Within Hours, Chavez's Landslide Defeat Became Victory
Jack Sweeney
Monday, Aug. 16, 2004
What a difference four hours can make in Venezuelan politics.
At 9 p.m. Sunday, exit polls conducted by the Democratic Coordinator
(CD) showed President Hugo Chavez losing Venezuela´s first-ever presidential
recall referendum by a lopsided margin of approximately 60 percent to 40 percent. Other
exit polls showed Chavez losing as well.
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However, at 3:47 a.m. Monday the National Electoral Council (CNE)
officially pronounced Chavez the winner by an equally lopsided 58.25 percent to
41.74 percent, based on a count of 94.49 percent of the automated acts transmitted by some
9,000 voting centers to the CNE.
According to the CNE´s official numbers, Chavez won 4.99 million votes, about 1.2 million votes more than he won in the 1998 presidential elections, when
the abstention rate topped 56 percent. The CNE also put the abstention rate at 40 percent.
Some CD leaders immediately charged that the government committed a massive
electoral fraud. However, if a fraud was indeed committed within the CNE,
the CD could have difficulty proving it.
Senior CD officials such as Miranda state Gov. Enrique Mendoza have not
made any public declarations as of 11:30 a.m. local time. However, if the CD
cannot prove that fraud occurred and Chavez´s CNE-declared victory is
ratified by the Organization of American States (OAS) and Carter Center
for Democracy, it´s likely that the CD will implode.
Meanwhile, Chavez lost no time proclaiming his victory to the international
community. He also declared the referendum's results validated his mandate
to advance his Bolivarian Revolution.
If the CNE's numbers hold up, the question is what happened to the political
opposition. Was the CD guilty of hubris? Are its leaders incompetent? Did
the opposition underestimate Chavez? In our view, the answer is all three
of the above.
The political opposition in Venezuela has always underestimated Chavez.
This isn't a gratuitous criticism if one considers that the Clinton and Bush
administrations with all their supposed resources at the State Department
and other U.S. government entities also have consistently underestimated
him.
$1,200 a Vote
Chavez might not have committed fraud. However, he did buy the election in a
way, spending at least $6 billion on social 'missions' that
boosted his favorable ratings from 28 percent to 40 percent in only four months.
Caracas-based analyst Michael Rowan calculates that Chavez won close to 5
million votes at a cost of about $1,200 a vote in a country where
two-thirds of the population earn less than $800 a month per capita and the
remaining third less than $400 a month.
With oil prices topping $45 a barrel, Chavez has plenty of cash to continue
spending on the poor to retain their support, possibly assuring his
re-election in 2006 for a second six-year term in power.
Chavez also has lots of ready cash to spend on his international Bolivarian
causes in Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and other countries.
Bush's Headache
The Bush administration, meanwhile, has a major geopolitical headache. The
State Department was quietly hoping the referendum would solve Venezuela's
democratic crisis by resulting in Chavez's resignation. Instead Chavez now
has a re-legitimized democratic mandate, and State doesn't have any fallback
options except to congratulate him.
If the results of the recall referendum are validated by the OAS and Carter
Center (and we think it´s likely they will be), Chavez would have a
democratic mandate he likely will use to continue his anti-U.S. foreign
policies in Latin America, Likely U.S. casualties of these Bolivarian
policies will include the Free Trade Area of the Americas, the Andean expansion of Plan Colombia and
other U.S. interests in the region.
Chavez's referendum victory is a huge boost for the expanding
Castro-Chavez-Lula axis in Latin America. It will invigorate extremist
nationalst groups in many countries. Chavez's win is also a major security
setback for Colombia, particularly if Chavez now starts to expand
Venezuela's military capabilities.
An interesting factoid: The number and percentage of votes CNE gives Chavez
is nearly the mirror image of votes Coordinadora claims were yes votes for
recall. Some foreign observers (press) think the government did commit electronic
fraud, but they also think Gaviria and Carter will validate the results as
honest and transparent.
Jack Sweeney writes for Hudson Institute, a think tank in Washington.
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