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Venezuela: Revolution, party and a new international
By Luis Bilbao, translated exclusively for Links by Federico Fuentes
Venezuela has entered a decisive phase of its revolutionary process, which has advanced rapidly, and without pause, since 1999. The failed attempt to reform the constitution in the December 2, 2007, referendum opened up a conjuncture of sharp contradictions in the short and medium term and modified the institutional framework in which this period will develop; but it does not modify the content of the confrontation underway. The forces of the revolution will be unleashed, along with those of the counterrevolution.
Expressed in 69 articles, the reform had four objectives as its central aim: to transfer political power to the councils of popular power (workers’ councils, peasant councils, student councils, etc); to promote and institutionalise the existence of popular militias; reorder the national design of the state (new geometry of power); and provoke a new and more dramatic transference of wealth in favour of the working class and the people as a whole. In summary: the dismantling of the bourgeois state and the beginning of the construction of a state of the workers, peasants and the whole of the people.
The
electoral defeat will change the form and perhaps the rhythm of this march,
nevertheless, the transition towards socialism will elevate itself to a
qualitatively superior level in relation to what we have lived through during
the last eight years. [1]
Never
so starkly has the dialectic of reform-revolution been evident. Never before
has the contradiction between means and ends been so strident. Starting from
the certainty that [Venezuela’s President Hugo] Chavez will maintain a line of
intransigent confrontation in the face of the opposition bloc, behind which
operates the White House, two unknown factors will become clearer: the
importance of the level of abstention (that is, the percentage of the
population who remain apathetic and have not joined the ranks of the
revolution) and whether the opposition will hold off or not from resorting to
the only recourse they have left: violence.
Inversely
to all other previous examples, the revolution in
With
the eruption of the new government, this power entrenched itself in the state
as it was composed – or, better said, decomposed. Throughout this period the
inherent contradictions were expressed through the figure of the head of state
and government, Hugo Chavez, in a never before seen situation in the history of
social struggles. The reforms as a whole -- often made through pragmatic paths
that led in a direction contrary to that sought after – were only foundations
on which to raise this revolutionary project.
In
different latitudes, individuals prone to developing concepts elaborated and
stated by others for different circumstances, but incapable of taking as their
starting point living phenomena, understanding them and responding to them, saw
this situation as a repetition of ``dual power’’. A repetition sui generis
of the situation that
It
might seem like the tiniest of differences on the theoretical level, but this
crucial error (that takes the appearance of a theoretical elaboration, but in
almost all cases had as its foundations an unfortunate combination of myopia
and cowardice), created a sectarian dynamic that rapidly transformed itself
into counterrevolutionary positions, manifested
in calls to vote against the constitutional reform, or the height of inconsistency entering as
secret fractions, gnashing their teeth,
the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), the party organised under the
impulse and initiative of Chavez. In the least grave cases of this mortal deviation,
vanguard groups and cadres stood firmly in the rearguard, playing the role of a
deadweight, acting against the revolutionary impulse.
No
matter how you look at it, the fact is, that the political phenomenon underway
in Venezuela is a revolution, without a doubt, whose social roots lie in the Caracazo
of 1989, but which, due to the combination of the actual social formation of
the country and the historic international moment in which it is situated, has
developed within the bourgeois institutional system; with a powerful but
atomised social movement, where the workers’ movement is not present in an
organic manner; without a party in a strict sense of the word and with the
unusual gravitation around an individual figure to provide definition of sense
and rhythm with which the class struggle advances.
It
is no coincidence that those groups and individuals who, with irresponsible
superficiality, condemn a supposed cult of personality on the part of Chavez,
are the same ones who refuse to commit themselves to constructing a
revolutionary force in the given circumstances, facilitating the intervention
of groups and individuals with social and/or political interests contrary to a
revolution ... within official political militancy, as well as in the government
itself. Considering all differences, an analogy can be made with the conduct of
infantile leftists in Argentina who, when the possibility existed to construct
a political instrument of the masses out of the Central de Trabajadores de la Argentina (CTA, Argentine Workers Centre), refused to commit themselves to this
process, only to afterwards condemn the outcome of that attempt, where the
absence of those who call themselves revolutionaries contributed to tipping the
balance of forces in favour of the reformist and conciliatory individuals and
structures.
