Quantcast
Channel: Opinion Articles
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 15861

After Chavez, what next?

$
0
0

The following is from an editorial in the Los Angeles Times:

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who died Tuesday of cancer at age 58, was beloved and reviled, bombastic and provocative, a flamboyant figure who was vastly influential in his country and throughout the region.

The former paratrooper-turned-populist promised to use Venezuela's vast oil wealth to improve life for the country's poor, and by most accounts he did just that. From 1997 to 2011, he reduced the percentage of people living in moderate poverty from 54 percent to 31 percent, and those living in extreme poverty from 23 percent to 9 percent, according to the World Bank.

He dramatically reduced illiteracy, set up medical clinics in slums and working-class barrios, and established discount grocery stores. But even as he wielded his power to rally, energize and protect his country's poor, he also used it to reinforce his own position, attack his critics and censor the media.

And he waged a long, theatrical war of words with the United States, palling around with Cuba's Fidel Castro and embracing leaders such as Iraq's Saddam Hussein and Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

His anti-U.S. rhetoric drove the George W. Bush administration crazy, but it also helped spearhead a reassessment by Latin American leaders of their relationship with the global superpower to the north. For better or worse, Chavez pushed for regional integration closer to home, helping set up organizations that intentionally excluded Washington. The United States' decision to support a 2002 coup that briefly led to Chavez's ouster only deepened his hostility toward Washington.

Now the question is what comes next in Venezuela. His handpicked successor, Nicolas Maduro, is expected to face an election within 30 days and, if he wins, a bleak economic future, rising crime rates and a deeply polarized nation. Maduro, an ex-union organizer who served as foreign minister, may lack the charisma and political capital to win broad support and stave off political opponents.

It is hoped whoever leads Venezuela next will understand that the best way to win support and preserve the gains of the unfinished Bolivarian Revolution of Hugo Chavez won't be by attacking those who disagree with him, but by ensuring that all Venezuelans, rich and poor, have a voice in the government.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 15861

Trending Articles