Why Hugo Chavez Won a Landslide Victory
Belief:
Introducing ChristianChirp, the Evangelical Right's Alternative to Twitter
Allison Kilkenny
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Real Recovery Is Easy to Spell: J-O-B-S
Jim Hightower
DrugReporter:
Drug Policy Alliance Conference Comes at a Crucial Moment for Drug Reform
Anthony Papa
Environment:
Whistleblowers Say Oil Reserve Numbers Deliberately Inflated to Avoid Panic, Appease the US
Matthew McDermott
Food:
Quitting Meat Is a Process -- Almost Impossible to Do All at Once
Jonathan Safran Foer
Health and Wellness:
Does the House Bill's Public Option Kill Off the Senate's?
Booman
Immigration:
Two More Legal Residents Caught in the Maw of our Immigration-Security-State
Seth Hoy
Media and Technology:
Relentless Pressure from Progressive Groups Pushes Hatemonger Lou Dobbs Out of CNN
Tana Ganeva
Movie Mix:
The Yes Men: Pranksters Out to Fix the World
Mark Engler
Politics:
How Catholic Bishops Threw the Health Care Debate into Turmoil with Anti-Abortion Maneuver
Adele M. Stan
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
"Precious" Star Claims the Spotlight
Emily Wilson
Rights and Liberties:
Muslim-Americans Have Good Reason to Fear Fort Hood Backlash
Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Sex and Relationships:
9 Silly Things People Say When They Hear You Don't Want Kids (And Ways to Counter Them)
Liz Langley
Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders
Water:
Radioactive Wastewater in New York Raises More Concerns About Oil Drilling
Abrahm Lustgarten
World:
Whistleblower: There’s a Lot Less Oil Than We Think and U.S. Has Been Trying to Cover It Up
Terry Macalister
When the rule of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was reaffirmed in a landslide 58-42 percent victory on Sunday, the opposition who put the recall vote on the ballot was stunned. They obviously don't spend much time in the nation's poor neighborhoods.
I knew Chavez would win the referendum when I met Olivia Delfino in a poor Caracas barrio that our international election delegation visited. Olivia came running out of her tiny house and grabbed my arm. "Tell the people of your country that we love Hugo Chavez," she insisted. She went on to tell me how her life had changed since he came to power. After living in the barrio for 40 years, she now had a formal title to her home and a bank loan to fix the roof so it wouldn't leak. Thanks to the Cuban dentists and a program called "Rescatando la sonrisa" – recovering the smile – for the first time in her life she was able to get her teeth fixed. And her daughter is in a job training program to become a nurse's assistant.
Getting more and more animated, Olivia dragged me over to a poster on the wall showing Hugo Chavez with a throng of followers and a list of Venezuela's new social programs that read: "The social programs are ours, let's defend them." Then slowly and laboriously, she began reading the list of social programs: literacy, health care, job training, land reform, subsidized food, small loans. I asked her if she was just learning to read and write as part of the literacy program. That's when she started crying. "Can you imagine what's it has meant to me, at 52 years old, to now have a chance to read?" she said. "It's transformed my life."
Walk through poor barrios in Venezuela and you'll hear the same stories over and over. The very poor can now go to a designated home in the neighborhood to pick up a hot meal every day. The elderly have monthly pensions that allow them to live with dignity. Young people can take advantage of greatly expanded free college programs. And with 13,000 Cuban doctors spread throughout the country and reaching over half the population, the poor now have their own family doctors on call 24-hours a day – doctors who even make house calls. This heath care, including medicines, is all free.
The programs are being paid for with the income from Venezuela's oil, which is at an all-time high. Previously, the nation's oil wealth benefited only a small, well-connected elite who kept themselves in power for 40 years through an electoral duopoly. The vast majority in this oil-rich nation remained poor, disenfranchised, and disempowered. With the election of Hugo Chavez in 1998 on a platform of sharing the nation's oil wealth with the poorest, all that has changed. The poor are now not only recipients of these programs, they are actively engaged in running them. They're turning abandoned buildings into neighborhood centers, running community kitchens, volunteering to teach in the literacy programs and organizing neighborhood health brigades.
Infuriated by their loss of power, the elite have used their control over the media to blast Chavez for destroying the economy, cozying up to Fidel Castro, antagonizing the US government, expropriating private property, and governing through dictatorial rule.
The opposition managed to collect enough signatures to trigger this Sunday's referendum on the president's mandate. Chavez supporters, bolstered by almost every poll, expected to win. "The opposition can lie all they want about Chavez," said Olivia defiantly, "but the facts speak for themselves. Before no one cared about us, the poor. Now they do."
The opposition accuse Chavez of using the social programs that have so improved the lives of the poor as a way to gain voters. In this, the opposition is right: Providing people with free health care, education, small business loans and job training is certainly a good way to win the hearts and minds of the people.
Sunday's overwhelming victory for Chavez has given him an even stronger mandate for his "revolution for the poor." It should also give George Bush and John Kerry reason to rethink their attitude towards Hugo Chavez. Rather than demonizing him as a new Fidel Castro and stoking the opposition, US leaders should embrace Venezuela's social transformation and the way it is empowering people like Olivia Delfino.
Medea Benjamin, co-founder of the human rights group Global Exchange and the women's peace group CodePink, is an election observer in Venezuela.
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »
| More Opinion: | ||
|
Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh Stoking GOP Civil War Media and Technology: The right-wing media are trying to play "king-maker." But they are incapable of picking winners and stand poised to rip the Republican Party apart. By Eric Boehlert, Media Matters for America. November 11, 2009. |
Does the House Bill's Public Option Kill Off the Senate's? Health and Wellness: Why the health care reform act has a very long and very difficult road ahead. By Booman, Booman Tribune. November 10, 2009. |
Atheists, It's Time to Stand Up to Jesus Belief: Civility has its uses, but atheists should not be afraid to mock faith to undermine religious power. By Russell Blackford, Udo Schuklenk, Comment Is Free. November 9, 2009. |
Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.