Jon Beasley-Murray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
 
http://www.art.man.ac.uk/spanish/jbm.html 
http://www.art.man.ac.uk/lacs/ 
 
------ 
 
"The Coup *Will* be Televised: Hugo Chavez's Downfall and the
Venezuelan 
multitude" 
 
by Jon Beasley-Murray 
 
 
So this is how one lives a modern coup d'tat: watching television.

Venezuela's coup (and coup it is, make no mistake) took place
in the 
media, fomented by the media, and with the media themselves the
apparent 
object of both sides' contention. But while South America's 
longest-standing democracy was brought down in the confused glare
of media 
spectacle, any attempt to turn this spectacle into narrative
or analysis 
must also take into account, first, oil and, second, the general
breakdown 
of Latin American political legitimacy, of which this coup has
been just 
one (particularly bloody) symptom. 
 
In Caracas, Venezuela's capital, everyone has been watching television

over the past few days: every restaurant, shop, and business
has had a 
television on, showing almost constant news coverage, and diners
and 
shoppers have been dividing their attention between what they
are 
consuming and what they are seeing of developments in the ongoing
crisis 
that came to a head last night with the overthrow of president
Hugo 
Chavez. 
 
For several months now, support for (now former) president Chavez's
once 
overwhelmingly popular regime has been in steady decline, in
part as a 
result of a relentless assault by both the press and the television

networks. In response, Chavez took to decreeing so-called "chains,"
in 
which he obliged all the networks to broadcast his own--often
long and 
rambling--addresses to the nation. The media only redoubled its

opposition, subverting the broadcasts by superposing text protesting

against this "abuse" of press freedom, or for instance by splitting
the 
screen between Chavez's speech on the one side and images of

anti-government demonstrations on the other. Moreover, through
the media 
came more and more calls for the president's resignation or,
failing that, 
for the intervention of the military. 
 
The military has now answered these calls. The trigger for the
most 
recent convulsions has been (predictably enough) a battle for
control of 
Venezuela's oil. The country is the world's fourth largest producer,
and 
the third largest exporter of oil to the United States; the state
oil 
company, PDVSA (the world's largest oil company and Latin America's

largest company of any kind), is crucial to the economy as a
whole, and 
among Chavez's policies had been the attempt to rejuvenate OPEC
and to run 
PDVSA according to national and political priorities rather than
simply 
acceding to market demands. Two weeks ago, the president sacked
several 
members of the company's board of directors, replacing them with
his own 
allies. The management immediately cried foul, initiating a production

slowdown, and taking up a position at the vocal centre of anti-government

protest. At the weekend, Chavez replaced more board members,
and on 
Monday the union federation Confederacion de Trabajadores de
Venezuela 
(CTV) and the national chamber of commerce, FEDECAMERAS, allied
with the 
oil industry's management and joined to call a general strike
for Tuesday 
10th. While the opposition gathered to demonstrate around the

headquarters of PDVSA, in Caracas's opulent East Side, those
loyal to the 
government congregated around the presidential palace in the
more working 
class and dilapidated city centre. Tuesday night Chavez decreed
another 
chain, declaring to the nation that the strike had been a failure;
in 
response, the coalition of union, business, and oil management
declared 
that the strike had been 100% successful (of course, the truth
was 
somewhere in between) and announced, first, another day's general
strike 
and, then, the following day, that the strike would be indefinite.

 
The atmosphere in the city became palpably tenser. Opposition
supporters, 
mainly from the middle and upper classes, drove through the city,
the 
national flag and the black flag of opposition waving from the
electric 
windows of their four-wheel drive vehicles, while a broader spectrum
of 
opponents added to the cacophony by banging pots and pans from
their 
windows (exchanging shouted insults with government supporters)
either 
when Chavez appeared on television or, on those days when he
was off the 
screen, at pre-arranged times in the evening. Encouraged by this
show of 
support, anti-Chavez forces called for a march within the East
Side for 
Thursday morning. On the day of the march, the two hundred thousand

demonstrators then continued on beyond their stated destination,
heading 
for the city centre and the core of the president's power base.

Undoubtedly this was a provocation (and almost certainly planned
in 
advance), but at this point the two sides had become so polarised
that 
confrontation was inevitable. 
 
