Hugo Chavez successor inherits goodwill, hard times

Written By kolimtiga on Kamis, 07 Maret 2013 | 16.38

CARACAS, Venezuela — Nicolas Maduro, a stocky former bus driver who never finished high school, takes power with a deep reserve of goodwill from supporters of Hugo Chavez — but also severe problems that may soon exhaust it.

When Maduro, 50, faces voters as early as next month as the successor to Chavez, who died Tuesday after a long battle with cancer, he will almost certainly win election in his own right. But the late comandante left behind a society mired in crime and economic problems that may soon sap support for his protege. Maduro has little of his mentor's charisma or political skill — and it's not clear that he can even count on unity within Chavez's movement.

What seems certain is that Maduro has the "popular legitimacy" to win election riding the tide of pro-Chavez public sentiment, said Sujatha Fernandes, a sociology professor at City University of New York. The Venezuelan Constitution calls for an election to be held within 30 days of the incumbent president's death or resignation, which makes it likely that the vote will take place in early April.

"Chavismo will be part of the Venezuelan and Latin American story for many decades, that of Chavez as a quasi-religious figure, the Jesus Christ of the poor," said Jose Manuel Puente, a professor at Advanced Management Studies Institute in Caracas, known by its Spanish initials IESA. "Maduro will benefit and capitalize on that."

But eventually Maduro will have to "prove his legitimacy to rule," said Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Washington office of the Americas Society. That task is made easier by Chavez having anointed him as his successor in December — but perhaps complicated by a sense that he didn't earn the position through election.

Maduro, a tall and voluble native of Caracas, has little of the oratorical skill of Chavez, who was able to maintain supporters' rapt attention during his five-hour "Alo Presidente" television shows. As foreign minister, Maduro built a reputation as a conciliator and something of a mystic. A few years ago he trekked to India to visit Sai Baba, a guru who teaches meditation and tolerance.

Maduro possesses the street smarts and negotiating experience of a union leader, which he once was. And he has a high-powered partner in his wife, Cilia Flores, who led the legal team that freed Chavez from prison after his participation in a failed coup in 1992. Like her husband, she went on to lead the National Assembly, the legislative branch of Venezuela's government.

Doubts remain, however, that Maduro can fill Chavez's shoes.

"He has little independent political base and he has obvious potential rivals within the Chavista movement," said Farnsworth. Those competitors include National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello, who is allied with the armed forces.

Others include Chavez family members, "who surely don't want to remain outside of the inheritance of political capital that the president left," said Luis Salamanca, a professor at Central University of Venezuela. Chavez's older brother Adan, now governor of Barinas state, was the late president's ideological mentor and is mentioned by some as a potential candidate for higher office.

Maduro's strengths include popular social spending programs put in place by Chavez, said Miguel Tinker Salas, a history professor at Pomona College.

But Chavez's social largesse was fueled by Venezuela's rising oil revenue over the last decade. Prices now have leveled off, crude production has stalled and Venezuela's debt is rising, including a $38.5-billion marker to the Chinese. Meanwhile, Venezuela's industrial and farm base — textiles, cattle, sugar and steel — continues to shrink, making the country ever more dependent on imports.

The collapse of domestic production is reflected in the increased reliance on crude sales. Puente said oil sales accounted for $96 of every $100 in Venezuelan exports last year, compared with about $80 before Chavez took office. Meanwhile Venezuela's imports last year totaled $59 billion, compared with a $10-billion to $12-billion average in the 1990s, Puente said.

To stanch the flow of imports, the government last month announced a 46.5% devaluation of the currency, the bolivar. That made imported goods more expensive. But the move will bite the poor hardest because they spend a greater part of their incomes on imported household goods. Also hurting the poor, analysts said, is inflation that could exceed 30% this year — one of the three highest rates in the world.

The scarcity of vital household food items is a volatile issue that could undercut Maduro's authority. A recent Central Bank study found that 1 in 5 basic supermarket items, including cooking oil, sugar and chicken, can now be considered "scarce." The poor suffer most as scarce items are often found on the black market at prices far above government-set limits.

"Despite having about the highest average oil price in history, the government faces huge challenges due to the mismanagement of the economy," said Francisco Monaldi, a visiting professor at Harvard University.

Mushrooming crime has made Venezuela one of the most violent nations on the planet. While Chavez, through the force of his charisma and common touch, overcame the issue to win reelection in October, Venezuelans may cut Maduro less slack. The homicide rate is now five times what it was in 1999. More police officers were killed in greater Caracas in 2011 than in the U.S. as a whole.

Like Chavez, Maduro is a fervent admirer of Cuban leaders Fidel and Raul Castro, and thus likely to continue Venezuela's economic support of the Communist regime, largesse that totals an estimated $6 billion annually and could try supporters' patience.

In the post-Chavez era, Maduro must deal, as did Chavez, with a highly polarized and volatile society, CUNY professor Fernandes said.

"One side is grieving the loss of a beloved leader and the other side is letting off firecrackers to celebrate his passing," Fernandes said.

Farnsworth expects Maduro to try to divert Chavistas' attention on domestic problems by bashing the United States. Venezuelans got a preview of that strategy hours before Chavez died Tuesday, when Maduro expelled two military attaches assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, and seemed to blame the United States for Chavez's cancer. The U.S. State Department described the charges as "absurd."

What seems beyond a doubt is that Maduro, who probably will soon be sworn in as "president in charge" until the election is held, will benefit from the large storehouse of Chavistas' goodwill, at least in the short term.

The likely opposition candidate in the impending presidential election is Miranda state Gov. Henrique Capriles, who lost to Chavez in the October election by a 10-point margin. The loss, plus overwhelming Chavista electoral machinery in place in the states, makes an opposition victory a long shot with any candidate.

As Chavez's coffin wound its way in a cortege through the streets of Caracas on Wednesday, en route from the hospital where the president died to the military academy where he will lie in state, Deyxy Galue, a university Spanish professor in the crowd, said Maduro has been "a good student of Chavez and we hope he continues Chavez's ideas. But Chavez is someone who can never be substituted."

"In the short run he has a lot going for him, a wave of sympathy resulting from the funeral and something close to an incumbency advantage," said Harvard's Monaldi. "But in the next few months he will face great challenges that will determine whether he is a man for the times or Chavez's Isabelita [widow of Argentine President Juan Peron] who shortly after Peron died was unable to govern the mess her husband left her.

Kraul and Mogollon are special correspondents.


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