Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200

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Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200
Movimiento Bolivariano Revolucionario 200
AbbreviationMBR-200
LeaderHugo Chavez
Founded17 December 1982 (1982-12-17)
DissolvedJuly 1997
Succeeded by
IdeologyRevolutionary socialism
Castroism
Bolivarianism
Left-wing nationalism
Political positionLeft-wing

The Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 (Movimiento Bolivariano Revolucionario 200 or MBR-200) was the political and social movement that the later Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez founded in 1982. It eventually planned and executed the February 4, 1992 attempted coup. The movement later evolved into the Movement for the Fifth Republic (MVR), set up in July 1997 to support Hugo Chávez's candidacy in the 1998 Venezuelan presidential election.

Foundation[edit]

The movement's first members were Chávez and his fellow military officers Felipe Acosta Carles and Jesús Urdaneta Hernández.[3] On 17 December 1982, as Chávez biographer Richard Gott reports,

The three revolutionary officers swore an oath underneath the great tree at Samán de Güere, near Maracay, repeating the words of the pledge that Simón Bolívar had made in Rome in 1805, when he swore to devote his life to the liberation of Venezuela from Spanish yoke: "I swear before you, and I swear before the God of my fathers, that I will not allow my arm to relax, nor my soul to rest, until I have broken the chains that oppress us..."[3]

Gott further explains that the suffix "200" was added to the group's name the following year, in 1983, on the 200th anniversary of South American liberator Simon Bolívar's birth.

The movement began "more as a political study circle than as a subversive conspiracy," but soon its members "began thinking in terms of some kind of coup d'état."[3] Chávez and his friends soon recruited more members, including Francisco Arias Cárdenas, in March 1985.[4]

History[edit]

February 1992 coup attempt[edit]

Chávez' participation in the 1998 election[edit]

In the early years after his release, Chávez considered the possibility of another coup attempt, but with the prospects appearing slim, some advisers, notably Luis Miquilena, urged him to reconsider his scepticism of the elections. In July 1997 Chávez registered the new Fifth Republic Movement with the National Electoral Council.[citation needed]

Continuation of the movement[edit]

In 2001, Chávez accused the Fifth Republic Movement of bureaucratization under Luis Miquilena and proposed the re-launching of the original MBR-200. This would eventually lead to the consolidation of his movement under the United Socialist Party of Venezuela label in 2007.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Temas Paises Argentina" (in Spanish). Bauleros. 21 December 2001. A version of Bolívar's oath had also been used by Chávez at the foundation of the "Ejército de Liberación del Pueblo de Venezuela" on 17 December 1982.[dead link]
  2. ^ Marco A Aponte Moreno (2008). Metaphors in Hugo Chávez's political discourse: conceptualizing nation, revolution and opposition (PhD thesis). City University of New York.
  3. ^ a b c Gott 2000, p. 40
  4. ^ Gott 2000, p. 41
  5. ^ Alvarez 2003, pp. 159-160
Sources
  • Gott, Richard (2000), In the Shadow of the Liberator: Hugo Chávez and the Transformation of Venezuela, London: Verso, ISBN 978-1-85984-775-6
  • Zago, Angela, La Rebelión de los Angeles. Fuentes 1992. ISBN 978-980-6297-12-8

External links[edit]