The Chavez legacy, however, includes much more than animosity between rich and poor, between left and right.
Chavez played a pivotal role in bringing the plight of Latin America's impoverished people to the top of the political agenda.
It was as if the former
paratrooper grabbed a continent by the lapels and shouted "You must
fight against poverty!" And the continent listened.
Frida Ghitis
Even the people who
vehemently disagreed with Chavez's neosocialist, populist ideology
realized that economic inequality required urgent attention.
In the years after he
came to power, aggressive anti-poverty programs have been launched in a
number of Latin American countries, with impressive success.
Chavez improved the lot
of the poor in Venezuela, and he had an impact on the reduction of
inequality elsewhere in the region. But in the process, he deeply
undermined Venezuelan democracy, and he created a model of
authoritarianism that other autocrats copied, harming democracy in many
countries.
His anti-American,
anti-opposition policies gained credence at home when the opposition
staged a coup attempt in 2002 that Chavez said was supported by the U.S.
His histrionic pretense
that he could "smell sulfur" when he took the podium after "the devil"
George Bush at the United Nations, turned him into a global media
superstar, and a prominent player in an anti-Washington alliance with
Iran's regime. He provided a lifeline to the Castro regime in Cuba, and
ostentatiously made friends with America's foes, such as Libya's Moammar Gadhafi and Syria's Bashar al-Assad.
The social programs he
developed brought housing and health care, and they helped feed the
poor. He helped raise living standards and inspired millions of
passionate supporters. The intensity of support was regularly stoked by
the constant attacks against the rich, "the oligarchs," as he called
them, and the United States, or "the empire."
But the unorthodox
economic methods of his "21st century socialism" and his "Bolivarian"
revolution, distorted the economy and, in fact, created less economic
growth and less prosperity than other countries in Latin America. And a
strong case has been made that Venezuela, a country with enormous oil
wealth, should have grown far more than it did during the Chavez years,
when businesses were regularly confiscated by the government and the
vital oil industry was put in the hands of political supporters instead
of technical experts.
Hugo Chavez's legacy
Venezuela's future after Chavez
The economic legacy is one of sky-high inflation, chronic shortages and dried up investment. Venezuela's economy has grown, but more slowly than that of Peru, Brazil or Panama, probably more slowly than it might have.
On the political front,
Chavez empowered the poor, making them rightly feel that they mattered
in system that had been controlled by the rich. But before long, he
manipulated the system to a degree that democracy started thinning to
little more than a brittle veneer.
Chavez unsuccessfully
tried to take power through a coup attempt in 1992. In 1999, he won the
presidency at the ballot box. He kept the top job until the day he died.
Immediately after taking
office, he convened a constitutional assembly. The new constitution
mandated a maximum of two terms in office. He called elections again and
won a second time, counting that as the start of his two terms. After
winning the presidency for a third time in 2006, he called a referendum
abolishing the presidential term limit and said he might remain
president until 2030. He won for a fourth time last year. Had mortality
not interfered, Chavez could have become the eternal president.
That manipulation of the
electoral system has been one of the most pernicious legacies of
Chavismo. In Nicaragua, for example, President Daniel Ortega, facing a
constitutionally mandated end to his presidency, took a page from the
Chavez playbook, packing the Supreme Court, which ruled that term limits
do not apply to the president.
Chavez improved the lot of the poor in Venezuela ... but in the process, he deeply undermined Venezuelan democracy
Frida Ghitis
Frida Ghitis
Other Latin American
presidents have imitated Chavez populist undemocratic style,
intimidating opponents, restricting the media and subverting the
judiciary.
Human Rights Watch documented the steady erosion
of democratic freedoms over the 14 years of Chavez's tenure, concluding
that Chavez and his supporters built "a system in which the government
has free rein to threaten and punish Venezuelans who interfere with
their political agenda, creating ever greater risks for judges,
journalists and human rights activists."
Chavez and his backers
took over practically all the levers of power, all the while claiming
democratic legitimacy. They allowed the opposition to continue
functioning, which along with the U.S. provided them with a foil to
blame for the country's woes.
The judiciary, in
particular, became a tool of the government, used for political purposes
even as the crime rates spiraled, homicide rates reached unprecedented
levels and most crimes went unsolved. The government decided to stop
keeping crime statistics, but one private organization counted more than 118,000 homicides
since Chavez took office. Experts said one of the problems was the
justice system, which, like other parts of government, had become more
political than professional.
In one infamous case,
Judge Maria Lourdes Afiuni granted bail to a banker charged with
breaking currency controls while he awaited trial. In his weekly
television show, Chavez declared "The judge has to pay!" She spent three years in a jail where, she said, she was raped, awaiting trial on trumped-up corruption charges.
Chavez shut down
critical media outlets and threatened others with closure, refusing to
renew broadcast licenses of some of his most powerful critics.
In recent years, the
appeal of Chavismo started waning in Latin America. Other less divisive,
more democratic, and more effective approaches became more popular.
With Chavez off the stage in Venezuela, a number of questions hang in the air.
The acrimony of his rule
has left a dangerously divided Venezuela facing serious social and
economic challenges, with the latest accusations by Maduro adding fuel
to those hot embers. Chavez leaves behind a country where the poor have
been empowered and society has been divided, and a continent where
alternatives to his model look more appealing than ever.
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