work of
the French philosopher Régis Debray - was also the achilles heel of the
Venezuelan guerrilla struggle. By exaggerating the vanguard leadership of
small, mobile guerrilla units called*focus*, Debray's *foquismo* soon
became an alibi for Venezuelan guerrillas who were increasingly isolated
from any significant mass support.

*SG: So while the guerrilla movement was a “people’s’ struggle” in the
sense of resistance you mention, it was not a “people’s struggle” in the
popular sense of the term. How did the guerrilla struggle break down and
what replaced it?*

That's right, while the guerrilla struggle was popular in its motivations
and aspirations, it was never popular in its constituency in the sense that
it never galvanised the masses of oppressed and impoverished Venezuelans to
throw themselves into the cause. When the guerrillas realised this, it was
really too late, but this realisation began to sow the seeds for later
developments and innovations. The years following the decline of the
guerrilla struggle, and especially the 1970s, marked a period of
experimentation, both theoretically and organisationally. A multiplicity of
armed groups persisted, oscillating between the hit-and-run tactics of
urban guerrillas and the establishment of mass fronts that operated in
semi-clandestinity as a way of connecting to the masses in the urban *
barrios*. Many began to question the party-form and vanguardism more
generally, some re-evaluated classical tenets of Marxism, and still others
excavated local sources for radical inspiration, whether in Latin American
figures like José Carlos Mariátegui or more locally in the cult of María
Lionza, indigenous fighters, and slave rebellions. It was in this period
that the idea of ‘Bolivarianism’ came to develop, not as a blinkered homage
to a bourgeois revolutionary, but instead as an overarching signifier for
the need to root struggles in local histories.

*SG: Yes, you have written that the generation of armed groups and the
localisation of political organisation provided the impetus for the future
development of popular militias and barrio assemblies under Chávez. However
there was little sign that this was going to be possible at the time.
Earlier in the interview you described the 1989 Caracazo as “the
fundamental moment that catapulted the Bolivarian Revolution to national
prominence”. How?*

The broad dialectic moved like this: militants learning the lessons of the
guerrilla struggle sought to shed their vanguardism and develop a mass base
in the urban *barrios*, and at this very moment in the early 1980s the
country entered into an economic crisis. The state responded to this threat
with a broadening violence against movements and eventually the poor as a
class. Students had tested the waters by fighting the police in the street,
and so when the surprise neoliberal reform package was announced in early
1989, it was like a perfect storm of subjective and objective conditions.
The people rebelled: rioting, looting, and taking over the city centre from
the rich. The importance of that moment is marked both by this powerful
example of resistance, but also by the mass slaughter that followed: up to
3,000 were killed, although the number is not known since most were thrown
in plastic bags and deposited unceremoniously in mass, unmarked graves. But
while resistance was momentarily crushed, the Venezuelan political system
had been dealt a fatal blow and began to collapse.

*SG: On the face of it, this appears paradoxical; Could you elaborate on
upon how organised popular struggle could turn such a catastrophic human
loss (the death of up to 3,000 people) into such a significant political
victory (the death of Puntofijismo)?*

The impact emerged in a few different ways according to the actors in
question. For the popular sectors, the Caracazo was a moment when righteous
outrage overcame fear, and while the "pacification" that followed was
certainly aimed at restoring fear as well, there comes a moment in all
revolutionary struggles when repression only emboldens resistance. For the
elites, who had been in many ways seduced by their own myths, this was a
glimpse in the mirror: not all, but certainly many, were forced to come to
terms with the reality of the massacre but also the fact that the poor were
not going to remain silent any longer. Finally, international elites had
been convinced for decades that Venezuela was an "exceptional" democracy,
an island of stability in turbulent waters. All three of these were smashed
in an instant, allowing everything that has come since.

*SG: The pairing of the Caracazo and the 1992 coup attempt offers us
another contradiction begging an explanation - that of the role of the army
in this sequence. In 1989 a weapon of state repression, in 1992 an agent or
confection of popular struggle.*

Yes, the connection between 1989 and the 1992 coup attempt should be
emphasised: it wasn't simply that Chávez and others took advantage of an
opportunity or rode a wave of discontent, the connections were much more
direct. Firstly, that Chávez and others conspiring within the military were
already connected to popular revolutionary organisations, partly through
Chávez's elder brother Adán, who was a member of the Party of the
Venezuelan Revolution (PRV). Secondly, because it was soldiers themselves
who were ordered into the *barrios* to kill people who looked just like
them, the Caracazo made coup attempts from within the military imperative,
and provided new recruits. As a result, the attempted coup was initially
scheduled to coincide with the third anniversary of the Caracazo, but
needed to be moved up to February 4th 1992.

This all speaks to the "contradiction" you identify, although I would
hesitate to use the term since it assumes the military is uniform and
homogeneous. But the truth is that the Venezuelan military, while certainly
not a vehicle of popular struggle, has always been much different from its
counterparts in places like Chile and Argentina, where it is a bastion of
elite power, or places like Bolivia, where it enforced a caste system.
Going back decades, but especially since 1958, a significant current within
the Venezuelan military has held to a sort of left-nationalism, with
significant infiltration from the far left leading to major uprisings in
the early 60s in Puerto Cabello and Carúpano led by communist cadres.
Today, while the army is still to the right of many popular organisations,
it has certain vanguard currents (like Chávez's own paratroopers) who are
steadfastly revolutionary, and this current is being strengthened with the
establishment of popular militias.

