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Opinion & Analysis

The Significance of Venezuela's Election Results and the New Struggles

Supporters and opponents of Venezuela’s Bolivarian revolution have come out with differing assessments post the November 23 regional elections, which Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez had defined as the most important electoral contest yet for the process of change.

US-Backed Right-Wing Launches Violent Assault on Chavistas, Venezuelan Revolutionary Gains

The Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network stands in solidarity with President Chavez and the grassroots Bolivarian movement against the right wing's latest attacks. We call for the democratic process in Venezuela to be respected by the new oppostion governors, and for an end to all United States interference in Venezuela's sovereign affairs.

Regional Elections and Participatory Ideology in Venezuela

What will be the relationship between municipal government and participatory projects in this new post-election climate? Indeed what is the relationship between elections for municipal government and more participatory processes?

“Please, tell the truth, if they let you"

The [Venezuelan] president asked a CNN correspondent and anchor of that channel to clarify that he never said that he “would bring tanks into the street” if the opposition won. He also requested that Glenda Omana straighten out that the government did not order any “information prohibition” in Venezuela.

After Venezuelan Elections, Workers Propose a Cleaning Out and More Revolution

Stalin Perez Borges, a national coordinator of the National Union of Workers (UNT)

It’s time to calm down and sit down together in order to evaluate in depth with the comrades, and draw conclusions that truly reflect reality. It is necessary to open a profound debate within the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), to reflect and proceed with self-criticism, as President Chávez indicated on Sunday night.

Feet of Clay or an Achilles’ Heel?

The catastrophic collapse of Chavismo was not to be, but nor was this a crushing victory or a clear mandate for the drastic radicalization of the revolutionary process. What was revealed was not feet of clay, but an Achilles' heel, giving necessary pause to revolutionaries and imposing reflection on some serious strategic losses.

Venezuela's 2008 Regional Elections

Regional elections held in Venezuela on November 23rd have been portrayed in the U.S. media as a defeat for to the government of President Hugo Chávez, when in fact the results strongly favor his party, the PSUV. The vast majority of state governorships and mayoralties, including those in many strategic parts of the country such as the Orinoco Oil Belt, remain under pro-government leadership.

Hugo's Still in Charge

Chavez achieved a sustained rate of economic growth outstripping that of most of Latin America and he put these resources to use tackling the most acute issues of poverty, health and education. These elections show that Chavez now faces a more specific but equally imperative challenge, that of radically improving the infrastructure, and with it, the efficiency and quality of life in the country's main cities.

Victory for Venezuela’s Socialists in Crucial Elections – November 2008

The pro-Chavez United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) won 72% of the governorships in the November 23, 2008 elections and 58% of the popular vote, dumbfounding the predictions of most of the pro-capitalist pollsters and the vast majority of the mass media who favored the opposition.

The Revolution Stumbles

The loss by the Chavistas of the main cities in Venezuela is a huge blow, and threatens the survival of the project.