But
the same did not occur in
Revolution
and violence
Although
there has not been a lack of violent episodes over the last eight years –
including regular assassinations of peasants,
a coup, sabotage of the petroleum industry and innumerable failed attempts
against the life of Chavez – the transformations that have occurred in the
political landscape, the relation of forces between classes, and the state
apparatus, have occurred in peace and
within the framework of democratic institutions.
This
prolonged phase, during which profound transformations have occurred, has led
to a belief that a revolution can be concluded without clashing frontally with
the class enemy that exists within and outside the country’s borders. But such
a similar illusion was not part of the plans of Chavez and his closest team,
who from the first moment took up the task of winning ground within the armed
forces, renewing armaments, enlisting defence plans in the face of possible
invasions and other forms of territorial aggression, and above all, the
formation of revolutionary popular militias, known as the reserves, which today
organise some one million armed men and women.
It
is not only legitimate, but absolutely correct, to make the biggest feasible
effort to postpone for the maximum time possible a frontal clash with the
enemy. Of course, this can only be said if at the same time not a single moment
is wasted to raise the political consciousness of society in regards to the
constant threat of imperialism and its local partners, at the same time as
organising a revolutionary armed force capable of confronting and defeating
this inexorable challenge.
In
this sense, by winning more time, two key factors can be achieved: one, the
conquest of more and more popular contingents – workers, peasants, students,
professionals, small producers and urban and rural traders – to the ranks of
the revolution or, which in essence is the same thing, diminish to the maximum
extent possible the social ranks of the enemy; two, pose the confrontation in
the sphere of the Latin American territorial and political terrain, that is, if
on the one hand a different relationship of forces against imperialism is
created, then on the other there is posed the necessity of making all the
necessary tactical steps forward to synchronise the unequal march of the
processes that are unfolding in the region.
The
position adopted by ex-general and former minister of defence Raul Baduel
accelerated suddenly the march towards a bellicose confrontation. It is obvious
that Baduel’s identification of the constitutional reform as a coup, along with
his call for a No vote, imply a formal alignment with imperialism and its war
plans against the socialist Bolivarian Revolution.[2]
Even
all the effort in the world will not be sufficient to postpone this
confrontation. In
The
old debate between ``armed struggle’’ or ``peaceful road’’ has now been
surpassed by this restating in a new international and regional context,
summarised in the pressing urgency to organise the masses into revolutionary
parties and to prepare ourselves in all spheres so that, due to the massive
nature and military capacity of the peoples, the violence is postponed and
minimised as much as possible.
For
reasons everyone should be able to comprehend, Critica has a debt with
developing this essential debate at a theoretical level. However, this is not
true regarding the political application
of this strategy. It should not be necessary to underscore that the historic
challenge facing us requires, now more than ever, to put the charlatans,
reformists and infantile leftists in their places, through arduous theoretical
work, as part of spearheading and being able to guarantee overcoming the
formidable tasks ahead.
The
United Socialist Party of
Since
the beginning of 2007, Chavez has affirmed without evasion the necessity of all
revolutionary organisations to dissolve in order to pave the way towards a
united party, of the masses, for the socialist revolution. As is known, the
three largest organisations that have accompanied Chavez and his Movimiento Quinta República (MVR, Movement for the
The
fact is that 5,770,000 citizens signed up as aspirant militants to the PSUV,
beginning the process of organising the party over this base.
As
the November edition of America XXI reads:
``The process of election of delegates to the Founding
Congress was completed in October… [with] 1674 delegates elected from the
Socialist Circumscriptions (CS), made up of between 8 and 12 Socialist
Battalions, which in turn elected seven members (spokesperson, alternative
spokesperson and five heads of commissions) to the CS…Although the realisation
[of the congress] will be difficult, the objective is that these three
instances act simultaneously, in a never before seen process of exchange
between the grassroots and the delegates in order to debate and vote on the
essential documents put to the consideration of the Congress: the Declaration
of Principles, Program and Statutes. [4]
Through a suitable combination of congress plenaries,
meetings in different regions, and report backs from delegates with debates in
their corresponding circumscription, plus the simultaneous functioning of the
Socialist Battalions, there will be an attempt to reach the maximum possible
level of democratic participation of the whole membership. The most modern
technologies of communication will contribute to the objective of putting
information at the disposition of everyone and channel the debates in both
directions: from the grassroots to the delegates and vice versa, who will have
at their disposition the use of a web page, email and mobile telephones.
