Skip to main content

Right-Wing victories in Argentina, Venezuela could accelerate US dominance in the region

Recent elections in Argentina and Venezuela have yielded major changes that could ultimately open the door to greater interference by corporate interests and the U.S.

by Ramona Wadi

The recent right-wing triumphs in Argentina and Venezuela are being touted as a pivotal moment in South American politics, with the longstanding balance of power shifting away from the left and toward the right.

In the 1970s, when a socialist fever was spreading across South America, especially after Salvador Allende’s triumph in Chile, the United States was concentrating on devious paths to destabilize the change that had been achieved through democratic elections. The neoliberal experiment that commenced in Chile on Sept. 11, 1973 later expanded in the region via Plan Condór, through which the U.S. sought to prop up dictatorships in the Southern Cone.

The Macri family business, the Macri Society or Socma, expanded its wealth during Argentina’s dictatorship era. According to a TeleSUR report, the family business grew significantly throughout the late 1970s and 1980s by providing services to the regime, including waste management and postal services.

And last month, a narrow victory went to Mauricio Macri, a right-wing presidential contender. With the backing of his party, he was part of the minority opposition to a bill proposed by former President Cristina Fernandez earlier this year that sought to investigate dictatorship crimes and those complicit in them.

After election results were announced, Jackie Fox, a psychological counselor, who was quoted in The Guardian, stated: “This is the end of corruption. We have someone who doesn’t need to become richer than he already is.” Yet a Nov. 23 analysis from TeleSUR warned:

The election of Mauricio Macri in Argentina’s presidential race comes as a welcome victory to the country’s business elite and right-wing parties across Latin America, but the president-elect has some dubious ties that could signal a lasting legacy in the new head of state of darker times in Argentina.

Indeed, recent elections in Venezuela have demonstrated a similarly chilled socialist fever which once gripped the region — a fever which democratic elections had kept in power until just recently. And, alarmingly, it’s opening the door wider to U.S. and corporate interference.

Does Macri mark Argentina’s return to a neoliberal agenda?

Despite earlier indications that left-wing candidate and former Vice President Daniel Scioli would likely emerge victorious, right-wing contender Mauricio Macri was propelled to a 3-point victory in November, spelling the end of the leftist era ushered in by Néstor Kirchner in 2003 and continued through his wife, Cristina Fernández.

Argentina’s former Minister of Economy Domingo Cavallo, whose policies some claim were responsible for the country’s financial collapse in 2001 and its ensuing default, clearly spelled out the terms upon which Macri’s political success would hinge, stating that his rule “might also help to put a definite end to the ‘Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of our America’ that has caused such a great damage to the peoples that adhered to it.

Following the election, Macri declared his intentions to align the country’s foreign policy with that of the U.S., while shunning Venezuela and Iran, saying, “We need to be in the world.

However, as Jonathan Watt sand Uki Goñi noted in The Guardian last month, Macri’s “small margin of victory could hamper his ability to push through political changes, particularly because Macri does not have a majority in either house of congress,” particularly as the former president continues to enjoy popularity among populist “Peronists, union members and supporters in congress.

Despite any perceived hurdles he may have to jump in his return to a neoliberal agenda that is likely to dominate his presidency, Macri has already declared his intention to expand the role of corporate media by scrapping the Media Law put into place under the Fernandez administration. Macri argues that it inhibits free-market competition, but, according to TeleSUR, critics maintain that an end to the Media Law “and its limitations on the size of media conglomerates is a direct assault on a democratic commitment to a diversity of voices in the media and will be a death sentence for alternative opinions in the media.

In his first comments following the announcement of election results, Macri stated that building relations with other countries in Latin America was a priority, adding that he would raise the issue of Venezuela’s alleged human rights abuses at Mercosur, the regional free trade association. During the final presidential debate, Macri had, in fact, threatened to seek to expel Venezuela from the trading bloc.

Once the right-wing victory in Venezuela was ascertained, though, Macri did not feel compelled to pursue Venezuela’s expulsion any further. Indeed, given the close electoral triumphs and Macri’s apparent intentions to boost Argentina-U.S. relations, the shift of power away from Venezuela’s socialist bloc is none other than an added victory for Macri, who is being hailed as the commencement of change in the continent.

For his part, Scioli had warned that “Macri wants to leave us to the luck of the market,” and accused him of making “a pact with the IMF and vulture funds.

