Archive for August, 2004

Next step in Venezuela

August 25, 2004

Not much time to write tonight, in case you have not seen Alvaro Vargas LLosa’s article today here it is, don’t agree with many things in it, but…


 


Next steps in Venezuela
Alvaro Vargas Llosa
Wednesday, August 25, 2004

I witnessed the recall referendum firsthand in Venezuela on Aug. 15, and I would suggest that, despite its taking place under very intimidating circumstances and a high degree of government control, it cannot be denied that President Hugo Chávez had enough real popular support to withstand the effort to oust him at the polls. Major soul-searching is now required among Chávez’s foes if they want their efforts to bear fruit in the future.



Let there be no doubt about the nature of that regime. Had it not been for the efforts of more than 3 million Venezuelans who have, through civil resistance, made life difficult for Chávez, Venezuela, the world’s fifth largest oil producer and the U.S.’s third largest supplier, would be on its way to becoming a semi-totalitarian state. After coming to power in 1999, Chávez threw away the constitution and used referendums and ad-hoc elections to replace the standing institutions with a loyal National Assembly, a government-controlled Supreme Court and a subservient electoral tribunal. With the use of thugs — the infamous “Bolivarian Circles” modeled on the Cuban “Committees of the Revolution” — he has intimidated opponents. Two violent incidents with many fatalities have produced no indictments, and there are political prisoners, such as Henrique Capriles, the mayor of Baruta Municipality accused of organizing a demonstration against the Cuban embassy (I tried unsuccessfully to visit him at the headquarters of the DISIP, the feared state-security apparatus).


 


Still, as Chávez proved, he has a considerable social base. Various factors come into play here. By far the most important is the hatred of all things related to the old regime, known as “el puntofijismo,” the name given to the agreements signed by the major parties in 1958 that inaugurated four decades of corrupt democracy in Venezuela. A coterie of private interests tied to the state and, particularly, to the oil industry (nationalized in the 1970s), enjoyed the spoils of a system that deprived the masses of access to capital. The military, bribed with oil money, stayed out of politics, and the people received what little the unproductive system of redistribution could channel to them.



He has also been able — and this is the second factor in his victory Aug. 15 — to unleash a torrent of oil money on the slums of Venezuela through a network of social services he calls "missions" that provide everything from food to educational scholarships. The effort is based on handouts, not on job-creating investments. In fact, the economy is in shambles, having registered a 10 percent drop in GDP in 2003, according to the International Monetary Fund. Thousands of small-sized businesses have closed down. But as long as the oil prices permit Chávez to obtain $20 billion a year, he can fund his populism.\
The last factor in his victory lies with the opposition itself. Acción Democrática and Copei, the two parties that embody the "puntofijismo" era, are dominant, together with other relics such as MAS, despite the presence of new, promising groups, such as Primero Justicia. The opposition made huge mistakes, such as the attempted coup in 2002 and the oil strike in early 2003, that made Chávez the victim and blurred the fact that during his government alone, 5 million people have joined the ranks of the poor. The strike also gave Chávez the pretext to purge the state oil company of all vestiges of independent management. He then turned it into a source of funding for many radical groups in Latin America, from the "piqueteros" in Argentina to the MAS in Bolivia.\
“,1]
);

//–>

One figure says it all: In the last quarter-century of that era, Venezuela accumulated some $300 billion in oil revenue (based on official government data), more than two thirds of Latin America‘s foreign debt in the early1990s. Little of that was used to develop the country, and the people became convinced the rich, white upper classes had stolen their wealth. Chávez, a man of Native American and African descent, was a child of that deeply felt resentment. Rather than dismantle the apparatus that had impoverished the people, he took it to the extreme. That is why he became unpopular after his first two years in office. But since then, the polarization of Venezuelan society has allowed Chávez to position himself again as the champion of the poor against the remnants of the old regime.



He has also been able — and this is the second factor in his victory Aug. 15 — to unleash a torrent of oil money on the slums of
Venezuela through a network of social services he calls “missions” that provide everything from food to educational scholarships. The effort is based on handouts, not on job-creating investments. In fact, the economy is in shambles, having registered a 10 percent drop in GDP in 2003, according to the International Monetary Fund. Thousands of small-sized businesses have closed down. But as long as the oil prices permit Chávez to obtain $20 billion a year, he can fund his populism.