No
technical resource will be able to overcome the impact of the absence of the
workers’ movement as an organised force, influencing and imposing its mark as a
class in the functioning of this massive organisation. At the same time, no one
can dodge the absence of a tradition of revolutionary mass organising, to which
has to be added a opposing tradition: that of Accion Democratica (AD,
Democratic Action), which for decades was sowed in consciousness through a
methodology at the service of capital and an established political structure.
The
crucial fact that the impulse for the construction of the PSUV came from
Chavez, and afterwards was articulated through functionaries from different
spheres of government, will also weigh in an ambivalent manner on this historic
birth. Nevertheless, until now, the dialectic established firstly between
Chavez and the thousands of promoters, then the millions of aspirants and
finally the whole of the grassroots and middle cadres has prevailed.
All
of this will reach a boiling point with the realisation of the congress.
Regardless of whatever faults there are in the results that emerge [out of the
congress], the workers, the people as whole – especially the youth – that is,
the whole of the country, will have taken an immense leap forward. The
championing in word and deed of the notion of the party, at the beginning of
the 21st century and following the traumatic collapse of the
political apparatuses that at one stage were parties only to be later
metamorphosed in order to adapt to the global capitalist system, is probably
the most transendental contribution that the Bolivarian Revolution has produced
up until now.”
In
effect, the championing of the notion of the revolutionary party is an immense
leap forward, and not only, nor principally, for Venezuelan revolutionaries and
the Venezuelan masses. Now, more so than at the beginning of the Bolivarian
Revolution, in this conjuncture the full, absolutely transparent participation
of all genuine revolutionary militants from any country is vital. Given the
conditions in which it is born, the PSUV will immediately face innumerable
risks of all types.
We
are dealing with, no more and no less, the same risks that have beset all and
every true revolution. Confronted with this, there is no room for doubt
regarding the decision that any Marxist revolutionary should take: confront
these risks, armed with their theoretical arsenal, their practical experience
and their resolve to relentlessly struggle against capitalism.
Therefore,
in
The
constant resorting to petitio principii will be of no use, that is, the
evocation of some god of revolutionary action in whose name actions are carried
out, with the same legitimacy that the pope assumes in acting as the
representative of the Holy Spirit.
That
is why the first condition for coming aboard the Latin American revolutionary
torrent from revolutionary Marxist positions is to break all and any nexus with
the pseudo-theoretical arguments and sectarian practises of the infantile
leftist tendencies.
A
Latin American international organisation
Critica has for a long time set out and defended its ideas regarding a mass
revolutionary party.[5] Nevertheless, with the birth of the PSUV, and the
revolutionary resolve represented by Chavez,
the task of raising the consciousness and organisation of the masses to
another level is now posed.
In
his August 25 intervention, in front of the promoters of the PSUV, President
Hugo Chavez said that 2008 would be the moment to ``convoke a meeting of left
parties of Latin America and organise a type of International, an organisation
of parties and movements of the left in Latin American and the Caribbean’’.
Chavez explained: ``There is a resurgence of the consciousness of the peoples;
the movements, leaders and leaderships of this new left, of this new project,
need to continue to grow.’’
The
last experience of this type was the Foro
de Sao Paulo (FSP, Sao Paulo Forum), originally convoked in this Brazilian
city, in 1990, by the Partido dos
Trabalhadores (PT, Workers Party, Brazil) and the Partido
Comunista de Cuba (PCC, Communist Party
of Cuba), as an ``Encounter of Parties and Organisations of the Left in Latin
America and the Caribbean’’.
From
the beginning, a strong ideological debate existed within this organisation. At
the first encounter a condemnation of capitalism and a correct characterisation
regarding the structural crisis won out. The following year, in
The
principal forces of the more than 100 organisations that made up the FSP were
the PT, PCC, Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación
Nacional (FMLN,Farabundo Marti National
Liberation Front, El Salvador), Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN, Sandinista National Liberation
Front, Nicaragua), Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD, Party of the Democratic
Revolution, Mexico), Frente Amplio (FA, Broad Front, Uruguay) and the Partido Socialista de Chile (PSCh,
Socialist Party of Chile).