*SG: You have written in your book that the Caracazo represented a
‘constituent moment’ which exposed the power of the people to intervene in
the political realm. As you put ‘it was 1989 that enabled 1992, and 1992
enabled 1998’. Nevertheless Chávez was elected on a relatively modest
manifesto in 1998. This changed after another ‘constituent moment’ in 2002
when Chávez was briefly ousted and then restored to power.*

Despite our hesitance to place too much faith in individual leaders, the
left often makes the mistake of attempting to derive political
possibilities on the basis of who those leaders are, where they come from,
what they believe. This isn't to say that none of this matters, but simply
that the conditions for a politics to be expressed vary according to a
complex set of circumstances. Chávez is a good example of this: he
certainly had radical influence, his brother came from the armed
revolutionary left, etc., but he also emerged within the military, an
institution which while potentially progressive and nationalist also
contained the seeds of reaction.

Moreover, Chávez was, as you say, elected on a moderate social-democratic
platform. At the last minute, as the traditional parties collapsed, even
large financial and political interests jumped on board what had only
months earlier been a long-shot campaign. While these interests would
certainly attempt to push Chávez to the right, the revolutionary
organisations that had been with him since before the 1992 coup attempt
would attempt to push him to the left.

In this tug-of-war, the heightened tensions of 2001 and the explosive
dialectic of 2002-2003 was decisive: Chávez passed a series of relatively
modest decrees governing land use, fishing, and a number of other things,
and the opposition went on the offensive, raising the stakes until the
brief coup of April 2002. Why does this coup matter? For a few reasons: it
led to the political decimation of the opposition (later decimated
economically after the oil strike of late 2002); it led Chávez to the
conclusion that social democracy was impossible because the right would not
permit it; and most importantly, it mobilised the base, and the coup itself
was largely reversed by the millions that poured into the streets in an
unmistakeable display of constituent force.

*SG: If the reforms up to that point had been so modest, what motivated
people to pour onto the streets?*

While the reforms were relatively modest, what had changed was fundamental:
the traditional parties had collapsed, an outsider was elected, the
political class was displaced from power, and a new constitution was
written and popularly endorsed. Since the oil economy has always meant that
political power is more important than economic power in Venezuela (or at
least the key to the latter), this was massively important. Furthermore,
given Chávez's combative rhetoric outspoken opposition to the old regime,
those who wanted to move forward in a revolutionary direction knew very
early on that there was only one way forward. Chávez and the constitution
were theirs, and they wouldn't give them up without a fight.

*SG: As you say the failed coup had the effect of shifting the Chavez
government to the left, and by 2005 Chávez was openly talking about
'Socialism of the 21st Century'. What are the most significant changes that
have taken place in Venezuela since the failed coup, and can we call it a
revolution?*

There's a lot of heated and occasionally silly debate about what we should
call a revolution or not, but what is clear is that there is a
revolutionary process underway. In other words, there are significant
changes taking root that point toward a revolutionary socialist or
communist future. In line with the participatory rhetoric of the Bolivarian
process, the most important of these have taken place on the level of
popular democracy: the formal establishment and empowerment of popular and
directly democratic communal council structures (to parallel the informal
assemblies that had existed for years). While these structures are rarely
perfect, and while they continue to lack an economic counterpart (there are
many cooperatives, collectives, occupied factories and the like, but no
generalisation of socialist production), they are the essential cornerstone
of Bolivarian socialism.

*SG: If the Venezuelan process isn't simply about Chavez, why was the
recent presidential election between Nicolas Maduro and Henrique Capriles
so close?*

There are a number of reasons for this, as well as a number of unanswered
questions, but the reality is that it did have to do with Chávez, and I
think few realised how powerfully his loss would be felt. Nicolás Maduro is
no Chávez, and some bad economic decisions (like a poorly-timed currency
devaluation) allowed the Venezuelan opposition to take advantage of
momentary weakness in an effort to convince the people that they were the
true bearers of a moderate and social-democratic Chavismo. This was of
course a monumental lie, and one that was borne out in the anti-democratic
violence unleashed after the election: Capriles represents the most elite
Venezuelan interests, and would govern through a return to something like
the neoliberal reforms that unleashed the process to begin with.

*SG: We are approaching the 40th anniversary of the coup in Chile. How was
the Venezuelan left able to defend the Chavez government in the way the
Chilean left failed to defend Allende government, and will it continue to
be able to defend itself under Maduro?*

While we should be wary of comparing the two cases lightly, given the
fundamental differences (especially in the military) between Venezuela and
Chile, we nevertheless must ask the Chile question. Once we do, the
strategic differences become clear. The Venezuelan process is not a repeat
of the Chilean attempt to build "electoral socialism" or to take the
"peaceful road" to socialism. It is a process that emerges out of the
heated crucible of mass street rebellion and rioting alongside failed
coups, and it was these explicitly non-electoral moments that made possible
what has come since. Once in power, moreover, it was clear that the
Bolivarian Revolution was not going to tie the hands of the popular
movements in the way that Allende often did. Informal popular militias are
an important element of the process, and the establishment of formal
militias within the military can serve to counterbalance the generals. As
the late general Alberto Müller Rojas often argued: the "people in arms" is
the best defence against right-wing coups.

*’We Created Chavez: A People's History of the Venezuelan
Revolution’<https://www.facebook.com/wecreatedhim>by
George Ciccariello-Maher (Duke University Press) is out now.*

*Samuel Grove is a contributing editor for Alborada and the associate
producer of Alborada Films <http://www.alborada.net/alboradafilms>'
documentary ‘Inside the Revolution: A Journey Into the Heart of
Venezuela'<http://www.alborada.net/itr.film>
.*
------------------------------
*Source URL (retrieved on 03/07/2013 - 10:45am):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/9799


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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