The final moments of Chavez's regime began that afternoon as
the president 
tried to take over the television networks literally as well
as 
symbolically. At around 1:30pm he appeared on the airwaves, broadcasting

from his office in the palace, declaring calm and that his government

continued in control, well able to deal with the vociferous minority

demanding his resignation. As the broadcast started, I was finishing

lunch with friends at a restaurant; at all the tables there was
a sudden 
silence, all present recognising that Venezuela's crisis had
entered its 
end-game. Over the next hour or so, as the president continued
talking 
(sometimes chiding, sometimes patronising), one by one the terrestrial

channels were taken off the air, leaving only the government
station 
available to those who did not have cable. For some time, a surreal

dialogue ensued, as the private channels (now visible only to
cable 
subscribers) split their screens once more, showing mute and
confused 
images of rioting taking place outside the palace, commenting
upon these 
events with superimposed text, while Chavez spoke calmly from
behind his 
desk while from off-screen aides periodically passed him notes
updating 
him about and allowing him to respond to the images and text
added by the 
television stations to the official discourse. 
 
Then the chain broke and, for all intents and purposes, the game
was up. 
The networks abandoned Chavez and dedicated themselves to the
pictures 
(often repeated, often out of synch) of what had been happening
in the 
city centre as the president's discourse had dominated the airwaves.

Confused and disorganised images of stone-throwing youths, the
injured 
carried away on stretchers, Chavez loyalists apparently returning
fire, 
the first dead bodies, troops and tanks mobilising, and various
military 
officials making statements all marked a coup in progress. I
was driven 
back to another friend's house as darkness fell, and we as well
as the few 
other road-users ran every red light in our way. As the night
wore on, 
the government television screened old nature documentaries,
and then went 
off the air completely as private channels regained their full

broadcasting capabilities. Eventually the entire military high
command 
declared themselves against the president. Grainy images of government

jets leaving the darkened city centre airfield with all lights
off 
strengthened rumours that the president might have fled, but
then the 
different forces seemed to have hunkered down until, at 1:30
in the 
morning, the sound of pots and pans and fireworks greeted the
news that 
Hugo Chavez was now in custody. But nobody went out into the
street. We 
turned the television off. 
 
It is only today that the coup's fall-out is becoming clear,
just as the 
choppy, confused television images are being re-written as linear,

coherent newspaper narrative. Adherents of the former government
are (in 
their entirety) being accused of perpetrating the massacre of
at least 
thirteen unarmed protesters yesterday--when it is far from clear
(and 
indeed, most unlikely) either that all the dead are protestors
or that the 
protestors were all unarmed. With this justification, however,
(and with 
the false notion that Chavez's regime was characterised by repression)
all 
traces of the past three years are rapidly being erased. It seems

probable that Chavez's democratising constitution will be revoked
(it has 
already been utterly breached), and that the country will return
to the 
constitution of 1961, and perhaps to the entrenched social inequalities
of 
the 1960s and 1970s, too. Much of the opposition, united only
in its 
rejection of Chavez, may find cause to regret the manner of the
old 
regime's passing, and the shape of the regime now in formation.
At 
present, the "transitional" government (which has promised new
elections 
"within a year") is the product of a pact between the military
and 
business: the new president, Pedro Carmona, is the former head
of the 
chamber of commerce, and in the televised announcement in which
his new 
position was announced, he was flanked by the collected heads
of the 
various armed services. Meanwhile, the police are conducting
raids in the 
city centre, (democratically elected) provincial governors are
being 
detained and stripped of power, and all those who sympathised
with or 
worked for the former government face an uncertain future; some
have 
already gone into hiding. 
 
The previous regime had many faults: after an auspicious beginning
(and 
80% support in the polls), it failed to mobilise the mass of
the people 
towards its stated aim of transforming what, for all its oil
resources, is 
still a country with considerable poverty. The regime's prospects
(and 
the prospects for any social change) came to depend all too much
on the 
figure of the president himself, at best a maverick, at worst

authoritarian in style (and probably in fact quite incompetent),
whose 
personal charisma would inevitably wane. As Chavez's personalism
allowed 
for no competition, when Chavez's popularity declined, there
were no 
alternatives left to those who believed in the generally progressive

causes advanced (if intermittently) by his government. "Chavismo"
itself 
came to create the political vacuum that has allowed the far
right pact of 
arms and commerce now to take control. 
 