The last factor in his victory lies with the opposition itself. Acción Democrática and Copei, the two parties that embody the “puntofijismo” era, are dominant, together with other relics such as MAS, despite the presence of new, promising groups, such as Primero Justicia. The opposition made huge mistakes, such as the attempted coup in 2002 and the oil strike in early 2003, that made Chávez the victim and blurred the fact that during his government alone, 5 million people have joined the ranks of the poor. The strike also gave Chávez the pretext to purge the state oil company of all vestiges of independent management. He then turned it into a source of funding for many radical groups in
Latin America, from the “piqueteros” in Argentina to the MAS in Bolivia.



This may turn out to be a good thing. It may finally dawn on the opposition that struggle is essentially domestic, and that radical new thinking, as well as new faces, are needed, and that Chávez needs to be attacked for perpetuating, rather than overturning, the old regime. If the opposition learns to live with this defeat, allows the new generation to come to the front and exposes the similarities between Chávez\’s system of oil- related patronage and that of the old regime, it will have a good chance of winning the presidential elections a couple of years from now.\
Alvaro Vargas Llosa is a research fellow at the Center on Peace and Liberty at the Independent Institute. His forthcoming book, "Liberty for Latin America," will be published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux in February.\
\
\http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin\/article.cgi?file=/chronicle\/archive/2004/08/25/EDGMP8D94O\1.DTL\\
“,1]
);

//–>

With the price of oil more than $40 a barrel, Chávez can count on the United States — eager to avoid, in the middle of a presidential election, further price hikes — to accommodate him. After all, he has never stopped shipping oil to the United States (1.5 million barrels a day, according to U.S. Department of Energy) or paying his debts, knowing that his power base depends on oil money.



This may turn out to be a good thing. It may finally dawn on the opposition that struggle is essentially domestic, and that radical new thinking, as well as new faces, are needed, and that Chávez needs to be attacked for perpetuating, rather than overturning, the old regime. If the opposition learns to live with this defeat, allows the new generation to come to the front and exposes the similarities between Chávez’s system of oil- related patronage and that of the old regime, it will have a good chance of winning the presidential elections a couple of years from now.



Alvaro Vargas Llosa is a research fellow at the Center on Peace and
Liberty at the Independent Institute. His forthcoming book, “Liberty for Latin America,” will be published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux in February.

Next step in Venezuela

August 25, 2004

Not much time to write tonight, in case you have not seen Alvaro Vargas LLosa’s article today here it is, don’t agree with many things in it, but…


 


Next steps in Venezuela
Alvaro Vargas Llosa
Wednesday, August 25, 2004

I witnessed the recall referendum firsthand in Venezuela on Aug. 15, and I would suggest that, despite its taking place under very intimidating circumstances and a high degree of government control, it cannot be denied that President Hugo Chávez had enough real popular support to withstand the effort to oust him at the polls. Major soul-searching is now required among Chávez’s foes if they want their efforts to bear fruit in the future.



Let there be no doubt about the nature of that regime. Had it not been for the efforts of more than 3 million Venezuelans who have, through civil resistance, made life difficult for Chávez, Venezuela, the world’s fifth largest oil producer and the U.S.’s third largest supplier, would be on its way to becoming a semi-totalitarian state. After coming to power in 1999, Chávez threw away the constitution and used referendums and ad-hoc elections to replace the standing institutions with a loyal National Assembly, a government-controlled Supreme Court and a subservient electoral tribunal. With the use of thugs — the infamous “Bolivarian Circles” modeled on the Cuban “Committees of the Revolution” — he has intimidated opponents. Two violent incidents with many fatalities have produced no indictments, and there are political prisoners, such as Henrique Capriles, the mayor of Baruta Municipality accused of organizing a demonstration against the Cuban embassy (I tried unsuccessfully to visit him at the headquarters of the DISIP, the feared state-security apparatus).


 


Still, as Chávez proved, he has a considerable social base. Various factors come into play here. By far the most important is the hatred of all things related to the old regime, known as “el puntofijismo,” the name given to the agreements signed by the major parties in 1958 that inaugurated four decades of corrupt democracy in Venezuela. A coterie of private interests tied to the state and, particularly, to the oil industry (nationalized in the 1970s), enjoyed the spoils of a system that deprived the masses of access to capital. The military, bribed with oil money, stayed out of politics, and the people received what little the unproductive system of redistribution could channel to them.



