Ever heard of a regime that gets stronger the more
opposition it faces? Welcome to Venezuela, where the charismatic president,
Hugo Chávez, is practicing a new style of authoritarianism. Part provocateur,
part CEO, and part electoral wizard, Chávez has updated tyranny for today.
As the 20th century drew to a close, Latin America finally
seemed to have escaped its reputation for military dictatorships. The
democratic wave that swept the region starting in the late 1970s appeared
unstoppable. No Latin American country except Haiti had reverted to
authoritarianism. There were a few coups, of course, but they all unraveled,
and constitutional order returned. Polls in the region indicated growing
support for democracy, and the climate seemed to have become inhospitable for
dictators.
Then came Hugo Chávez, elected president of Venezuela in
December 1998. The lieutenant colonel had attempted a coup six years earlier.
When that failed, he won power at the ballot box and is now approaching a
decade in office. In that time, he has concentrated power, harassed opponents,
punished reporters, persecuted civic organizations, and increased state control
of the economy. Yet, he has also found a way to make authoritarianism
fashionable again, if not with the masses, with at least enough voters to win
elections. And with his fiery anti-American, anti-neoliberal rhetoric, Chávez
has become the poster boy for many leftists worldwide.
Many experts, and certainly Chávez's supporters, would not
concede that Venezuela has become an autocracy. After all, Chávez wins votes,
often with the help of the poor. That is the peculiarity of Chávez's regime. He
has virtually eliminated the contradiction between autocracy and political
competitiveness.
What's more, his accomplishment is not simply a product of
charisma or unique local circumstances. Chávez has refashioned authoritarianism
for a democratic age. With elections this year in several Latin American
states—including Mexico and Brazil—his leadership formula may inspire
like-minded leaders in the region. And his international celebrity status means
that even strongmen outside of Latin America may soon try to adopt the new Chávez
look.
The Democratic Disguise
There are no mass executions or concentration camps in
Venezuela. Civil society has not disappeared, as it did in Cuba after the 1959
revolution. There is no systematic, state-sponsored terror leaving scores of desaparecidos ,
as happened in Argentina and Chile in the 1970s. And there is certainly no
efficiently repressive and meddlesome bureaucracy à la the Warsaw Pact. In
fact, in Venezuela, one can still find an active and vociferous opposition,
elections, a feisty press, and a vibrant and organized civil society.
Venezuela, in other words, appears almost democratic.
But when it comes to accountability and limits on
presidential power, the picture grows dark. Chávez has achieved absolute
control of all state institutions that might check his power. In 1999, he
engineered a new constitution that did away with the Senate, thereby reducing
from two to one the number of chambers with which he must negotiate. Because Chávez
only has a limited majority in this unicameral legislature, he revised the
rules of congress so that major legislation can pass with only a simple, rather
than a two-thirds, majority. Using that rule, Chávez secured congressional
approval for an expansion of the Supreme Court from 20 to 32 justices and
filled the new posts with unabashed revolucionarios , as Chavistas call
themselves.
Chávez has also become commander in chief twice over. With
the traditional army, he has achieved unrivaled political control. His 1999
constitution did away with congressional oversight of military affairs, a
change that allowed him to purge disloyal generals and promote friendly ones.
But commanding one armed force was not enough for Chávez. So in 2004, he began
assembling a parallel army of urban reservists, whose membership he hopes to
expand from 100,000 members to 2 million. In Colombia, 10,000 right-wing
paramilitary forces significantly influenced the course of the domestic war
against guerrillas. Two million reservists may mean never having to be in the
opposition.
As important, Chávez commands the institute that supervises
elections, the National Electoral Council, and the gigantic state-owned oil
company, pdvsa, which provides
most of the government's revenues. A Chávez-controlled election body ensures
that voting irregularities committed by the state are overlooked. A Chávez-controlled
oil industry allows the state to spend at will, which comes in handy during
election season.
Chávez thus controls the legislature, the Supreme Court, two
armed forces, the only important source of state revenue, and the institution
that monitors electoral rules. As if that weren't enough, a new media law
allows the state to supervise media content, and a revised criminal code
permits the state to imprison any citizen for showing “disrespect” toward
government officials. By compiling and posting on the Internet lists of voters
and their political tendencies—including whether they signed a petition for a
recall referendum in 2004—Venezuela has achieved reverse accountability. The
state is watching and punishing citizens for political actions it disapproves
of rather than the other way around. If democracy requires checks on the power
of incumbents, Venezuela doesn't come close.