At the same time, under Chavez, Venezuela constituted a dissident

exception to the contemporary prevalence of a neoliberalism that
has only 
accentuated the divide between rich and poor throughout Latin
America. If 
Chavez was not the way forward, he was rather a throwback, a
(somewhat 
hokey) mix both of the nineteenth-century liberators he revered--he
went 
so far as to rename the country the "Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela,"
in 
honour of Simon Bolivar, the leader of the Latin American independence

movement--and of early twentieth-century populists such as Argentina's

Juan Peron. Briefly, at least, Chavez seemed to demonstrate that
other 
models were possible--and, in his attempts to make OPEC a force
of third 
world producers allied against a global system heavily weighted
in favour 
of first world consumers, that another form of globalisation
might be 
imagined. 
 
Now, however, Venezuela has rejoined the Latin American "mainstream."

This mainstream is characterised by the almost complete breakdown
of any 
semblance of a social pact. One sign of this breakdown is the
perceived 
dramatic rise in delinquency or common crime--Caracas is a city
in which 
cars abound with a surplus of security devices, the many high-rise

residential buildings that characterise its urban growth all
have guards, 
and people are weighed down by the number of keys required to
operate 
lifts and open doors, gates, and pass through other protective
cordons. 
Another sign of this breakdown is the withdrawal of any popular

legitimation for political systems--the clamour in Peru, Argentina,
and 
now Venezuela (among other countries) has been against politicians
of any 
kind, all of whom are regarded as equally corrupt, equally inefficient,

and equally inadequate to the needs and demands of the multitude.

Venezuela's coup is simply another sign of the disappearance
of the former 
contract (however illusory that contract may have been) between
people and 
nation. Hugo Chavez tried to reconstruct that contract by televisual

means, but the medium itself (unsuited to such simple narratives)
rebelled 
against him. The current regime lacks any legitimacy, however
much it may 
have paraded invented rituals for the cameras, and will survive
only 
through repression or apathy. But the multitude is waiting for
other 
alternatives, and other possibilities. 
 
Jon Beasley-Murray 
University of Manchester 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
Caracas, 12th April 2002 
 
---------- 
 
>From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mon Apr 15 18:41:23 2002 
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2002 18:35:52 +0200 (MEST) 
From: Per I. Mathisen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: [kkf] The Revolution Will Not Be Televised 
 
From: Jon Beasley-Murray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
 
http://www.art.man.ac.uk/spanish/jbm.html 
http://www.art.man.ac.uk/lacs/ 
 
----- 
 
"The Revolution Will Not be Televised: Hugo Chavez's Return and
the 
Venezuelan multitude" 
 
So this is how a modern coup d'etat is overthrown: almost invisibly,
at 
the margins of the media. Venezuela's return to democracy (and
democracy 
it is, make no mistake) took place despite a self-imposed media
blackout 
of astonishing proportions. A huge popular revolt against an
illegitimate 
regime took place while the country's middle class was watching
soap 
operas and game shows; television networks took notice only in
the very 
final moments, and, even then, only once they were absolutely
forced to do 
so. Thereafter television could do no more than bear mute witness
to a 
series of events almost without precedent in Latin America--and
perhaps 
elsewhere--as a repressive regime, result of a pact between the
military 
and business, was brought down less than forty-eight hours after
its 
initial triumph. These events resist representation and have
yet to be 
turned into narrative or analysis (the day after, the newspapers
have 
simply failed to appear), but they inspire thoughts of new forms
of Latin 
American political legitimacy, of which this revolt may be just
one 
(particularly startling) harbinger. 
 