Although the rhetoric can be perceived as part of the pre-election diatribe, the accusation is reminiscent of right-wing tactics in Venezuela, where prominent individuals have discussed the concept of foreign intervention through the International Monetary Fund as part of the plans to oust Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

Maduro: ‘A counterrevolution has won’

In Venezuela, the Democratic Unity Roundtable, the coalition opposition group, made significant gains in this month’s legislative elections. It won 99 out of 167 seats in the National Assembly elections, shifting the balance of power away from the country’s socialist base for the first time in nearly two decades.

In the wake of election results, President Nicolas Maduro reiterated that the destabilization tactics of the U.S.-backed right wing had managed to influence public opinion enough to sway votes away from the socialist principles of the Bolivarian Revolution, the socialist movement of his predecessor and mentor, Hugo Chavez.

In the aftermath of the defeat, Maduro’s rhetoric shifted from acceptance of the outcome of the election — though he continued to reiterate that economic sabotage such as deprivation of basic household staples, played a crucial role in the result — to calls for strengthening the grassroots movement in the country.

After calling upon Venezuelans to “recognize in peace these results and re-evaluate many political aspects of the revolution,” Maduro embarked upon an offensive, vowing to protect workers’ rights and announcing “the creation of a new law to protect workers’ stability for the next three years.

The announcement was made as the Venezuelan opposition had already started threatening an overhaul of existing legislation that protects workers’ rights — namely, the Organic Labor Law — in favor of ushering in a capitalist agenda. The 2012 Organic Labor Law sought to protect workers’ rights by proclaiming the need to “protect work as a social deed” and “recognizing workers as creators of socially produced wealth and as protagonists in education and work processes.” Cipriana Ramos, a leading opposition lawmaker and the head of one of the country’s largest business organizations, argued that the law “can’t exist to benefit workers.” With an overwhelming majority, the opposition can now begin work to repeal existing legislation that has safeguarded workers’ rights and shift power back to the Venezuelan oligarchy.

The opposition also declared that, should it win two-thirds of the National Assembly seats, it would seek to oust Maduro. Other threats voiced by the opposition are in direct retaliation against the Bolivarian Revolution, including threats to repeal the Law on Fair Costs and Prices, a price-setting law which ensures affordable and accessible commodities for the entire Venezuelan population.

In the wake of election results, Maduro insisted: “The opposition hasn’t won — a counterrevolution has won.

TeleSUR has not been averse to criticizing government weaknesses in the aftermath of the elections. While acknowledging the role played by intentional disinformation, particularly through international media and social media, Maduro’s inability to deal resiliently with the economic sabotage affecting the working class has been cited as another factor contributing to the defeat.

While the opposition revels in its newfound grasp on power, it will also face an uphill battle as it attempts to convince its voters of an independent strategy away from the U.S. After violent incitement backed by the U.S., as well as the support garnered from European countries which attempted to portray Maduro’s government as infringing upon human rights — in February 2014 the European Parliament passed a resolution urging Maduro to resign — the right-wing agenda in Venezuela is a clear return of the oligarchy with the intent of destroying the socialist structure.

The methods used to sabotage Venezuela today may differ slightly from those of the past, notably Chile and the ensuing Plan Condor. However, it is clear that the U.S. has, through various means, attempted to destroy Venezuela, in particular by targeting its strongest structures, such as the accessibility of goods and services to accommodate basic needs and, on a higher level, Venezuela’s oil.

According to U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby, the election results “reinforce for us the importance of continuing to have dialogue with Venezuela, and to continue to try to get this relationship on a better path.

Dialogue with the U.S. is a mere euphemism for collaborative interference. In November, TeleSUR and the Intercept revealed that since 2010, the U.S. National Security Agency spied on Petroleos de Venezuela, a state-owned oil and natural gas company, obtaining data which would in turn provide an opening through which to spy on the company’s officials. U.S. President Barack Obama authorized the operation in 2010, and it was carried out by the CIA and NSA, operating directly from the premises of the U.S. Embassy in Caracas.

This revelation should not be viewed as an isolated incident but within the context of coups against Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution since 2002, when Chavez was briefly ousted and the designated U.S. and IMF-backed Pedro Carmona took over for two days.

After Chavez’s death, destabilization and coup attempts intensified — with the latest in February 2015 — following a series of oppressive international measures such as U.S. sanctions on Venezuelan leaders for alleged human rights violations.

