By Andres Oppenheimer
The
conventional wisdom is that President Hugo Chávez’s victory in Venezuela’s
elections will increase his influence in Latin America, and that it may
encourage other presidents to seek indefinite reelections. But there are good
reasons to think that Chávez’s political momentum will be short lived, and
geographically limited.
After
Chávez’s Sunday victory, which will allow him to rule until 2019, most of his
supporters and critics seem to agree that his victory will re-energize his
followers throughout Latin America.
In a
telephone interview from Caracas, Venezuela’s vice minister of foreign
relations Jorge Valero told me that Chávez’s victory will mark a turning point
in Latin America’s current history.
“This
election will have a much more profound impact on the continent than what the
Bolivarian Revolution has already had,” Valero told me. “This is a revolution,
and this is a victory that may even impact other continents, such as Europe.”
Chávez’s
victory will “give a new impulse” to several Latin American diplomatic groups
that were born since the Venezuelan president took office 14 years ago, such as
the Venezuela-led ALBA group that is also made up of leftist countries, such as
Cuba, Bolivia and Nicaragua; Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) and the
recently created Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC),
Valero said.
The start
of Chávez’s third term in 2013 will coincide with Cuba taking over the rotating
presidency of UNASUR, which is now held by Chile. That will be only one of many
factors that will help bolster Venezuela’s diplomatic influence, he said.
Will the
fact that a significant 45 percent of Venezuelans voted for the opposition —
despite an uneven race in which Chávez virtually controlled television time and
used massive state resources to buy votes — lead the president to reach out to
the opposition, or will he radicalize his revolution, I asked Valero.
“The
message from the Venezuelan people is that we need to move forward in the
construction of an egalitarian society,” Valero said.
Elsewhere
in Latin America, the outcome of Venezuela’s elections is likely to embolden
other presidents — such as Argentina’s president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
— to change their constitutions and seek indefinite reelections, as well as to
step up efforts to clamp down on critical media, the Spanish daily El Pais said
Monday. Many leading Latin American analysts voiced similar views in recent
days.
My opinion:
Chávez will undoubtedly get a political boost from his election victory at home
and abroad, but his momentum will not compare to the clout he had a few years
ago.
First, one
of the most remarkable things of Venezuela’s Sunday election is that opposition
leader Henrique Capriles won about 45 percent of the vote — much more than any
predecessor — although Chávez had a “captive vote” of millions of public
employees and recipients of government subsidies, as well as a near total
control of television time.
Despite 14
years of near absolute powers, Chávez is much weaker today than he was in the
2006 presidential elections, when the opposition got only 36 percent of the
vote.
Second, all
politics is local, and Chávez’s victory will not automatically translate into a
growing club of presidents-for-life. In a few months, Chávez’s victory will be
a distant memory in most countries.
Third, and
most important, Chávez’s influence at home and abroad is directly proportional
to world oil prices, and there are no signs that oil prices will soar anytime
soon.
When Chávez
took office, oil was at $9 a barrel. When oil prices jumped to nearly $150 a
barrel in 2008, Chávez reached his peak, traveling around the world giving away
petro-dollars to boost his narcissist-Leninist model, and seeking a seat at the
United Nations Security Council.
Now, with
oil prices back to about $100 a barrel, Chávez will have to spend much of his
time taking care of domestic problems, such as fighting pressures to carry out
a massive devaluation of the currency after the Dec. 16 state elections,
controlling runaway inflation, lowering record crime rates, and ending
electricity shortages that are politically embarrassing in one of the world’s
top oil exporters.
Venezuela’s
difficult economic situation, alongside a gradually growing opposition, and
Chávez’s own uncertain health will keep Chávez from significantly stepping up
his international activism. Barring an unexpected rise of oil prices, he will
be too busy trying to keep the lights on at home.
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