http://nacla.org/news/2013/7/10/communal-state-communal-councils-communes-and-workplace-democracy

The Communal State: Communal Councils, Communes, and Workplace Democracy

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Jul 10 2013
Dario Azzellini



The particular character of what Hugo Chávez called the Bolivarian process
lies in the understanding that social transformation can be constructed
from two directions, “from above” and “from below.” Bolivarianism—or
Chavismo—includes among its participants both traditional organizations and
new autonomous groups; it encompasses both state-centric and anti-systemic
currents. The process thus differs from traditional Leninist or social
democratic approaches, both of which see the state as the central agent of
change; it differs as well from movement-based approaches that conceive of
no role whatsoever for the state in a process of revolutionary change.

The current transformation in Venezuela is thus the product of a tension
between constituent and constituted power, with the principal agent of
change being the constituent. Constituent power is the legitimate
collective creative capacity of human beings expressed in movements and in
the organized social base to create something new without having to derive
it from something previously existing. In the Bolivarian process, the
constituted power—the state and its institutions—accompanies the organized
population; it must be the facilitator of bottom-up processes, so that the
constituent power can bring forward the steps needed to transform society.

[image: 1846]PHOTO BY DARIO AZZELLINI

This approach was elaborated on various occasions by former president Hugo
Chávez and has been confirmed by his successor, Nicolás Maduro, during the
recent electoral campaign. It is shared by sectors of the administration
and by the majority of the organized movements. Both from the government
and from the rank and file of the Bolivarian process, there is a declared
commitment to redefine state and society on the basis of an interrelation
between top and bottom and thereby to move toward transcending capitalist
relations. Although not free of contradictions and conflicts, this
two-track approach has been able to uphold and deepen the process of social
transformation in Venezuela.

Constituent power, being comprehensive and expansive, has been the
fundament for every revolution, democracy, and republic; it is the greatest
motor of history, the most powerful, innovative social force. Historically,
however, we have seen constituent powers silenced and weakened after barely
carrying out their role of legitimating the constituted power. In a genuine
revolutionary process, however, the constituent power must maintain its
capacity to intervene and to shape the present, to create something new
that does not derive from the old. This is what defines revolution: not the
act of taking power, but rather a broad process of constructing the new, an
act of creation and invention.1 This is the global legacy of the Bolivarian
process.

In Venezuela, the concept of constituent power arose at the end of the
1980s as the defining trait of a continuous process of social
transformation. The main slogan of the neighborhood assemblies was “We
don’t want to be a government, we want to govern.” This idea, understood in
increasingly radical terms, came to orient the revolutionary
transformation, acquiring a hegemonic status in the political-ideological
debate of the 1990s.2

The Bolivarian process began by calling for a strengthening of civil and
human rights and for the building of a “participatory and protagonistic
democracy” in search of a “third way” beyond capitalism and socialism.
Starting in late 2005, however, President Hugo Chávez described socialism
as the only alternative for bringing about the necessary transcendence of
capitalism. The presidential election of 2006 was defined by Chávez as a
choice between capitalism and a path towards socialism. The onset of the
era of Chávez’s presidency expanded and reinforced participatory
possibilities and council structures and created new ones. The idea of
participation was officially defined in terms of popular power,
revolutionary democracy, and socialism. Because of the obvious difficulties
of defining a clear path to socialism or a clear concept of what socialism
can be today, the goal was defined as “socialism of the 21st century,”
which is an ongoing project. The name also serves to distinguish it from
the “real socialisms” of the 20th century. The process of seeking and
building is guided above all by values such as collectivity, equality,
solidarity, freedom, and sovereignty.3 It is embodied in the construction
of councils.

In January 2007, Chávez proposed to go beyond the bourgeois state by
building the communal state. He thus picked up and applied more widely a
concern originating with anti-systemic forces. The main idea was to form
council structures of all kinds (communal councils, communes, and communal
cities, for example), as bottom up structures of self-administration.
Councils of workers, students, peasants, and women, among others, would
then have to cooperate and coordinate on a higher level in order to
gradually replace the bourgeois state with a communal state. According to
the *National Plan for Economic and Social Development 2007-2013*, “since
sovereignty resides absolutely in the people, the people can itself direct
the state, without needing to delegate its sovereignty as it does in
indirect or representative democracy.”4

The notion of a separation between “civil society” and “political
society”—as expressed, for example, by NGOs—is thus rejected. The focus is
rather upon fostering the potential and the direct capacity of the popular
base to analyze, decide, implement, and evaluate what is relevant to its
life. The constituent power is embodied in councils, in the institutions of
popular power, and in the basic concept of the communal state. As was
proposed in the constitutional reform that was rejected in the 2007
referendum, the future communal state must be subordinated to popular
power, which replaces bourgeois civil society.5 This would overcome the
rift between the economic, the social, and the political—between civil
society and political society—which underlies capitalism and the bourgeois
state. It would also prevent, at the same time, the over-centralization
that characterized the countries of “real socialism.”6