Source:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Trump's tariffs: A unique opportunity for BRICS and the Global South to fully escape from dollar tyranny

globinfo freexchange   Does Trump know what he is doing? Well, yes and no. While many interpretate his latest move, mostly as an attempt to halt China, his main goal is to give the final blow to the neoliberal order on behalf of his oligarchs .  From this perspective, Trump's unprecedented decision to decide mass tariffs against almost everyone, was an act of strategic hit against the global free market neoliberalism, with the financial capital  at its top. And that's because this dominant-for-almost-half-century system, identifies restrictions and protectionism as major threats against its own existence. In other words, Trump acted as a commander of the capitalist faction that wants to beat its neoliberal rivals and put itself in charge, through a new transformation of capitalism into a 21st century corporate feudalism.   Concerning China, Trump's move may have some negative impact on its economy for a while, since China has chosen to partially play by the rule...

Deranged euroclowns want to revive a nazi-origin project!

globinfo freexchange   Behind the ridiculously cartoonish latest spot of the EU that gives "instructions" to the European citizens on how to deal with a major crisis during the first hours, lies a secret desire.    The deranged euroclowns of the crypto-fascist extreme center , are trying to build up a condition of consent inside the minds of Europeans, which is related to their biggest wet dream: an autonomous imperialist European army. The idea was not born suddenly because of Trump's hostile attitude against his own allies. From the early 50s, pan-European networks of neo-Nazis were created. In May 1951, the European Social Movement (MSE) was founded in Malmö, Sweden. Essentially, it was about projecting the ideology of the German SRP on a pan-European level. The MSE, which would remain active until the 1980s, proclaimed the need for Europe to emancipate itself from the divisive tutelage of the USA and the USSR, called for the defense of the “European race” against th...

Neoliberalism Needs To Go

Second Thought  

Netanyahu BRAGS About Genocide - And Our Media COVERS IT UP

Owen Jones  

Google Imports Ex Israeli Spies, The Genocide Resumes, Cruel Britannia

by Nate Bear   Part 3 - Cruel Britannia   The UK is moving ahead with large welfare cuts for disabled people, including those with cancer. On TV the other day, the UK’s health secretary Wes Streeting said that people with cancer should be in work, not at home resting. Alongside this, the government has said that to cut youth employment it will push young people to join the army. This, of course, is in the context of a massive expenditure on military weapons in the face of the Russian bogeyman.   What’s happening in the UK under a nominally centre-left Labour government is a good reminder that there is never a lesser evil if your leaders are neoliberals. Balancing the books on the backs of the poorest and most vulnerable in society is the north star of all neoliberals, whether they call themselves centrists, left wing or right wing. Cruelty is the policy and the point.    Yet the last few years have also been a good reminder that everything is a choice. Cov...

Trump Speeds Up FALL OF THE WEST With Tariff War

Owen Jones     Related:   Trump's tariffs: A unique opportunity for BRICS and the Global South to fully escape from dollar tyranny

UN rapporteur Francesca Albanese: World is watching a live genocide in Gaza and doing nothing

The New Arab   As Israel’s war on Gaza enters its 19th month, UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese is sounding the alarm louder than ever: the world is watching a live genocide — and doing nothing to stop it. In an exclusive interview with The New Arab , Albanese describes the devastation in Gaza as unparalleled since WWII. Entire neighbourhoods lie in ruins, tens of thousands are dead, and 91% of Gaza’s population is at risk of malnutrition. Over 60,000 children show signs of cognitive impairment due to starvation.  “This is not just war. This is genocide in real time,” she says. “What we are seeing now is the destruction of a people who refuse to leave.” Despite UN mandates and international law, Albanese says the global system is paralysed, and governments, corporations, and even universities are complicit. “If Palestine were a crime scene, it would bear all our fingerprints.”

US Official EXPOSES Truth About Gaza From The Inside

Owen Jones  

Google Imports Ex Israeli Spies, The Genocide Resumes, Cruel Britannia

by Nate Bear   Part 2 - The genocide resumes   The day before the Wiz deal, Israel resumed its genocide of Gaza with an unhinged bloodthirsty rampage, the deadliest twenty-four hours in the last nearly eighteen months of genocide. A high bar had been set, and it was cleared. They attacked at night, itself an act of utter cowardice and sadism, and slaughtered hundreds as they slept in tents. In tents. Close to one hundred babies and young children were killed. The overall death toll exceeds 400 and is rising. As expected, there is not a flicker of condemnation from world leaders, many of whom are arming Israel with the weapons and intelligence it needs for genocide. The British air force spent the ceasefire period gathering intelligence on Palestinians and feeding it to Israel so they could restart the mass murder efficiently.  The genocide is the end of the west. It destroys any claim to moral superiority over Russia, China, Iran or any of the officially designated bad g...