Polarize and Conquer
Chávez's power grabs have not gone unopposed. Between 2001
and 2004, more than 19 massive marches, multiple cacerolazos
(pot-bangings), and a general strike at pdvsa
virtually paralyzed the country. A coup briefly removed him from office in April
2002. Not long thereafter, and despite obstacles imposed by the Electoral
Council, the opposition twice collected enough signatures—3.2 million in
February 2003 and 3.4 million in December 2003—to require a presidential recall
referendum.
But that was as far as his opponents got. Chávez won the
referendum in 2004 and deflated the opposition. For many analysts, Chávez's
ability to hold on to power is easy to explain: The poor love him. Chávez may
be a caudillo , the argument goes, but unlike other caudillos, Chávez
approximates a bona fide Robin Hood. With inclusive rhetoric and lavish
spending, especially since late 2003, Chávez has addressed the spiritual and
material needs of Venezuela's poor, which in 2004 accounted for 60 percent of
the country's households.
Yet reducing Chávez's political feats to a story about
social redemption overlooks the complexity of his rule—and the danger of his
precedent. Undeniably, Chávez has brought innovative social programs to
neighborhoods that the private sector and the Venezuelan state had all but
abandoned to criminal gangs, though many of his initiatives came only after he
was forced to compete in the recall referendum. He also launched one of the
most dramatic increases in state spending in the developing world, from 19
percent of gross domestic product in 1999 to more than 30 percent in 2004. And
yet, Chávez has failed to improve any meaningful measure of poverty, education,
or equity. More damning for the Chávez-as-Robin Hood theory, the poor do not
support him en masse. Most polls reveal that at least 30 percent of the poor,
sometimes even more, disapprove of Chávez. And it is safe to assume that among
the 30 to 40 percent of the electorate that abstains from voting, the majority
have low incomes.
Chávez's inability to establish control over the poor is key
to understanding his new style of dictatorship—call it “competitive autocracy.”
A competitive autocrat has enough support to compete in elections, but not
enough to overwhelm the opposition. Chávez's coalition today includes portions
of the poor, the bulk of the thoroughly purged military, and many
long-marginalized leftist politicians. Chávez is thus distinct from two other
breeds of dictators: the unpopular autocrat who has few supporters and must resort
to outright repression, and the comfortable autocrat, who faces little
opposition and can relax in power. Chávez's opposition is too strong to be
overtly repressed, and the international consequences of doing so would in any
case be prohibitive. So Chávez maintains a semblance of democracy, which
requires him to outsmart the opposition. His solution is to antagonize, rather
than to ban. Chávez's electoral success has less to do with what he is doing
for the poor than with how he handles organized opposition. He has discovered
that he can concentrate power more easily in the presence of a virulent
opposition than with a banned opposition, and in so doing, he is rewriting the
manual on how to be a modern-day authoritarian. Here's how it works.
Attack Political Parties: After Chávez's attempt to
take power by way of coup failed in 1992, he decided to try elections in 1998.
His campaign strategy had one preeminent theme: the evil of political parties.
His attacks on partidocracia were more frequent than his attacks against
neoliberalism, and the theme was an instant hit with the electorate. As in most
developing-country democracies, discontent with existing parties was profound
and pervasive. It attracted the right and the left, the young and old, the traditional
voter as well as the nonvoter. Chávez's antiparty stand not only got him
elected, but by December 1999 also allowed him to pass one of the most
antiparty constitutions among Latin American democracies. His plan to
concentrate power was off to a good start.
Polarize Society: Having secured office, the task of
the competitive autocrat is to polarize the political system. This maneuver
deflates the political center and maintains unity within one's ranks. Reducing
the size of the political center is crucial for the competitive autocrat. In
most societies, the ideological center is numerically strong, a problem for
aspiring authoritarians because moderate voters seldom go for
extremists—unless, of course, the other side becomes immoderate as well.