*

The communal councils are a non-representative structure of direct
democracy and the most advanced mechanism of self-organization at the local
level in Venezuela. In 2013, approximately 44,000 communal councils had
been established throughout the country. Since the new constitution of 1999
defined Venezuela as a “participative and protagonistic democracy,” a
variety of mechanisms for the participation of the population in local
administration and decision-making have been experimented with. In the
beginning they were connected to local representative authorities and
integrated into the institutional framework of representative democracy.
Competing on the same territory as local authorities and depending on the
finances authorized by those bodies, the different initiatives showed
little success.

Communal councils began forming in 2005 as an initiative “from below.” In
different parts of Venezuela, rank-and-file organizations, on their own,
promoted forms of local self-administration named “local governments” or
“communitarian governments.” During 2005, one department of the city
administration of Caracas focused on promoting this proposal in the poor
neighborhoods of the city. In January 2006, Chávez adopted this initiative
and began to spread it. On his weekly TV show, “Aló Presidente,” Chávez
presented the communal councils—*consejos comunales*—as a kind of “good
practice.” At this point some 5,000 communal councils already existed. In
April 2006, the National Assembly approved the Law of Communal Councils,
which was reformed in 2009 following a broad consulting process of
councils’ spokespeople. The communal councils in urban areas encompass
150-400 families; in rural zones, a minimum of 20 families; and in
indigenous zones, at least 10 families. The councils build a
non-representative structure of direct participation that exists parallel
to the elected representative bodies of constituted power.

The communal councils are financed directly by national state institutions,
thus avoiding interference from municipal organs. The law does not give any
entity the authority to accept or reject proposals presented by the
councils. The relationship between the councils and established
institutions, however, is not always harmonious; conflicts arise
principally from the slowness of constituted power to respond to demands
made by the councils and from attempts at interference. The communal
councils tend to transcend the division between political and civil society
(i.e., between those who govern and those who are governed). Hence, liberal
analysts who support that division view the communal councils in a negative
light, arguing that they are not independent civil-society organizations,
but rather are linked to the state. In fact, however, they constitute a
parallel structure through which power and control is gradually drawn away
from the state in order to govern on their own.7

At a higher level of self-government there is the possibility of creating
socialist communes, which can be formed by combining various communal
councils in a specific territory. The councils decide themselves about the
geography of these communes. These communes can develop medium and
long-term projects of greater impact while decisions continue to be made in
assemblies of the communal councils. As of 2013 there are more than 200
communes under construction.

In the context of the creation of communes and communal cities, it is
important to analytically distinguish between (absolute)
political-administrative space and socio-cultural-economic (relational)
space.8 Communes reflect the latter; their boundaries do not necessarily
correspond to existing political-administrative spaces. As these continue
to exist, the institutionalization of the communal councils, communes, and
communal cities develops and shapes the socio-cultural-economic space.
Thus, the idea of council-based non-representative local self-organization
creates a “new power-geometry.” The concept of power in human geography, as
elaborated by Doreen Massey, has been put “to positive political use”
following the “recognition of the existence and significance, within
Venezuela, of highly unequal, and thus undemocratic, power-geometries.”9

Various communes can form communal cities, with administration and planning
“from below” if the entire territory is organized in communal councils and
communes. The mechanism of the construction of communes and communal cities
is flexible; they themselves define their tasks. Thus the construction of
self-government begins with what the population itself considers most
important, necessary, or opportune. The communal cities that have begun to
form so far, for example, are rural and are structured around agriculture,
such as the Ciudad Comunal Campesina Socialista Simón Bolívar in the
southern state of Apure or the Ciudad Comunal Laberinto in the northwestern
state of Zulia. Organizing and the construction of communes and communal
cities has been easier in suburban and rural areas than in metropolitan
areas, since there is less distraction and less presence of opposition,
while at the same time common interests are easier to define.

*

Regarding the democratization of ownership and administration of the means
of production, Venezuela has experimented with a series of different
models. Between 2001 and 2006, the Venezuelan government—in addition to
asserting state control over the core of the oil industry—focused on
promoting cooperatives for any type of company, including models of
cooperatives co-administrated with the state or private entrepreneurs. The
1999 constitution assigned the cooperatives a special weight. They were
conceived as contributing to a new social and economic balance, and thus
received massive state assistance. The favorable conditions led to a boom
in the number of cooperatives founded. In mid-2010, according to the
national cooperative supervisory institute Sunacoop, 73,968 cooperatives
were certified as operative, with an estimated total of 2 million members,
although some people participated in more than one cooperative and were
thus counted twice.10 The initial idea that cooperatives would
automatically produce for the satisfaction of social needs and that their
internal solidarity based on collective property would extend to their
local communities, proved to be an error. Most cooperatives still followed
the logic of capital; concentrating on the maximization of net revenue
without supporting the surrounding communities, many failed to integrate
new members.11 In the light of these experiences the government’s focus in
supporting the creation of cooperatives switched to cooperatives controlled
and owned by the communities.