By Friday night, Caracas, Venezuela's capital, seemed to be returning
to 
normal the day after the coup that had brought down the increasingly

unpopular regime of president Hugo Chavez. In the middle classes'

traditional nightspots, such as the nearby village of El Hatillo,
with its 
picturesque colonial architecture and shops selling traditional

handicrafts, the many restaurants were full and lively. Those
who had 
banged on pots and pans over the past few months and marched
the previous 
day to protest against the government seemed to be breathing
a sigh of 
relief that the whole process had eventually been resolved so
quickly and 
apparently so easily. "A Step in the Right Direction" was the
banner 
headline on the front page of one major newspaper on the Saturday,
and the 
new president, Pedro Carmona (former head of the Venezuelan chamber
of 
commerce), was beginning to name the members of his "transitional"

government, while the first new policies were being announced.
Control 
over the state oil company, PDVSA (the world's largest oil company
and 
Latin America's largest company of any kind), had been central
to the 
ongoing crisis that had led to the coup, and its head of production

announced, to much applause, that "not one barrel of oil" would
now be 
sent to Cuba. Not all was celebration, it is true: the television
showed 
scenes of mourning for the thirteen who had died in the violent
end to 
Thursday's protest march, but the stations also eagerly covered
live the 
police raids (breathless reporters in tow) hunting down the Chavez

supporters who were allegedly responsible for these deaths. 
 
Elsewhere, however, another story was afoot, the news circulating

partially, by word of mouth or mobile phone. Early Saturday afternoon,
I 
received three phone calls in quick succession: one from somebody
due to 
come round to the place I was staying, who called on his mobile
to say he 
was turning back as he had heard there were barricades in the
streets and 
an uprising in a military base; another from a journalist who
also 
cancelled an appointment, and who said that a parachute regiment
and a 
section of the air force had rebelled; a third from a friend
who warned 
there were fire-fights in the city centre, and that a state of
siege might 
soon be imposed. My friend added that none of this would appear
on the 
television. I turned it on: indeed, not a sign. Other friends
came by, 
full of similar rumours, and with word that people were gathering
outside 
the national palace. Given the continued lack of news coverage,
we 
decided to go out and take a look for ourselves. 
 
Approaching the city centre, we saw that indeed crowds were converging.

But as we drove around, we saw almost no sign of any police or
army on the 
streets. In the centre itself, and at the site of Thursday's

disturbances, some improvised barricades had been put up, constructed
with 
piles of rubbish or with burning tyres, marking out the territory
around 
the national palace itself. The demonstration was not large,
but it was 
growing. We then headed towards the city's opulent East Side,
and came 
across a procession of people advancing along the road towards
us, people 
clearly poorer and more racially mixed than the East Side's usual

inhabitants. They were chanting slogans in favour of Chavez,
and carrying 
portraits of the deposed president. This march was clearly headed
towards 
the city centre, as were a stream of buses apparently commandeered
by 
other chavistas. Neighbourhood police were eyeing them carefully,
but 
letting them pass. If this number of demonstrators were arriving
from the 
eastern suburbs, then many more must be converging on the palace
from the 
working class West. We doubled back and tracked the march from
parallel 
streets, watching as the numbers grew, as passers-by were called
to join 
in this unexpected protest. 
 
Meanwhile, we were listening to the radio. Some reports were
arriving of 
the crowds on the streets, but mainly we heard official pronouncements.

First the army chief spoke, and we heard the signs of incipient
splits 
among the forces behind the ruling junta: the army would continue
to 
support interim president Carmona only if he reinstated Congress
as well 
as the other democratically elected regional governors favourable
to the 
previous regime who had been (unconstitutionally) deposed the
previous 
day. But if Congress were reinstated then, according to the constitution,

and in the absence of the previous president and vice-president,
the head 
of Congress should rightfully be next in line as head of state.
Then 
Carmona himself was interviewed, by CNN. He declared that the
situation 
in the city was absolutely calm and under his control, denied
that he had 
been forced to take refuge in any army base (clearly CNN knew
something we 
did not), downplayed any insubordination among other sectors
of the armed 
forces, and announced that his next step might be to fire some
of the 
military high command. Finally, the head of the national guard
then 
pronounced that respect and recognition needed to be shown to
those who 
had supported--and continued to support--the deposed president,
Chavez. 
The pact between military and commerce was beginning to unravel.
We 
decided to head home. 
 