The solution is to provoke one's opponents into extreme
positions. The rise of two extreme poles splits the center: The moderate left
becomes appalled by the right and gravitates toward the radical left, and vice
versa. The center never disappears entirely, but it melts down to a manageable
size. Now, our aspiring autocrat stands a chance of winning more than a third
of the vote in every election, maybe even the majority. Chávez succeeded in
polarizing the system as early as October 2000 with his Decree 1011, which
suggested he would nationalize private schools and ideologize the public school
system. The opposition reacted predictably: It panicked, mobilized, and
embraced a hard-core position in defense of the status quo. The center began to
shrink.
Chávez's supporters, meanwhile, were energized and not
inclined to quibble as he colonized institutional obstacles to his power. This
energy within the movement is essential to the competitive autocrat, who
actually faces a greater chance of internal dissent than unpopular dictators
because his coalition of supporters is broader and more heterogeneous. So he
must constantly identify mechanisms for alleviating internal tensions. The
solution is simple: co-opt disgruntled troops through lavish rewards and
provoke the opposition so that there is always a monster to rail against. The
largesse creates incentives for the troops to stay, and the provocations
eliminate incentives to switch sides.
Spread the Wealth Selectively: Those expecting Chávez's
populism to benefit citizens according to need, rather than political
usefulness, do not understand competitive autocracy. Chávez's populism is
grandiose, but selective. His supporters will receive unimaginable favors, and
detractors are paid in insults. Denying the opposition spoils while lavishing
supporters with booty has the added benefit of enraging those not in his camp
and fueling the polarization that the competitive autocrat needs.
Chávez has plenty of resources from which he can draw. He
is, after all, one of the world's most powerful CEOs in one of the world's most profitable businesses:
selling oil to the United States. He has steadily increased personal control
over pdvsa. With an estimated $84
billion in sales for 2005, pdvsa
has the fifth-largest state-owned oil reserves in the world and the largest
revenues in Latin America after pemex,
the Mexican state-oil company. Because pdvsa
participates in both the wholesale and retail side of oil sales in the United
States (it owns citgo, one of the
largest U.S. refining companies and gas retailers), it makes money whether the
price of oil is high or low.
But sloshing around oil money isn't polarizing enough. Chávez
needs conflict, and his recent expropriation of private land has provided it.
In mid-2005, the national government, in cooperation with governors and the
national guard, began a series of land grabs. Nearly 250,000 acres were seized
in August and September, and the government announced that it intends to take
more. The constitution permits expropriations only after the National Assembly
consents or the property has been declared idle. Chávez has found another
way—questioning land titles and claiming that the properties are state-owned.
Chávez supporters quickly applauded the move as virtuous Robinhoodism. Of
course, a government sincerely interested in helping the poor might have simply
distributed some of the 50 percent of Venezuelan territory it already owns,
most of which is idle. But giving away state land would not enrage anyone.
Most expropriated lands will likely end up in the hands of
party activists and the military, not the very poor. Owning a small plot of
land is a common retirement dream among many Venezuelan sergeants, which is one
reason that the military is hypnotized by Chávez's land grab. Shortly after the
expropriations were announced, a public dispute erupted between the head of the
National Institute of Lands, Richard Vivas, a radical civilian, and the
minister of food, Rafael Oropeza, an active-duty general, over which office
would be in charge of expropriations. No one expects the military to walk away
empty-handed.
Allow the Bureaucracy to Decay, Almost: Some
autocracies, such as Burma's, seek to become legitimate by establishing order;
others, like the Chinese Communist Party, by delivering economic prosperity.
Both types of autocracies need a top-notch bureaucracy. A competitive autocrat
like Chávez doesn't require such competence. He can allow the bureaucracy to
decline—with one exception: the offices that count votes.
Perhaps the best evidence that Chávez is fostering
bureaucratic chaos is cabinet turnover. It is impossible to have coherent
policies when ministers don't stay long enough to decorate their offices. On
average, Chávez shuffles more than half of his cabinet every year. And yet,
alongside this bureaucratic turmoil, he is constructing a mighty electoral
machine. The best minds and the brightest técnicos run the elections.
One of Chávez's most influential electoral whizzes is the quiet minister of
finance, Nelson Merentes, who spends more time worrying about elections than
fiscal solvency. Merentes's job description is straightforward: extract the
highest possible number of seats from mediocre electoral results. This task
requires a deep understanding of the intricacies of electoral systems,
effective manipulation of electoral districting, mobilization of new voters,
detailed knowledge about the political proclivities of different districts,
and, of course, a dash of chicanery. A good head for numbers is a prerequisite
for the job. Merentes, no surprise, is a trained mathematician.
