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 Post subject: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:52 am 
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From the Iberian Anarchist Federation's Tierra y Libertad website, an article describing and criticizing the government of Hugo Chávez and its attempts to co-opt the Venezuelan labor movement.

Orlando Chirino, a revolutionary Venezuelan labor leader, has recently denounced the Bolivarian government as "anti-worker and anti-union." It would be difficult to accuse Chirino of being a "golpista" [1] or an "ally of imperialism." In the year 2002 he condemned the coup, mobilizing to defend the state oil industry from the work stoppage driven by management leadership. In each occasion presented him, he supported and accompanied workers' attempts to control factories closed by their bosses. He is rooted among the workers and was made a leader in the Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (UNT), the labor union promoted by his own president Chávez. If Orlando has been part of the so-called Bolivarian movement for many years, what has happened in 2009 to get him to make these kinds of statements about the government he once defended? The main part of the answer is: because Chirino is an iron defender of the unions' autonomy.

The attempt to control the workers' movement from above began as soon as Hugo Chávez was elected president of Venezuela. In 1999 a clash began with the traditional Confederación de Trabajadores de Venezuela (CTV), a labor union created in 1947 by the influence of Acción Democrática (AD) [2], and changed, since 1959, into the main negotiator of the labor policies developed by the state. Nevertheless, in spite of Chavismo's questions about the irregularities and vices of this organization, in the abscence of their own labor movement, they participated in its internal elections in October 2001. The Bolivarian candidate, Aristóbulo Isturiz, was defeated by the AD candidate Carlos Ortega, who became the president of the CTV. A year and a half later, repeating the same history of the CTV, the government created by decree what it called "the real labor union": the Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (UNT), which quickly reproduced the corruption that it claimed to fight. One Marxist organization that participated in its foundation, Opción Obrera, says it more clearly than us: "The UNT was born under agreements from above, and was ridden for a show for the rank and file; few authentic union leaders had power in it... [3] The UNT was born with governmental protection, which lifted it up. The criticized "perks" of the old CTV unionism are now granted to the leaders of the UNT, who are staunch supporters of the government." Paradoxically, before the limited acceptance of the new labor union among the mass of workers, and the resistance of some sectors of the union to their cooptation, the Bolivarian power promoted new organizations in order to displace the UNT, as is the case of the Frente Socialista Bolivariano de los Trabajadores (FSBT).

A second milestone, justified with the argument of weakening the CTV bureaucracy, was the promotion of the so-called "union parallelism" [4] from the seat of government, creating unions artificially, from outside, in the principal industries of the country. In this way Chavismo would be able to publicize that with almost 700 registered unions, the Bolivarian process has promoted the organization of workers like nothing has before. However, this rise of the unions did not mean their greater influence on labor policies. One indicator is the end of the discussion of collective contracts in the public sector, counting 243 expired, paralyzed and unsigned contracts at the end of 2007, in a sector that in May 2009 employs 2,244,413 people, a quarter of those contracted by the private sector.

The decisions on salaries, labor conditions, and labor law are made unilaterally by the institutions of the state, after which they are mechanically ratified by the spokespersons of the UNT. In addition to the fragmentation and loss of capacity for pressure and negotiation, union parallelism has exacerbated the disputes for control of those workplaces in the areas of oil and construction - in which the union can place 70 out of 100 recruits - which have increased the cases of assassination of union leaders and workers in inter-union strife. Between June 2008 and when this text was written, there have been 59 murders that spread with the greatest impunity.

A third element is the creation of the Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (PSUV), a partisan body that, in president's own words, should absorb all organizations that support the Bolivarian process, including the unions. A few defended the independence of the workers' organizations, but dissent from the official line was not tolerated. In march of 2007 Chávez affirmed in a speech "The unions should not be autonomous... we must end with that," which was followed by successive declarations in the same line, reaching the zenith in march of 2009, when after ridiculing the demands of the basic industries of Guayana - the biggest industrial belt of the country - he threatened to use the police to crush any attempts at demonstrations or strikes there. For a revolutionary like Orlando Chirino, it was unbearable, stating at the time that it "constituted a declaration of war against the working class."