Despite
the fact that a split did not occur in
The
ideological battle was fought out basically between four currents:
a) PCC
b) social democracy
c) social christianism
d) diverse organisations who called themselves Trotskyists, each of them
very different in regards to each other.
As
is known, at that time
In
the ensuing encounters of the FSP, beyond the speeches made and declarations
approved, it became clear that the position of two of the four currents had
converged: social democracy and social christianism. The Trotskyist tendencies
withdrew from the FSP (and became debilitated to the point of extinction). The
revolutionary current headed by the PCC (made up of a big majority of the
organisations of the whole hemisphere) did not cohere itself, with its role
diluted to the point of being limited to a few good speeches at each encounter,
without generating any consequences.
Today,
the FSP is an empty shell in the hands of those most opposed to any
revolutionary ideas, and specifically to the Bolivarian Revolution. Beyond
individual positions, within the leadership structures of the PT, PRD, FA and
PSCh, Chavez is a synonym for Lucifer. It should be specifically pointed out
that in November 2001, in the encounter in La Habana, it was not possible to
reach an agreement to send a delegation in solidarity with Chavez in the face
of the evidence of an escalating coup plot. Recently, the PRD delegate who
habitually represents this party in the FSP participated in the congress of the
Venezuelan Movimiento al Socialismo
(MAS, Movement Towards Socialism) [which is part of the opposition].
This
drift of the FSP contributed in a significant manner to the destruction and/or neutralisation
of tens of thousands of cadres and middle cadres in
Conjuncture
The
dispersal of forces who define themselves as favouring a revolutionary solution
– and are willing to fight for it – is today the principal point that imperialism
and the national bourgeoisies count in their favour.
Out
of those militant sectors dragged towards reformism by their leaderships, we
can presume that a percentage is willing to join an alternative that once again
proposes what it was that convinced them to enter into political activity.
Another contingent coming from that period is dispersed in innumerable
organisations, a good part of which should also be in a position to incorporate
themselves into an international movement that contributes to the creation,
orientation and development of national organisations of important political
weight. But it is highly probable that the most important contingent of
militants for a new Latin American revolutionary alternative will be
unorganised youth who today are politically active, but whose forces are
dispersed in social organisations, small newspapers, community radio stations
and other expressions of militancy without a strategy to struggle for power.
If
it is left solely up to the existing political-organisational relations and
definitions at the national level, we cannot expect to see, at least for a long
time, the recomposition of these militant contingents.
The
permanence of tens of thousands of cadres and activists in this current state,
despite the fact that this immense force today sees itself compelled towards
the perspective of Latin American revolution, will assure, in a relative short
timeframe, the destruction in high proportions of this revolutionary force.
On
the contrary, the existence of a general political orientation, of a recognised
leadership, could put into action a powerful revolutionary human force that is
today inert, saving from degradation and subsequent destruction, hundreds of
thousands of militants across
This
capacity for orientation and leadership can only be based on revolutionary
leaderships with deep roots, prestige and sufficient energy in front of this
collection of revolutionary militants. Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez, as symbols
and representatives of the revolutions in
Moreover,
the long-term attack already put in train by imperialism, with the resolute
collaboration of social democracy and social christianism, urgently requires
defining positions, marking out a general strategic line of action and
organising grand human contingents to impede the counterrevolutionary pincer
advancing forward, drowning in blood the growing revolutionary process in
At
the Ibero-American summit in
At
the trade union level, this convergence has already taken an organic form over
the last few years, with the coming together of the union confederations of the
Vatican and social democracy in the International Trade Union Confederation,
that is now beginning to articulate itself in Latin America, where in Argentina
it counts on the support of some wings of the CTA.[6]
The
first step in advancing towards the organisation of a Latin American-Caribbean
political structure that, despite the fact that it depends on the decision of
Chavez and Fidel to undertake the task, will from the beginning have an
international projection.