The results are apparent. Renewing a passport in Venezuela
can take several months, but more than 2.7 million new voters have been
registered in less than two years (almost 3,700 new voters per day), according
to a recent report in El Universal , a pro-opposition Caracas daily. For
the recall referendum, the government added names to the registry list up to 30
days prior to the vote, making it impossible to check for irregularities. More
than 530,000 foreigners were expeditiously naturalized and registered in fewer
than 20 months, and more than 3.3 million transferred to new voting
districts.
Chávez's electoral strategists have also figured out how to
game the country's bifurcated electoral system, in which 60 percent of
officeholders are elected as individuals and the rest of the seats go to lists
of candidates compiled by parties. The system is designed to favor the
second-largest party. The party that wins the uninominal election loses some
seats in the proportional representation system, which then get assigned to the
second-largest party.
To massage this system, the government has adopted the
system of morochas , local slang for twins. The government's operatives
create a new party to run separately in the uninominal elections. And so Chávez's
party avoids the penalty that would normally hit the party that wins in both
systems. The benefit that would otherwise go to an opposition party gets
captured instead by the same people that win the individual seats—the precise
outcome the system was designed to avoid. In the August 2005 elections for
local office, for instance, Chávez's party secured 77 percent of the seats with
only 37 percent of the votes in the city of Valencia. Without morochas, the
government's share of seats would have been 46 percent. The legality of many of
the government's strategies is questionable. And that is where controlling the
National Electoral Council and the Supreme Court proves useful. To this day,
neither body has found fault with any of the government's electoral strategies.
Antagonize the Superpower: Following the 2004 recall
referendum, in which Chávez won 58 percent of the vote, the opposition fell
into a coma, shocked not so much by the results as by the ease with which
international observers condoned the Electoral Council's flimsy audit of the
results. For Chávez, the opposition's stunned silence has been a mixed
blessing. It has cleared the way for further state incursions, but it left Chávez
with no one to attack. The solution? Pick on the United States.
Chávez's attacks on the United States escalated noticeably
at the end of 2004. He has accused the United States of plotting to kill him,
crafting his overthrow, placing spies inside pdvsa, planning to invade
Venezuela, and terrorizing the world. Trashing the superpower serves the same
purpose as antagonizing the domestic opposition: It helps to unite and distract
his large coalition—with one added advantage. It endears him to the
international left.
All autocrats need international support. Many seek this
support by cuddling up to superpowers. The Chávez way is to become a ballistic
anti-imperialist. Chávez has yet to save Venezuela from poverty, militarism,
corruption, crime, oil dependence, monopoly capitalism, or any other problem
that the international left cares about. With few social-democratic
accomplishments to flaunt, Chávez desperately needs something to captivate the
left. He plays the anti-imperialist card because he has nothing else in his
hand.
The beauty of the policy is that, in the end, it doesn't
really matter how the United States responds. If the United States looks the
other way (as it more or less did prior to 2004), Chávez appears to have won.
If the United States overreacts, as it increasingly has in recent months, Chávez
proves his point. Aspiring autocrats, take note: Trashing the United States is
a low-risk, high-return policy for gaining support.
Controlled Chaos
Ultimately, all authoritarian regimes seek power by
following the same principle. They raise society's tolerance for state
intervention. Thomas Hobbes, the 17th-century British philosopher, offered some
tips for accomplishing this goal. The more insecurity that citizens face—the
closer they come to living in the brutish state of nature—the more they will
welcome state power. Chávez may not have read Hobbes, but he understands
Hobbesian thinking to perfection. He knows that citizens who see a world
collapsing will appreciate state interventions. Chávez therefore has no
incentive to address Venezuela's assorted crises. Rather than mending the
country's catastrophic healthcare system, he opens a few military hospitals for
selected patients and brings in Cuban doctors to run ad hoc clinics. Rather
than addressing the economy's lack of competitiveness, he offers subsidies and
protection to economic agents in trouble. Rather than killing inflation, which
is crucial to alleviating poverty, Chávez sets price controls and creates local
grocery stores with subsidized prices. Rather than promoting stable property
rights to boost investment and employment, he expands state employment.