Various initiatives are currently being developed to increase control over the country's workers. For one thing, laws have been passed that limit and criminalize protest, requiring people to report periodically to the courts, in addition to prohibiting them from participation in meetings and demonstrations, such as occurred this past July 13 to 5 union leaders of the oil refinery of El Palito, in the west of the country. According to figures from spokespersons of the affected communities, at least 2,200 people would be currently subject to the scheme. It must be brought out that, curiously, more than 80% are part of the movement to support the national government. This detail is significant because since 2008 has come increasing social unrest in the face of the miseries and limitations of material life for workers on the ground. The protests for social rights have displaced the mobilizations for political rights, that set the scene during the years 2002 and 2006. The failure to meet the expectations generated by Bolivarian rhetoric, the weakening of patronage networks by declining oil revenues and the stagnation and decline of effective social policies, known as "missions," have catalyzed the accumulated unrest in the absence of profound transformations that significantly improve the quality of life for the majority of the country. Another initiative underway, again by decree from above, is the replacement of unions with "workers' councils" for discussing work conditions in companies, a proposal entered in the reform of the Organic Labor Law (LOT), a regulation that has been discussed in secret in the National Assembly, an executive that is promoted around the world as a champion of "participatory democracy."

Other laws, that seem to have no connection to the world of work, have also been restricting workers' rights. That's the case with the reformed Law of Land Transit, which in its article 74 prohibits the closure of streets to obstruct pedestrian and vehicle traffic, which has been the historical practice of protest by the popular sectors, especially in demanding their labor rights. Meanwhile, on August 15 an Organic Law of Education was passed, which has provoked protest by opposition groups for its secularism and for establishing strict regulations for private education institutions. However, what this center-right and social-democratic opposition does not question, much less Chavismo, are the limitations to the right of association, unionization, and collective bargaining, which is not guaranteed. One sign of the reactionary character of the order is section 5.f of the first transitional provision, which states that teachers and professors engage in serious misconduct "by physical aggression, speech, and other forms of violence" against their superiors. To make matters worse, the fifth transitional provision regulates the use of scabs "for reasons of proven necessity" in order to break strikes and work stoppages, a practice that has become habitual in so-called "Bolivarian Venezuela." In addition, the Chavista movement has driven an onslaught against the media outlets that don't accommodate the government, whose principle motivation is the visibility of the conflicts and protests that they provide, in contrast with the scarce coverage of the state and para-state media, self-declared "alternative and community," but without editorial and financial independence of any kind.

The role of Venezuelan anarchists in this moment of fracture of Bolivarian hegemony is to participate, accompany, and radicalize the conflicts, from below and with the people, and in this way to stimulate the recovery of the belligerent autonomy of the social movements. They must also become actively involved in the construction of a different, revolutionary alternative to the inter-bourgeois conflict for the control of the oil revenues that has engulfed the political scene in recent years, fighting the Bolivarian bourgeoisie in power with the same impetus as the potential rearticulations of those political parties it has displaced. In this way we walk, as always, without giving any concession to power and having our old values (self-management, direct action, anticapitalism and mutual aid, among others) as a bright horizon.

1. Literally a "coup-ist," the connotation is a national traitor
2. AD is a Venezuelan center-left party
3. Literally "in the direction converged few authentic leaders with union trajectory"
4. "Parallel association" might be a better translation

Translated by Dan Knutson
Original Spanish article: http://www.nodo50.org/tierraylibertad/4articulo.html


http://anarchistnews.org/?q=node/9955


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:21 pm 
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Quote:
The decisions on salaries, labor conditions, and labor law are made unilaterally by the institutions of the state...


Sounds like Nazi Germany to me. So sad, I hope these Anarchists get the support they need.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:15 pm 
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I need to spread this shit around. Many of my friends seem to love Chavez. It's the anti-US bullshit that gets them. I'm really not sure how they can defend this guy with the injustices under his government.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:19 pm 
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AnarchoJustin wrote:
I need to spread this shit around. Many of my friends seem to love Chavez. It's the anti-US bullshit that gets them. I'm really not sure how they can defend this guy with the injustices under his government.


I'm under the impression he's done a lot of good things though. Like giving people better access to health care and stuff, right?