We turned on the television. Every Venezuelan commercial station
was 
continuing with normal programming (and the state-owned channel
had been 
off the air since Thursday's coup). However, as we had access
to cable, 
from BBC World and CNN "en espanol" we started to receive reports
of 
disturbances in various parts of Caracas that morning, and some
details 
about the parachute regiment's refusal to surrender arms to the
new 
regime. More mobile phone calls assured us that the crowd outside
the 
palace was still growing, and still peaceful. The BBC had a reporter
in 
the crowd, and spoke of thousands of people gathered. Darkness
fell, and 
still no word from any of the national networks. At one point
the CNN 
anchor pointedly asked its Caracas correspondent whether or not
local 
television was covering this tense situation: no, he replied,
despite 
these same channels' protests over alleged censorship under the
previous 
regime. Now the self-censorship of soap operas and light entertainment

stood in the way of any representation of what was slowly emerging
as a 
pro-Chavez multitude. 
 
Indeed, the private networks had previously protested loudly
and bitterly 
about the former president's policy of decreeing so-called "chains,"
in 
which he obliged all the networks to broadcast his own--often
long and 
rambling--addresses to the nation. Now the networks had instituted
their 
own chain, the apparent diversity of variety shows masquerading
a uniform 
silence about what was happening on the streets. 
 
Then a development: suddenly one channel broke its regular programming
to 
show scenes of the street outside its own headquarters. A group
of thirty 
to forty young and mobile demonstrators, on motorcycles and scooters,
were 
agitating outside the plate glass windows. Some rocks were thrown,
some 
windows smashed and graffiti sprayed, and suddenly a new chain
was formed 
as all the networks switched to the same image of demonstrators
apparently 
"attacking" the building. But the group moved on and the soap
operas 
resumed. Until a similar group turned up at another channel's

headquarters, then another, then another. No more stones were
thrown, but 
the demonstrations could now at least be glimpsed, in fragments
(the 
channels splitting their screens into three, and, as one of the
images 
turned out to be an image of the television screen itself, further
still, 
into an endless regress of fuzzy images snatched through cracked
windows 
and over balconies). A local pro-Chavez mayor who had been in
hiding from 
the repression was briefly visible, apparently calling for people
to 
remain calm. But no camera teams ventured outside, and we still
had 
little idea as to what was happening at the presidential palace.

 
We were switching rapidly between channels: to CNN and the BBC
at the top 
of the hour, and then through the various commercial channels
to try to 
see at least a partial view of the multitude that must now be
on the 
streets. The international channels were showing footage shot
during the 
day, of police repression of protests in the poorer neighbourhoods--the

footage was out there, but had not been screened or discussed
on any 
private channels. At around 10:30pm, on one of these searches
through the 
cable stations, we saw a channel that had been dark had now come
back to 
life. A friend phoned almost immediately: "Are you watching channel

eight?" Yes, we were. State television had, amazingly, come back
onto 
the airwaves. 
 
The people who had taken over the state television station were
clearly 
improvising, desperately. The colour balance and contrast of
these studio 
images was all wrong, the cameras held by amateur hands, and
only one 
microphone seemed to be working. Those behind the presenters'
desk were 
nervous, one fiddling compulsively with something on the desk,
another 
shaking while holding the microphone, but there they were: a
couple of 
journalists, a "liberation theology" priest, and a minister and
a 
congressman from the previous regime. The minister spoke first,
and very 
fast. She gave a version of the violent end to Thursday's march
that 
differed absolutely from the narrative the media had put forward
to 
justify the coup that had followed: the majority of the dead
had been 
supporters of Chavez (not opposition protesters), and the snipers
firing 
upon the crowds were members of police forces not under the regime's

control. Moreover, the former president had not resigned; he
was being 
held against his will at a naval base on an island to the north.
The 
current president, Carmona, was illegitimate head of a de facto
regime 
that was product of a military coup. Thousands of people were
on the 
streets outside the presidential palace demanding Chavez's return.
A 
counter-narrative was emerging. 
 
The congressman appealed directly to the owners and managers
of other 
television stations to portray what was happening in Caracas.
No change 
on those other channels, however, most of which had returned
to their 
regular programming. And then the state channel went off the
air. 
 
