[image: Tiwy.com] <http://www.tiwy.com/news.phtml?id=167>      September
18, 2010
Venezuelan Elections: Opposition's Chances are Nonexistent

[image: Venezuelan Elections: Opposition's Chances are Nonexistent]

   *Nil Nikandrov* - http://www.strategic-culture.org

   The parliamentary elections in Venezuela are scheduled for September 26
and at the moment the electoral campaign is entering the final phase.The
alliance of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and the
communists is competing against the opposition represented by the Coalition
for Democratic Unity (MUD).Voters will elect 165 deputies to the National
Assembly (3 seats automatically go to Indians) and 17 deputies – to the
Latin-American parliament.

The pro-Chavez alliance clearly has the potential to win the race: it is
campaigning energetically across the country and – at least as the
opposition claims – relies heavily on the available administrative leverage.
Teams of Chavez's campaigners known as patrols employ an array of tactics to
mobilize support for their candidates from mass rallies to individual
interactions with voters, trying to pay a visit literally to every apartment
and home. Their approach is that Chavez's every supporter should convince
ten other people to vote for pro-Chavez candidates. Chavez stressed in an
address to the patrols gathering that the plan is absolutely realistic. He
said: “Talk to your friends and relatives, knock on you neighbors' and
acquaintances' doors, persistently invite all those who benefit from our
social missions but so far lacked the activity to support our government.
The right time has come”.

The opposition boycotted the previous parliamentary elections in Venezuela
in 2005. Its leaders cited various reasons for the boycott, particularly
stressing that the elections would likely be rigged by the Chavez regime.
Supporters of the government do believe Washington advised the opposition
not to partake, meaning to cast a shadow over the legitimacy of the
elections outcome. Eventually the opposition's withdrawal de facto played
into the hands of Chavez and helped him pass the legislation necessary to
implement his XXI century socialism program.

At the moment the Coalition for Democratic Unity is doing everything to win
as many seats in the parliament as it can. In some cases, the opposition
leaders are Chavez's former allies turned foes. Chavez's one-time friend and
former defense minister Raul Baduel who is serving a sentence of eight years
for corruption but sells himself as a prisoner of conscience issued an
appeal to the Coalition for Democratic Unity members from jail. Chavez and
his team hold that the opposition plans to use the parliament for distinctly
conspiratorial purposes. If the Coalition for Democratic Unity gets
entrenched in Venezuela's parliament, the replay of the Honduran scenario –
the toppling of the country's legitimate president - will only be a matter
of time.

Both Chavez's supporters and the opposition regularly conduct public opinion
polls. The recent data released by the GIS XXI polling company hired by the
government showed that the alliance of PSUV and the communists would garner
53% of the vote. Moreover, some polls give Chavez's supporters as much as
two thirds of the seats in the new parliament, which would mean the
government would enjoy unlimited freedom of legislative initiative.

Surveys conducted by the polling companies working for the opposition carry
projections evidently tailored to the tastes of their clients: according to
their forecasts, the Coalition for Democratic Unity will either outpace
Chavez's supporters by a small margin or secure a 50:50 result. The soberer
of the opposition leaders do expect a much more modest result in the 25-30
seats bracket. Some hyperactive journalists even asked a magician from the
Vargas state who generously dispenses political predictions of his own
making what to expect from the elections – he promised 138 seats to the
supporters of Chavez and 27 – to the opposition.

These days an average Venezuelan enjoys relative social comfort: Venezuela's
labor code guarantees the rights of employees and a decent pay, plus the
government coverage of medical care and opportunities for continued
training. Residential construction in line with modern standards is underway
en mass both in the country's industrial centers and in its remote areas,
and the solution to the housing problem already looms on the horizon.
Residences are also being built for Indians, the formerly but no longer
disadvantaged group of population.

Chavez's government diverts up to 30% of the Venezuelan budget to social
spending. A lot is done for the younger generation, and the country is free
from social discrimination. The Ayacucho Foundation awards thousands of
government-funded stipends annually to let Venezuelan students study in
prestigious universities abroad.

The opposition has no trump cards to beat Chavez's socially-oriented
policies. Instead, it paints the frightening picture of Chavez's
transformation into a “perilous communist dictator” and asserts that
removing him from power should be “the mission of genuine democrats”. Money
is poured into the propaganda by the CIA via various NGOs.

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is a key
force behind the workings of the Venezuelan fifth column. USAID coordinates
the dissent movement among Venezuelan students and intellectuals. Eva
Golinger, a renown expert in CIA covert operations in Latin America, says
that over the past several months alone the Venezuelan opposition grabbed a
handsome $50m to destabilize the country and to launch opposition media
campaigns.

Long before the opening of the current elections campaign, the opposition
started to focus on staples like the threat of famine in Venezuela, the
drought, the problems experiences by the country's electric supply grid, and
the rising level of crime across the country which allegedly topped the
corresponding levels in such heavily criminalized countries as Mexico and
Columbia.

The opposition and pro-US media deliberately overlook the Venezuelan
government's accomplishments in the sphere of food security – from the
creation of agro-industrial complexes and peasant cooperatives to the supply
of free meals at schools and the establishment of the nationwide Mercal
discounter network. They pretend to be oblivious to the facts that the
living standards in Venezuela have improved seriously over the period of
Chavez's rule and that these days the Venezuelans' menus are typically
superior to those of the people in the majority of Latin American countries.


Climate fluctuations and the drying of water reservoirs have affected the
functioning of several of Venezuela's hydroelectric plants, the result being
temporary power supply downscaling. In a smear campaign, the opposition made
the problem look like evidence of the government's total inaptness. However,
an agent of the Columbian intelligence service was arrested in Barinas State
shortly thereafter while photographing co-generation plants, hydroelectric
plants, electric power transmission lines, and high voltage stations for the
CIA. The incident helped unmask those who are actually responsible for the
electric power supply disruptions in Venezuela.

The claims that the crime situation in Venezuela is severer than in Mexico,
the country where the drug war accompanied by tens of thousands of
fatalities and attacks on police and army checkpoints is raging, are clearly
at odds with reality. Nor is it fair in this regard to compare Venezuela to
Columbia where the oligarchy has been waging war against the country's
people with the US support since 1948. For a long time, Venezuela has been
suffering from the conflict in Columbia, the country from where the AUC
paramilitary groups, FARC and ELN guerrillas, drug cartel emissaries, and
ordinary criminals are serially penetrating its territory. In a recent
example, SEBIN, the Venezuelan intelligence service, arrested in the
border-zone Táchira state three members of Black Hawks, a Columbian
paramilitary group. The group's hideout was loaded with military and police
uniforms as well as various weaponry including the TS-15 assault rifles used
in the past by the Florida State police. SEBIN maintains that on the eve of
the elections the CIA is sending increasing numbers of terrorist groups to
Venezuela in the framework of a reserve plan to organize political murders
and allegedly spontaneous public unrest and thus to compromise the PSUV-led
alliance.


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



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