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 10:02 pm 
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AnarchoJustin wrote:
I need to spread this shit around. Many of my friends seem to love Chavez. It's the anti-US bullshit that gets them. I'm really not sure how they can defend this guy with the injustices under his government.


Yeah, the pro-Chavez sentiment in some Anarchist circles has got to go. If he's a politician, he's the enemy, no matter how many free lunches he hands out. Did anybody see this story last week?

http://www.anarchistnews.org/?q=node/9891

RAAN put out some good material on the Bolivarian "Revolution" a few years ago. I think it's still up on their site.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 10:27 pm 
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Yes, he has set up antipoverty measures. Poverty has went down, but is still pretty high and his price controls have been terrible and have caused food shortages at times. So the results aren't really anything to write home about.



I have a feeling that this guy is all show and no substance as far as his antics are concerned. Him giving Obama the Galeano book was really just something for him to jack off to and for the College left to blush over. He has said that the IMF is a tool for imperialism and guess what? Venezuela is still a part of that institution as far as I'm aware or at least accepting help. All show.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 9:36 am 
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I'm as much of a socialist and revolutionary as the next person. But see to be honest I find comments like this pretty alienating.

Quote:
If he's a politician, he's the enemy, no matter how many free lunches he hands out.


You see the thing is, even if Chavez is an utter cunt, at the end of the day his reformist government has still done more, for more millions and millions, to lift the poor out of poverty, and provide access to things that the gangsterism that prevailed before (which in effect anarchists offer a proxy support for, because they posit no realistic alternative: revolution is all nice and stuff and I'm right behind that, but sometimes the abstract has to connect with the reality) did not. As such his government has probably done more to advance humanity than anything anarchists have ever offered. I say that, and I am not the slightest bit taken in by Bolivarian circle jerks or red bomber jackets, and rhetorical confessions of Trotskysm.

At the end of the day you have to say to yourself that the oil unions in Venezuala hate this man because they are a labour aristocracy and Chavez means to share the wealth out. The Yanks hate this man cos he's outfoxed them and set up an economic bloc. And the anarchists hate this man because they like to hate things, and it's far simpler to be against shit than to build the kind of serious power that would allow for a revolution across the Americas thru mass union power.

Quote:
Venezuela is still a part of that institution as far as I'm aware or at least accepting help.


Have you ever ran a 3rd world oil state, prized it from gangsters, in the backyard of the world's most powerful and most bloody empire in history? How do you suppose Chavez would acquire capital if not from the IMF? The SCO as far as I am aware maintains no such institution. Moreover Chavez has achieved what in Latin America, nationalist governments have fought for decades to achieve, a counter-economic bloc to the US.

There is a tension however, as Venezuala's biggest customer for its most powerful weapon (the black stuff) is the US.

It's all very well coming away with rhetoric about college lefties and shit, but there is a pretty abject lack of hard-headed realism in your comments, that to be honest looks a bit studenty, and morally derived, rather than empirically grounded, from my side of the fence.

Quote:
Sounds like Nazi Germany to me.


I take it Chavez is embarking on endless wars of conquest, establishing a unitary database of all citizens to monitor them absolutely, launching raids and mass executions of communists and trade unionists, and planning the next phase of his ethnic cleansing plans to establish his thousand year empire then?

Quote:
The failure to meet the expectations generated by Bolivarian rhetoric, the weakening of patronage networks by declining oil revenues and the stagnation and decline of effective social policies, known as "missions," have catalyzed the accumulated unrest in the absence of profound transformations that significantly improve the quality of life for the majority of the country.


^ Key point. ^

It's all very well to frame politicians as good or bad, but there are structural limitations there. An anarchist society going it alone, autarkically would face the exact same dilema and would also be faced with losing control or asserting it with an iron fist. That's just the politics of the situation.

I've no doubt Chavez is little more than a populist caudillo with some progressive views. And I've no doubt he'll crack some of our heads to maintain power. End of the day tho I'd rather him than some US mafia boss. And he is fucking up the US empire, and opening up a space for social movements to operate (a space that doesn't exist in more 'traditional' US heartlands like Colombia). No bad thing in my view.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 9:46 am 
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Dundee_United wrote:

Quote:
Sounds like Nazi Germany to me.