Conceptual
bases
Throughout
history there have been, conceptually and in practice, four anti-capitalist
international organisations. The First, in which Karl Marx and Frederick Engels
were key figures in its foundation, brought together different anti-capitalist
revolutionary currents. It emerged directly out of the impulse of the workers
themselves in struggle against the system in
The
Second, defined as social democratic (with the meaning that this word had at
that time, the inverse of what it is today) was based on the grand mass
socialist workers’ parties which, at the time, had been formed in all of
The
Third, founded by Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, defined itself as communist,
counterposing itself to the social democrats, who by then were identified by
the position of subordinating the interests of the workers to those of the
bourgeoisie of each country; the mass social democratic parties all split
paving the way for the emergence of communist parties, which founded the Third
International with this name.
The
Fourth, in reality, never became a truly international organisation deeply
rooted in the working class. It was born as a result of the Stalinist
degeneration of the
Today,
due to objective and subjective reasons – laid out over the years in
these pages and which will not be developed in this article – an international
organisation cannot pretend to have the ideological homogeneity that the
Second, Third and Fourth internationals had. On the contrary, its heterogeneous
nature will far surpass that of the First International, apart from the fact
that it will not result from the conscious and organised impulse of a workers’
vanguard with backing from the masses.
The
point of support for such a heterogeneous organisation will be the explicit
decision to struggle against imperialism and for socialism of the 21st
century, assuming as its starting point the unknown elements and ambiguities
that this definition implies.
To
this ideological heterogeneity will correspond an organisational criterion
that, although obliging in terms of general strategy of each member party or
organisation, will allow the participation of different organisations in the
same country and will not enforce unanimous criteria for political activity.
Nevertheless,
the international could not be assimilated into the concept of a united front.
It is closer to the criteria of a mass party, with ideological heterogeneity
and political homogeneity on central questions regarding hemispheric strategy,
and with all the flexibility that this requires given differences of
participation in each country.
This
contradiction will be resolved in favour of cohesion, political homogeneity and
international coherence through the organ of the international leadership,
which could only be made up of representatives of parties from those countries
where no more than one recognised organisation exists.
The
organisation of a revolutionary international with these characteristics, far
from being a distant perspective is an immediate necessity. Defence of the
revolutionary processes underway in
[This
is an updated version of an article first written for the November 2007 edition
of Crítica de Nuestro Tiempo N° 36 http://www.geocities.com/nuestrotiempo/ultima/home.htm,
just prior to the December 2 referendum. The author updated it at the end of
February 2008. Critica de Nuestro Tiempo, International Journal of
Theory and Practice, was founded in 1991, since which it has regularly
defended the cause of socialism. This article was translated exclusively for Links
– International Journal of Socialist Renewal (http://www.links.org.au) by Federico Fuentes. Luis Bilbao is
a journalist, founder and director of Critica de Nuestro Tiempo, and
member of the Union of Militants for Socialism (
Notes
[1]
See reports and analyses about the content of the reforms in America XXI,
Issues No 30, 31 and 32, corresponding to the months of September, October and
November. www.americaxxi.com.ve
[2]
It is worth noting in passing that this episode revealed the real role of
certain opportunists and pseudo-theoreticians, such as Heinz Dieterich, who
without an intermediary period passed over from Stalinism to
bourgeois-reformist gibberish, marinated with appropriate resources in order to
dazzle a certain disorientated intellectual layer. With a pseudo-revolutionary
verbosity, this author cooked up a formula for a supposed new socialism, which
is nothing more than a road to take in order to avoid the abolition of
capitalism. His alignment with Baduel (worse still disguised under a call to
Chavez for reconciliation with Baduel, arguing that the Yes and No vote in the
constitutional reform where not antagonistic), revealed the course that this
type of itinerant intellectual inexorable takes when the decisive hour of the
revolution arrives.
[3]
On this debate, information can be found principally in issue 24 and 25 of America
XXI, in March and April 2007, as well as in the following issues of this
magazine.
[4]
View the draft Declaration of Principles and Program at Links http://www.links.org.au/node/261
[5]
The last contribution in this sense was ``Theory and Practice of the
Revolutionary Party’’ Critica No 34, October 2006, http://www.geocities.com/nuestrotiempo/34/34teoriaypractica.htm
[6]
See the balance sheet of the Ibero-American Summit in ``


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