Like most fashion designers, Chávez is not a complete
original. His style of authoritarianism has influences. His anti-Americanism,
for instance, is pure Castro; his use of state resources to reward loyalists
and punish critics is quintessential Latin American populism; and his penchant
for packing institutions was surely learned from several market-oriented
presidents in the 1990s.
Chávez has absorbed and melded these techniques into a
coherent model for modern authoritarianism. The student is now emerging as a
teacher, and his syllabus suits today's post-totalitarian world, in which
democracies in developing countries are strong enough to survive traditional
coups by old-fashioned dictators but besieged by institutional disarray. From
Ecuador to Egypt to Russia, there are vast breeding grounds for competitive
authoritarianism.
When President Bush criticized Chávez after November's
Summit of the Americas in Argentina, he may have contented himself with the
belief that Chávez was a lone holdout as a wave of democracy sweeps the globe.
But Chávez has already learned to surf that wave quite nicely, and others may
follow in his wake.
BIO:
Javier Corrales is associate professor of government at
Amherst College.
WTKM?
For a brief compilation of
some of Hugo Chávez's most controversial statements on politics, personalities,
and culture, visit www.ForeignPolicy.com.
The rise of competitive
authoritarianism remains relatively unexplored terrain. A notable exception is
Lucan A. Way's “Authoritarian State Building and the Sources of Regime
Competitiveness in the Fourth Wave: The Cases of Belarus, Moldova, Russia, and
Ukraine” (World Politics, January
2005). Marina Ottaway offers a broader perspective on the phenomenon in Democracy
Challenged: The Rise of Semi-Authoritarianism
(Washington: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2003).
The colorful Chávez has
spawned a healthy literature of his own. The British journalist Richard Gott
has written an engaging account of Chávez's turbulent rise to power in Hugo
Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution (New
York: Verso, 2005). A more varied and theoretical discussion of Venezuela's
slide into authoritarianism can be found in The Unraveling of
Representative Democracy in Venezuela
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004), edited by Jennifer L. McCoy
and David J. Myers. Moisés Naím explains how Chávez outsmarted the American
superpower in “A Venezuelan Paradox” (Foreign
Policy, March/April 2003).
»For links to relevant Web
sites, access to the FP Archive, and a
comprehensive index of related
Foreign
Policy articles, go to
www.ForeignPolicy.com.
Sidebar
The Everywhere Man
Oil money and an expansive ideology mean that Chávez's
influence knows no bounds.
When Hugo Chávez travels, controversy rarely trails far
behind. In recent years, the Venezuelan leader's peregrinations have come to
resemble an anti-American road show. He makes it a point to visit countries on
the outs with the United States—Cuba, Iran, and Libya—where he is feted as a
brave and progressive statesman.
But Chávez is peddling more than an anti-American tirade.
His potent mix of ideology and oil money is increasingly leading him to meddle
in the internal politics of his neighbors, much to the frustration of some
Latin American leaders. “Chávez is orchestrating a campaign throughout Latin
America to inject himself into the electoral processes of Bolivia, Colombia,
Mexico, and Nicaragua,” says former Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castañeda.
A favored Chávez tactic is funding left-leaning civil
society groups with political aspirations. In Nicaragua, he has stumped for
Marxist Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega and offered him cheap oil. Chávez has
supported Brazil's Landless Workers Movement, which is pushing for dramatic
land redistribution. The Venezuelan president has also been active in Bolivia,
where he has funded the cocaleros , a powerful group of small-farm owners
that opposes coca eradication efforts. Evo Morales, the Bolivian leftist
leader, has even taken to calling Chávez “ mi comandante .”
Rumors of Chávez's machinations are everywhere in Latin
America—and Chávez seems content to see them spread. Ecuador's El Comercio
newspaper recently reported that members of an underground leftist movement
there had received weapons training in Venezuela. In Mexico, there are
published reports that the Venezuelan Embassy has become a hub for
antigovernment activities. Venezuela, it appears, is not enough for Chávez.
Copyright © 2001-2008, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
0 COMMENTSON THIS ARTICLE
BE THE FIRST TO COMMENT
COMMENTING RULES & FAQ