Over the next few hours, channel eight would go on and off the
air several 
times. Each time the immediate fear was that it had been forcibly
closed 
down again; each time, it turned out that technical problems
were to blame 
as the channel was making do with a team unaccustomed to the
equipment. 
Several times the channel attempted to show images from inside
the 
presidential palace, but these were eventually successfully screened
first 
on CNN: the "guard of honour" defending the palace was declaring
its 
loyalty to Chavez. Later, around 1am, amid the confusion, we
saw pictures 
of the vice-president, Diosdado Cabello, inside the palace, being
sworn in 
as president. Venezuela now had three presidents simultaneously:
Hugo 
Chavez, Pedro Carmona, and Cabello. The situation was extremely
confused, 
the majority of the channels were still transmitting none of
this, and 
rumours reported on the BBC suggested that two of the three--Carmona
as 
well as Chavez--were currently being detained by different sectors
of the 
armed forces. But the balance of power seemed to have shifted
to 
supporters of the previous regime. The only question remaining,
the 
questioned posed by the thousands at the gates of the presidential
palace 
and still besieging the private television stations (by now some
had been 
forced to interview spokespeople from the crowd, while at least
one had 
simply switched to the feed provided by channel eight), was:
would we see 
Chavez? 
 
And so the apparently unthinkable happened. As all the armed
forces as 
well as the seat of power effectively passed back to the control
of those 
loyal to the deposed regime, shortly before 3am, Hugo Chavez,
president of 
Venezuela, returned to the presidential palace, mobbed as soon
as he left 
his helicopter by the thousands of supporters who were now in
a state of 
near delirium. All the television stations were now running the
images 
provided by channel eight--a new chain had formed, as commercial

television lapsed into a new form of stunned silence. The president

returned to the office from which he had been broadcasting on
Thursday 
afternoon, when he attempted to close down the private stations
and as the 
coup was unfolding. This time, however, he was no longer alone
behind his 
desk, but flanked by most of his ministers and in a room crowded
with 
people, buzzing with excitement and emotion. We turned the television

off. 
 
Today the fall-out from this revolt is far from clear, just as
the 
partial, confused television images have yet to be re-written
as linear, 
coherent newspaper narrative. What is becoming clearer are the
lineaments 
of the coup that the revolt overthrew--though even here rumours
abound, 
such as the notion that it had been planned for three months,
or about the 
extent of possible US involvement. If it had been planned for
three 
months, then it was badly planned over that time: above all,
those who led 
the coup were always uncertain as to whether or not they wished
to present 
the coup for what it was. Had they decided to go through unashamedly
with 
a coup d'etat (in, for instance, the Pinochet style), they would
have been 
more thorough-going and widespread in their repression (though
as it was, 
more people were killed during the illegitimate regime's brief
existence 
than were killed in Thursday's demonstration, let alone by Chavez's

security forces over the past three years); they would have detained
more 
chavistas, rather than leaving key (former) ministers to pay
a part in the 
revolt (though as it was, they used extreme force in raiding
several 
ministers' homes, and detained, for instance, up to sixty people
at the 
country's largest university); and they would have decisively
secured the 
state television and no doubt imposed a state of siege. Yet had
they 
decided to preserve at least a facade of legitimacy, they would
have made 
some effort to extract some kind of (written or televised) resignation

from Chavez, would have not dissolved the Congress, would have
not 
detained and stripped of power (democratically elected) provincial

governors, and hence would not have so utterly breached the constitution.

 
As it was, the pact between military and business that engineered
the coup 
was weak, and could survive only through repression or apathy.
But the 
military was split, and (especially) the front-line forces unwilling
to go 
through with repression--even while the business component refused
to 
negotiate with the other anti-Chavez sectors of society, nominating
a 
cabinet almost exclusively composed of figures from the extreme
right. 
More importantly still, the coup plotters were surprised to discover
that 
they were received not with apathy, but with an extraordinary
and 
near-spontaneous multitudinous insurrection. 
 