He has also been able — and this is the second factor in his victory Aug. 15 — to unleash a torrent of oil money on the slums of Venezuela through a network of social services he calls "missions" that provide everything from food to educational scholarships. The effort is based on handouts, not on job-creating investments. In fact, the economy is in shambles, having registered a 10 percent drop in GDP in 2003, according to the International Monetary Fund. Thousands of small-sized businesses have closed down. But as long as the oil prices permit Chávez to obtain $20 billion a year, he can fund his populism.\
The last factor in his victory lies with the opposition itself. Acción Democrática and Copei, the two parties that embody the "puntofijismo" era, are dominant, together with other relics such as MAS, despite the presence of new, promising groups, such as Primero Justicia. The opposition made huge mistakes, such as the attempted coup in 2002 and the oil strike in early 2003, that made Chávez the victim and blurred the fact that during his government alone, 5 million people have joined the ranks of the poor. The strike also gave Chávez the pretext to purge the state oil company of all vestiges of independent management. He then turned it into a source of funding for many radical groups in Latin America, from the "piqueteros" in Argentina to the MAS in Bolivia.\
“,1]
);

//–>

One figure says it all: In the last quarter-century of that era, Venezuela accumulated some $300 billion in oil revenue (based on official government data), more than two thirds of Latin America‘s foreign debt in the early1990s. Little of that was used to develop the country, and the people became convinced the rich, white upper classes had stolen their wealth. Chávez, a man of Native American and African descent, was a child of that deeply felt resentment. Rather than dismantle the apparatus that had impoverished the people, he took it to the extreme. That is why he became unpopular after his first two years in office. But since then, the polarization of Venezuelan society has allowed Chávez to position himself again as the champion of the poor against the remnants of the old regime.



He has also been able — and this is the second factor in his victory Aug. 15 — to unleash a torrent of oil money on the slums of
Venezuela through a network of social services he calls “missions” that provide everything from food to educational scholarships. The effort is based on handouts, not on job-creating investments. In fact, the economy is in shambles, having registered a 10 percent drop in GDP in 2003, according to the International Monetary Fund. Thousands of small-sized businesses have closed down. But as long as the oil prices permit Chávez to obtain $20 billion a year, he can fund his populism.



The last factor in his victory lies with the opposition itself. Acción Democrática and Copei, the two parties that embody the “puntofijismo” era, are dominant, together with other relics such as MAS, despite the presence of new, promising groups, such as Primero Justicia. The opposition made huge mistakes, such as the attempted coup in 2002 and the oil strike in early 2003, that made Chávez the victim and blurred the fact that during his government alone, 5 million people have joined the ranks of the poor. The strike also gave Chávez the pretext to purge the state oil company of all vestiges of independent management. He then turned it into a source of funding for many radical groups in
Latin America, from the “piqueteros” in Argentina to the MAS in Bolivia.



This may turn out to be a good thing. It may finally dawn on the opposition that struggle is essentially domestic, and that radical new thinking, as well as new faces, are needed, and that Chávez needs to be attacked for perpetuating, rather than overturning, the old regime. If the opposition learns to live with this defeat, allows the new generation to come to the front and exposes the similarities between Chávez\’s system of oil- related patronage and that of the old regime, it will have a good chance of winning the presidential elections a couple of years from now.\
Alvaro Vargas Llosa is a research fellow at the Center on Peace and Liberty at the Independent Institute. His forthcoming book, "Liberty for Latin America," will be published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux in February.\
\
\http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin\/article.cgi?file=/chronicle\/archive/2004/08/25/EDGMP8D94O\1.DTL\\
“,1]
);

//–>

With the price of oil more than $40 a barrel, Chávez can count on the United States — eager to avoid, in the middle of a presidential election, further price hikes — to accommodate him. After all, he has never stopped shipping oil to the United States (1.5 million barrels a day, according to U.S. Department of Energy) or paying his debts, knowing that his power base depends on oil money.



This may turn out to be a good thing. It may finally dawn on the opposition that struggle is essentially domestic, and that radical new thinking, as well as new faces, are needed, and that Chávez needs to be attacked for perpetuating, rather than overturning, the old regime. If the opposition learns to live with this defeat, allows the new generation to come to the front and exposes the similarities between Chávez’s system of oil- related patronage and that of the old regime, it will have a good chance of winning the presidential elections a couple of years from now.



Alvaro Vargas Llosa is a research fellow at the Center on Peace and
Liberty at the Independent Institute. His forthcoming book, “Liberty for Latin America,” will be published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux in February.

