The Devil's Excrement





  The Devil's Excrement
Observations focused on the problems of an underdeveloped country, Venezuela, with some serendipity about the world (orchids, techs, science, investments, politics) at large. A famous Venezuelan, Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo, referred to oil as the devil's excrement. For countries, easy wealth appears indeed to be the sure path to failure. Venezuela might be a clear example of that.
Last updated:
4/2/2007; 9:57:50 PM

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Saturday, November 11, 2006



While I have no idea at this time who is ahead in the polls, the publication of results by unknown or obscure polling firms giving a strong lead to the autocrat, simply tells me that someone indeed knows something I don’t and it can’t be very pretty for the failed revolution. You see, despite all of the negative press, most well known Venezuelan polling firms are quite good at getting the numbers right, even if they can never get the level of abstention anywhere near the correct level.

This does not mean that polling in Venezuela is easy. On the contrary, it is quite hard for a number of reasons, including fear, atypical educational levels across the lower social strata of the population, differential behavior between urban and rural areas and lack of personal safety in some areas where polling needs to be done. Add to that the fact that abstention is likely to be quite different among pro-Chavez, anti-Chavez and the undecided and the 2006 election is likely to be one of the most difficult to predict with accuracy in the country’s history.

Thus, when unknown and inexperienced pollsters like Zogby or Evans and McDonough are all of a sudden splashed all over the news and their results reprinted in pro-Chavez ads. And when you have to yet hear from Chavez’ traditional pollsters, you have to wonder. In fact a look at the latter’s webpage shows few press releases in the last two years and none of them on the electoral area.

But the signaling is all over the place, somebody is definitely very worried, as the usual tactics than the intolerant revolutionaries had accustomed us to, no longer seem to work to stop the opposition candidate. Only about eight weeks ago, most of Rosales’ rallies or visits to barrios were met by your customary band of thugs and paid muscle, intended to scare away the opposition candidate much like the new Venezuelan Ambassador to the UN was scared away from coming close and campaign among the poor in 2000.

Except this time it does not work. For one, it is getting hard to volunteer the thugs and paying them daily was certainly expensive and obvious when the same faces appeared everywhere, so that the Chavista bands became in most cases a specter of their old self and they also had to confront increasingly larger crowds of Rosales’ supporters that made them look somewhat ridiculous. In addition, Rosales was not like Arias Cardenas, a newcomer to politics, but a man with a plan and that plan included going out and getting in touch with the people day after day, as the main strategy to gain the support behind him. And it’s working very well.

Thus, the strategy shifted from trying to stop things from the bottom to trying to command them from the top a la Seniat or Ramirez in PDVSA. And the signaling is very clear, Chavismo is very worried, they must know more than we know about the numbers, although we can see the difference in the size of the crowds. Compare the clean, red-shirted groups of Chavistas, limited in size, with the massive rallies that Rosales holds everywhere and the size of criwds even in towns I did not even know existed like in this picture in Alek’s page, from San Francisco, Estado Zulia.

But the strategy seems to have backfired, with polls that were giving Chavez a lead a scant ten days ago showing him losing ground fast in response to the widespread abuse of public workers’ rights at too many institutions by an electorate that is already unhappy about Chavez and his revolution even if maybe still dubious of whether or not to go and vote for Rosales.

A second strategy has been to suggest the image of a violent opposition, as if it had any weapons or was calling for people to be armed and ready like the Government certainly is. We hear daily warnings about how the Government will be forceful at any attempts at unrest or protest of the results of the elections as if it were the opposition’s fault how the vote has been set up in order to make the process have as little transparency as possible.

If the Government wanted quick and easy acceptance of the results on Dec. 3d. it should ask the CNE to withdraw the treacherous fingerprint machines and the counting of 100% of all of the paper ballots and not daily press conferences threatening the opposition if they do not abide by whatever number comes out of the CNE no matter how outrageous it may be. In fact, today Rosales challenged Chavez to ask for the removal of the fingerprint machines, which are coincidentally going to be used only in eight of the top nine states in terms of public employees in the nation.

And then we are also thrown the threat that the Armed Forces are “Rojo, rojo…rojito” as that institution has more cracks than the earth’s mantle. But we are supposed to believe it is united behind the revolution, when there is clearly lots of infighting within the various forces. And we see it daily in the many Generals that speak publicly contradicting each other. Did you know that the Commander General of the Navy was named five months ago, but has yet t be sworn in? Or that the General in charge of one of the largest regional commands of the National Guard has refused to hand over the position to his successor? Such is unity under the revolution.

And the divisions are repeated daily. Rosales asks to meet with the Chiefs of Staff and one General accepts, but the Minister of Defense says he will not meet with him. Another General says that the Armed Forces have to be “Roja, roja…rojita” only to be disallowed by the same Minister of Defense. Meanwhile, nobody knows what the Air Force Generals think, as they have few planes that fly and are still awaiting for their new toys, while the rank and file of the Army wonder whether the reserve created by Chavez is one day supposed to be the new country’s army.

And it is in fact quite scary to see those divisions and the infighting within the military. In 1992 when Hugo Chavez staged his infamous coup, most Venezuelans thought that the era of military coups and military men trying to overthrow Governments was over. Chavez brought it back and while it led him to power, it also revived the ambitions of many of his colleagues, such as the Zen-loving Minister of Defense, who reportedly believes he could be a much better President than the autocrat.

And maybe that is also what worries some of the leaders of the Chavez administration, whether what is stake may be more than simply Chavez versus the opposition if things get stirred up on Dec. 3d. While Vice-President Rangel has kept a cool stance, others have even accused people in Government to be conspiring against Chavez.

And then of course there are the armed groups that say they refuse to accept a defeat of Chavez on Dec. 3d., introducing a potential source of violence and conflict after the results are out.

And therein lies the danger of suggesting erroneously that one side or the other is winning by a landslide. We all lose in the end. In the absence of transparency in the voting process, the losing side will refuse to believe the outcome, whatever it may be. (Remember the Chavistas complaining about the fingerprint machines in the special Carrizal election?) And there are signs that even Chavez may understand this, as even he raised the possibility of his loss the other day saying that he would hand over power if he lost. (See it, to believe it.)

Hopefully, any potential conflict will be resolved by the politicians and not by the military even if in this Government it is sometimes hard to differentiate them. The alternative is to go into even more unknown territory than another six years of the silly revolution signify.

But it’s cool to see the usual suspects squirm and worry anyway.


1:17:59 AM    comment []



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