The fate of Chavez's government, and indeed also of Chavez himself,

remains uncertain. Support for what was once an overwhelmingly
popular 
regime had been in steady decline, in part as a result of a relentless

assault by both the press and the television networks, but also
because it 
had so far failed to achieve its stated aim of transforming what,
for all 
its oil resources, is still a country with considerable poverty.
Now 
(despite an initial concession of reversing the interventions
in PDVSA 
that had triggered the most recent convulsion), Chavez still
has a large 
proportion of the middle classes firmly set against him, people
who 
supported the coup; he must negotiate with them without at the
same time 
betraying--and indeed while starting to fulfil--the desires of
the 
multitude that overthrew it. The government has a golden opportunity--it

is now more clearly legitimate than at any time since its auspicious

beginnings (when it had 80% support in the polls), whereas the
commercial 
media that so fomented his downfall are patently in disgrace.
Yet the 
government could so easily blow that opportunity, especially
if it 
continues (as before the coup) to depend all too much on the
figure of the 
president himself, at best a maverick, at worst authoritarian
in style 
(and probably in fact quite incompetent), whose personal charisma
is 
already lost on the middle classes. As Chavez's personalism allows
for no 
competition, it leaves few alternatives to those who believe
in the 
generally progressive causes advanced (if intermittently) by
his 
government. "Chavismo" itself came to create a political vacuum
that 
briefly allowed the far right pact of arms and commerce to take
control. 
 
In the event, however, the multitude came to fill that political

vacuum--silently at first, almost invisibly, at the margins of
the media. 
Though Chavez (and chavismo) claims to represent that multitude,

yesterday's insurrection should be the signal that the regime
is in the 
end dependent upon (constituted by) that multitude. Chavez should
not 
repeat the mistake--made both by the nineteenth-century liberators
he 
reveres and the early twentieth-century populists he resembles--that
he 
can serve as a substitute for that multitude, or that he can
masquerade 
their agency as his own. For in the tumultuous forty-eight hours
in which 
the president was detained, it became clear that "chavismo without
Chavez" 
has a power all of its own, apt to surprise any confused attempt
at 
representation. 
 
Thanks to that multitude, Venezuela continues to constitute a
dissident 
exception to the contemporary prevalence of a neoliberalism that
has only 
accentuated the divide between rich and poor throughout Latin
America. It 
is not so much, perhaps, that Chavez demonstrates that other
models are 
possible--though his unpredictable foreign policy (embracing
figures as 
diverse as Saddam Hussein and Fidel Castro), as well as his more
coherent 
attempts to make OPEC a force of third world producers allied
against a 
global system heavily weighted in favour of first world consumers,
do help 
to suggest that another form of globalisation might be imagined.
Rather, 
it is that the multitude suggests another possible, liberatory,
side to 
the almost complete breakdown of any semblance of a social pact
that 
characterises the Latin American "mainstream." 
 
One sign of this breakdown is the perceived dramatic rise in
delinquency 
or common crime--Caracas is a city that abounds with a surplus
of security 
devices (people are weighed down by the number of keys required
to operate 
lifts and open doors, gates, and pass through other protective
cordons) 
that regulate the middle class's comings and goings in line with
this fear 
of latent social disorder. But yesterday's events suggest another
side to 
this apparent disorder, both on the one hand that it is a criminological

demonisation of a sector of society that (it is presumed) has
to be 
systematically cleansed from social spaces; and on the other
that it is a 
glimpse of a desire to go beyond such enclosures. The criminalisation
of 
mobility is a reaction to a force that no longer "knows its place."

Another sign of this breakdown is the withdrawal of any popular

legitimation for political systems--the clamour in Peru, Argentina,
and 
now Venezuela (among other countries) has been against politicians
of any 
kind, all of whom are regarded as equally corrupt, equally inefficient,

and equally inadequate to the needs and demands of the multitude.
But the 
breakdown of any representation of yesterday's insurrection might
also 
point towards a politics that is itself beyond representation,
beyond a 
set of systematic substitutions of people for politicians. 
 
Venezuela's coup, and the revolt that overturned it, constitute
simply 
another sign of the disappearance of the former contract (however
illusory 
that contract may have been) between people and nation. Hugo
Chavez tried 
to reconstruct that contract by televisual means, but the medium
itself 
(unsuited to such simple narratives) rebelled against him, and
it will 
continue to do so. The current regime has legitimacy, but this
legitimacy 
does not come from paraded invented rituals for the cameras;
it comes from 
the multitude's constituent power. And the multitude is also
waiting for 
other alternatives, and other possibilities. 
 
Jon Beasley-Murray 
University of Manchester 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
Caracas, 14th April 2002 

Reply via email to