Night of the living dead

August 25, 2004

That’s how I feel tonight as the vultures swoon around the CD to pick up the rot: There was, of course, Salas Romer, challenging Chavez to a full recount and saying “Yo no fui”, AD saying we can’t have a forfeit y “yo tampoco fui” and making the accusations that CANTV’s transmission of the recall results was interrupted at some point without explanation. Then there was COPEI saying I haven’t died ….yet (call a doctor!), and we are also going to the regional elections. The only party missing so far is URD, but I think none of them are still breathing, so they will not make a statement.


A veritable night of the living dead!

On mathematical studies of the recall results part I

August 24, 2004

-In the comments below there are two simulations by ele and Gustavo, both of which claim that they get results of their simulations which agree with the results for the recall vote.


-I have received a Monte Carlo study by some Professors at UCV which reaches a different conclusion. Using data from 2135 centers, they use as the probability of participating the results of the CNE and the probability of voting “Si” the vote for each center based on the results of the 15th. They do 100 simulations using a binomial distribution and reach the following conclusion:


 


i)                    The probability of 236 centers having duplicate “Si” votes, as in the results, is less than 1%.


ii)                   The probability of having 6 centers having triplicate “Si” votes is less than 25%


iii)                 The probability of having one center having four machines with the same vote is less than 5%.


 


-A study of the results for the Actas per Center, when compared to the exit polls shows a low probability for the exit poll sample coming from the population of the actas.


 


More on all of these as I have more information or I am allowed to say more.

No change at (in)Justice

August 24, 2004

An important change took place this week in Venezuela which should not go unnoticed. President Hugo Chavez changed his old Minister of the Interior and Justice Lucas Rincon (below left), famous for saying on the evening of April 11th. 2002 “The President was asked to resign and he accepted it” earning him the nickname Pinocchio, for Jesse Chacon who particiapted in the murders of innocent civilians on Nov. 27th. 1992 during the failed coup (below right)



A friend has now corrected me, telling me that despite claims in newspapers, teh guy below is not Jesse Chacon and above is the picture he sent of Chacon that same day after the takeover of Canal Ocho. he was there but did not pose for the icture below over the civilian guard at the TV station. I stand corrected.


No change at (in)Justice

August 24, 2004

An important change took place this week in Venezuela which should not go unnoticed. President Hugo Chavez changed his old Minister of the Interior and Justice Lucas Rincon (below left), famous for saying on the evening of April 11th. 2002 “The President was asked to resign and he accepted it” earning him the nickname Pinocchio, for Jesse Chacon who particiapted in the murders of innocent civilians on Nov. 27th. 1992 during the failed coup (below right)



A friend has now corrected me, telling me that despite claims in newspapers, teh guy below is not Jesse Chacon and above is the picture he sent of Chacon that same day after the takeover of Canal Ocho. he was there but did not pose for the icture below over the civilian guard at the TV station. I stand corrected.


One way dialogues

August 24, 2004

These imaginary dialogues could have been part of the comments section of this blog:


-January 2004, Juan Chavista and Pepe Opposition meet to have coffee:


 


JuanCh: You see, I knew there was fraud, Chavez is saying it.


PepeOpp: Come on Juan, just because Chavez says it does not make it true.


JuanCh: But you have to admit the signatures have the same calligraphy so it needs to be investigated.


PepeOpp: But the international observers saw the person gathering the signatures writing the names


JuanCh: Didn’t you see the four cases Chávez showed on Sunday.


PepeOpp: That does not prove anything; it’s only a small sample.


JuanCh: Let’s do an audit of all the signatures


PepeOpp: That’s ridiculous and a waste of time.


JuanCh: It isn’t a waste of time, if it clears the air.


PepeOpp: But a sample will tell you the truth.


JuanCh: But Rodriguez said a sample was not valid.


PepeOpp: What does Rodriguez knows about statistics, he is a psychiatrist.


JuanCh: You guys just have to be patient, what’s the rush?


PepeOpp: The rush is this is going to take forever and that’s not good for the country.


JuanCh: Why don’t you accept the truth, there was fraud and you did not get the signatures.


 


-August 2004, Juan Chavista and Pepe Opposition meet to have an arepa:


 


PepeOpp: You see, I knew there was fraud, the CD is saying it.


JuanCh: Come on Pepe, just because the CD says it does not make it true.


PepeOpp: But you have to admit the results are funny, so it needs to be investigated.


JuanCh: But the international observers saw the lines of Chavistas and said the results match.