In response to the employers’ lockout of 2002–2003, the “entrepreneurs
strike,” with the stated intention of toppling the Chávez government,
workers began the process of taking over workplaces abandoned by their
owners. At first, the government relegated the cases to the labor courts,
and then in January 2005 began expropriations. Beginning in July 2005, the
government began to pay special attention to the situation of closed
businesses, and since then hundreds of such companies have been
expropriated. But a systematic policy for expropriations in the productive
sector did not exist until 2007. The expropriated enterprises are
officially supposed to be turned into “direct social property” under the
direct control of workers and communities. In reality most of them are not
administered by workers and communities but by state institutions. Working
conditions have not fundamentally changed, and expropriations have not
automatically produced co-management or workers’ control.

[image: 1847]PHOTO BY DARIO AZZELLINI

The concept of “direct social property” is also supposed to apply to
hundreds of new “socialist factories” built by the government in the
context of an overarching strategy of industrialization. The local communal
councils select the workers, while the required professionals are drawn
from state and government institutions. The aim is to gradually transfer
the administration of the factories into the hands of organized workers and
communities. But most state institutions involved do little to organize
this process or prepare the employees, which has generated growing
conflicts between workers and institutions.

In 2007, Chávez picked up the idea of “socialist workers councils,” which
was already being discussed by many rank-and-file workers and by existing
councils and workers’ initiatives. In fact, there was a network with the
same name: Socialist Workers Councils (CST). Chávez presented CST as a good
practice and called on workers to form CST at their workplaces.
Nevertheless, since most institutions were opposed to workers councils,
only a few councils were formed at the beginning, mainly in recovered
factories like the valve factory, Inveval, or the water pipe factory, Inefa.

Growing pressure from below led several government institutions to start to
accept or even promote the creation of workers councils in institutionally
administered workplaces, even without the benefit of an enacted law on
workers councils. But while on the one hand the majority of institutions
tried to prevent the constitution of workers councils in their workplaces,
in others, and in state administered enterprises, the institutions often
tried to assume the lead and constitute the CST themselves. This move
represented an attempt to distort the councils’ purpose and reduce them to
a representative authority dealing with work and salary related questions
within the government bureaucracy. As a consequence, the CST turned into
another site of struggle for workers control.12

The most successful attempt at a democratization of ownership and
administration of the means of production is the model of Enterprises of
Communal Social Property (EPSC), promoted to create local production units
and community services enterprises. The EPSC are collective property of the
communities, which decide on the organizational structure of enterprises,
the workers incorporated and the eventual use of profits. Government
enterprises and institutions have promoted the communal enterprises since
2009, and since 2013 several thousand EPSC have been constituted. Most
belong to the sectors of community services like public transport or are
engaged in food production and food processing. The state-owned oil
company, PDSVA, set up a local liquid gas distribution administered by
communities call Gas Comunal.13

Since 2007, the government’s ability to reform has increasingly clashed
with the limitations inherent in the bourgeois state and the capitalist
system. The movements and initiatives for self-management and
self-government, designed to overcome the bourgeois state and its
institutions, with the goal of replacing it with a communal state based on
popular power, have grown. The broadening of direct grassroots
participation brings an increase in the conflicts between the state and its
popular base (especially in the sphere of production) as well as within the
state itself, which becomes a site of class conflict. Not surprisingly, the
deepening of social transformation multiplies the points of confrontation
between top-down and bottom-up strategies. But simultaneously, because of
the expansion of state institutions’ work along with the consolidation of
the Bolivarian process and growing resources, state institutions have been
generally strengthened and have become more bureaucratized. Institutions of
constituted power aim at controlling social processes and reproducing
themselves. Since the institutions of constituted power are at the same
time strengthening and limiting constituent power, the transformation
process is very complex and contradictory.

[image: 1848]PHOTO BY DARIO AZZELLINI

Institutions, as well as many individuals in charge in institutions, follow
an inherent logic of perpetuating and expanding their institutional power
and control to guarantee the institution’s survival. Or as Thamara
Esis, a *consejo
comunal* activist from Caracas explains in a personal interview, “These
nice people who already made themselves comfortable in their offices, are
not willing to renounce their benefits, they live on the needs of the
people. It is like a little enterprise, you understand?” This tendency is
strengthened in times of profound structural changes when the purpose and
existence of any institution is questioned in the context of transformation.