I take it Chavez is embarking on endless wars of conquest, establishing a unitary database of all citizens to monitor them absolutely, launching raids and mass executions of communists and trade unionists, and planning the next phase of his ethnic cleansing plans to establish his thousand year empire then?


Ur right. He's pretty far from it. But I've read anarchists who accuse him nonetheless of using the politics of fear. And what I was referring to was state control of prices and labor. I wasn't trying to say they were the same. I was saying they were similar.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 9:59 am 
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Venezuala is a very large country. A unitary country of that nature requires to be ruled by fear to some degree in times of government cutbacks, otherwise it would collapse into anarchy (in the bad sense) and lawlessness. You can also bet Colombia would march right on in there (with two or three US carrier battlegroups off the coast).

If you were in Chavez' government position right now, what would you do?


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 12:36 pm 
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Dundee_United wrote:
Venezuala is a very large country. A unitary country of that nature requires to be ruled by fear to some degree in times of government cutbacks, otherwise it would collapse into anarchy (in the bad sense) and lawlessness. You can also bet Colombia would march right on in there (with two or three US carrier battlegroups off the coast).

If you were in Chavez' government position right now, what would you do?


I've heard this type of justification before. Wanna know where from?


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 12:48 pm 
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Let me guess? Some Marxist bogeyman.

Did they look like this?

Image

or this?

Image

I think it's interesting that I manage to explain that I am not a supporter of Chavez, and yet you somehow think I am offering 'justifications'.

I was annoyed because the level of debate and discussion had dropped below the complexity in your average 50s hollywood cowboys and indians B-movie script.

The reality is were we in Chavez' position we'd have to adopt an iron rule kind policy. That's not a "justification"; it's me saying that in that position we'd already have lost, and some appreciation for how nations are governed I would have thought at the very least, kind of entry level theory for socialists serious about winning, no?

End of, Chavez has to crack heads to stay in power. I'd rather have Chavez than some mafia boss. And those are the 'options' given the socialist movement is in no position to launch a geo-regional revolution across the Americas.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 1:27 pm 
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I think we need to offer solidarity to any working people being attacked by any government any where, in any way we can.

At the very least we should and could publicise workers criticisms of the Chavez regime on the left in the UK, in an attempt to undermine the idiots of the VSC...

It's a bit pointless to ask questions like "what would you do in Chavez's position?" as we would never seek to be in his position in the first place.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:04 pm 
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eight.hour.day wrote:
It's a bit pointless to ask questions like "what would you do in Chavez's position?" as we would never seek to be in his position in the first place.


QFT. I apologize for being the sort of dumb country bumpkin (and I am, admittedly) that can't frame all of my opinions in a vast, and to me useless, theoretical framework or explain my opposition to a regime through Hegelian dialectics, but I made the transition from "Democratic Socialist" to "Libertarian Socialist" a while ago for a reason, and it wasn't to settle for any state solution, whether it be Obama in my own country or Chavez in another. Sorry if that comes off as harsh, it probably seems more abrasive than I meant to phrase it, but it is more or less how I feel.
I'll go back to writing my B-western script now.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:41 pm 
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Fucking up the US empire? South America was sooooo 1970's and 80's. Other than supporting pieces of shit like Uribe, the US government really couldn't give a flying fuck what Chavez does. They're too busy tripping over themselves worrying about Afghanistan and Iran. He's not that important a person, in other words.



Further, what's this stuff about rather having him than some US fucker? Do we have to choose? I'd rather have neither and I also agree with Eight Hour Day's sentiments and the "what would you do" stuff.


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 Post subject: Re: FAI: The Bolivarian Government Against Union Autonomy
PostPosted: Tue Oct 27, 2009 4:02 pm 
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Siding with the government against the workers for whatever reason (nevermind, so the "wrong type of lizard"* doesn't get in) is a clear failure of class perspective IMHO. What are workers supposed to do? Give up, lie down and be trampled on, for the sake of "the greater good". Who's "greater good" is this anyway?

* apologies to Douglas Adams


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