PepeOpp: Didn’t you see the coincidences and the exit polls the CD showed.


JuanCh:  does not prove anything, it’s only a small sample and who believes in exit polls.


PepeOpp: Let’s do an audit of all the votes


JuanCh: It’s ridiculous and a waste of time.


PepeOpp: It isn’t a waste of time, if it clears the air.


JuanCh: But a sample will tell you the truth.


PepeOpp: How do you know where the fraud took place and if the boxes were changed?


PepeOpp: You guys just have to be patient, what’s the rush?


JuanCh: The rush is this is going to take forever and that’s not good for the country.


PepeOpp: Why don’t you accept the truth, there was fraud and the “Si” won.

One way dialogues

August 24, 2004

These imaginary dialogues could have been part of the comments section of this blog:


-January 2004, Juan Chavista and Pepe Opposition meet to have coffee:


 


JuanCh: You see, I knew there was fraud, Chavez is saying it.


PepeOpp: Come on Juan, just because Chavez says it does not make it true.


JuanCh: But you have to admit the signatures have the same calligraphy so it needs to be investigated.


PepeOpp: But the international observers saw the person gathering the signatures writing the names


JuanCh: Didn’t you see the four cases Chávez showed on Sunday.


PepeOpp: That does not prove anything; it’s only a small sample.


JuanCh: Let’s do an audit of all the signatures


PepeOpp: That’s ridiculous and a waste of time.


JuanCh: It isn’t a waste of time, if it clears the air.


PepeOpp: But a sample will tell you the truth.


JuanCh: But Rodriguez said a sample was not valid.


PepeOpp: What does Rodriguez knows about statistics, he is a psychiatrist.


JuanCh: You guys just have to be patient, what’s the rush?


PepeOpp: The rush is this is going to take forever and that’s not good for the country.


JuanCh: Why don’t you accept the truth, there was fraud and you did not get the signatures.


 


-August 2004, Juan Chavista and Pepe Opposition meet to have an arepa:


 


PepeOpp: You see, I knew there was fraud, the CD is saying it.


JuanCh: Come on Pepe, just because the CD says it does not make it true.


PepeOpp: But you have to admit the results are funny, so it needs to be investigated.


JuanCh: But the international observers saw the lines of Chavistas and said the results match.


PepeOpp: Didn’t you see the coincidences and the exit polls the CD showed.


JuanCh:  does not prove anything, it’s only a small sample and who believes in exit polls.


PepeOpp: Let’s do an audit of all the votes


JuanCh: It’s ridiculous and a waste of time.


PepeOpp: It isn’t a waste of time, if it clears the air.


JuanCh: But a sample will tell you the truth.


PepeOpp: How do you know where the fraud took place and if the boxes were changed?


PepeOpp: You guys just have to be patient, what’s the rush?


JuanCh: The rush is this is going to take forever and that’s not good for the country.


PepeOpp: Why don’t you accept the truth, there was fraud and the “Si” won.

The arrogance of Smartmatic

August 23, 2004

A little bit arrogance of Smartmatic President Mugica to “offer’ the democratic Coordinator the possibility of auditing the real ballots with the results of the machines. This is what the CD requested of the CNE early last week and never even received a reply. How can Mr. Mugica offer something that the CNE said would not happen?


Mr. Mugica said in his letter to Enrique Mendoza:


 


“We will audit as soon as possible the contents and results of a certain number of voting machines with their ballot boxes, chosen specifically by the CD at its best criteria”


 


Can he deliver? How come he can deliver more than the Carter Center and the OAS? Is he more powerful than the CNE? Why now, not last week? Or should I follow that Spanish proverb: “Piensa mal y acertaras” (Be suspicious and you will be right)

The arrogance of Smartmatic

August 23, 2004

A little bit arrogance of Smartmatic President Mugica to “offer’ the democratic Coordinator the possibility of auditing the real ballots with the results of the machines. This is what the CD requested of the CNE early last week and never even received a reply. How can Mr. Mugica offer something that the CNE said would not happen?


Mr. Mugica said in his letter to Enrique Mendoza:


 


“We will audit as soon as possible the contents and results of a certain number of voting machines with their ballot boxes, chosen specifically by the CD at its best criteria”


 


Can he deliver? How come he can deliver more than the Carter Center and the OAS? Is he more powerful than the CNE? Why now, not last week? Or should I follow that Spanish proverb: “Piensa mal y acertaras” (Be suspicious and you will be right)