In fact, the Ministry of Communes turns out to be one of the biggest
obstacles to the construction of communes and most of the communes under
construction complain about the Ministry. Only the growing organization
“from below,” especially the self-organized network of commune activists
that brings together about 70 communes could bring enough pressure on the
Ministry of Communes to start changing its politics at the end of 2011.
They forced the ministry to register some 20 communes. In return, the
communes had to set up the registration sheet since the Ministry of
Communes not only did not register any communes in the first three years of
it’s existence, but one year after the law on communes had been released,
it had not even created an official procedure for the registration of
communes.

Nevertheless, strategies “from above” and “from below” have maintained
themselves in the same process of transformation for 14 years and the
conflictive relationship between constituent and constituted power has been
the motor of the Bolivarian process. In his government plan for 2013-2019,
presented during the electoral campaign for the 2012 presidential
elections, Chávez stated clearly “We should not betray ourselves: the still
dominant socio-economic formation in Venezuela is of capitalist and rentist
character.”14In order to move further towards socialism, Chávez underlined
the necessity to advance in the construction of communal councils, communes
and communal cities, and the “development of social property on the basic
and strategic factors and means of production.”15 His successor, Nicolás
Maduro, committed to the program, and one of the central slogans of the
movements supporting his electoral campaign was “*Comuna o nada*”.


------------------------------



1. Antonio Negri, *Il Potere Costituente* (Carnago: Sugarco Edizioni,
1992), 382.

2. Roland Denis, *Los fabricantes de la rebelión* (Caracas: Primera Linea,
2001), 65.

3. Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Comunicación y la Información,
“Líneas generales del Plan de Desarrollo Económico y Social de la Nación
2007-2013,” (Caracas: MinCI, 2007), 30.

4. MinCI, Líneas generales, 30.

5. Asamblea Nacional Dirección General de Investigación y Desarrollo
Legislativo, “Ejes Fundamentales del Proyecto de Reforma Constitucional.
Consolidación del Nuevo Estado,” (Caracas: AN-DGIDL, 2007).

6. Hugo Chávez, *El Poder Popular* (Caracas: Ministerio de Comunicación e
Información, 2008), 38.

7. Dario Azzellini, *Partizipation, Arbeiterkontrolle und die Commune*,
(Hamburg: VSA, 2010).

8. David Harvey, “Space as a keyword,” in David Harvey. *A Critical Reader*,
ed. Noel Castree and Derek Gregory, (Malden: Blackwell, 2006).

9. Doree Massey, “Concepts of space and power in theory and in political
practice,” *Doc. Anàl. Geogr 55*(2009): 20.

10. Interview with Juan Carlos Baute. Presidente de Sunacoop, accessed
January 16, 2009,http://www.sunacoop.gob.ve/noticias_detalle.php?id=1361.

11. Dario Azzellini, “From Cooperatives to Enterprises of Direct Social
Property in the Venezuelan Process,” in *Cooperatives and Socialism. A View
from Cuba*, ed. Camila Piñeiro Harnecker, (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan,
2012): 259-278; Dario Azzellini, “Economía solidaria en Venezuela: Del
apoyo al cooperativismo tradicional a la construcción de ciclos comunales,”
in *A Economia Solidária na América Latina: realidades nacionais e
políticas públicas*, ed. Sidney Lianza and Flávio Chedid Henriques, (Rio de
Janeiro: Pró Reitoria de Extensão UFRJ, 2012): 147-160;

12. Dario Azzellini, “De la Cogestión al Control Obrero. Lucha de clases al
interior del proceso bolivariano,” (PhD diss., Benemérita Universidad
Autónoma de Puebla, 2012), 183-196.

13. Aurelio Gil Beróes, “Los Consejos Comunales deberán funcionar como
bujías de la economía socialista,” accessed January 4, 2010
http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=98094.

14. Aurelio Gil Beróes, “Los Consejos Comunales deberán funcionar como
bujías de la economía socialista,” accessed January 4, 2010
http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=98094.

15. “Propuesta del Candidato,” Chávez, 7.


------------------------------



*Dario Azzellini is a visiting fellow at the CUNY Graduate Center and works
at the Johannes Kepler University (Linz, Austria). He has published several
books and journal articles about popular movements, workers control, local
self administration, and privatization of military services, with a
regional focus on Latin America.*


------------------------------



*Read the rest of NACLA's Summer 2013 issue: "Chavismo After Chávez: What
Was Created? What Remains?" <https://nacla.org/node/9138>*


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



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