Jump to content

Hugo Chávez: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m Spelling
(393 intermediate revisions by 94 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{POV}}
{{Venezuelan presidents infobox
{{cleanup-date|16 May 2006}}
{{Venezuelan presidents infobox
| name = Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías
| name = Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías
| image = Chavez bandera.jpg
| image = Chavez bandera.jpg
| order = 53rd
| order = 53rd
| terms = February 2, 1999 – [[Present (time)|Present]]
| affiliations = [[Fifth Republic Movement]]
| affiliations = [[Fifth Republic Movement]]
| terms = [[February 2]], [[1999]] &ndash; [[April 12]], [[2002]];<br>[[April 13]], [[2002]] &ndash; [[Present (time)|Present]]
| vice_president = [[José Vicente Rangel]]
| vice_president = [[José Vicente Rangel]]
| predecessor = [[Rafael Caldera]]
| successor = ''Incumbent''
| footnotes = &nbsp;
| footnotes = &nbsp;
}}
}}
'''Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías''' (<!--[[English language|English]] [[IPA chart for English|IPA]]: {{IPA|['ugo(ʊ) ˌɹɑfe(ɪ)'ɛl 'tʃɑbɪz 'fɹiɪs]}}; [[Spanish language|Spanish]] -->[[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]: {{IPA|['uɰo rafa'el 'tʃaβes 'fɾias]}}; born [[July 28]], [[1954]]) is the 53<sup>rd</sup><ref name="UCAB_1999">{{Harv|Universidad Católica Andrés Bello|1999}}.</ref> and current [[List of Presidents of Venezuela|President]] of [[Venezuela]]. As the leader of the "[[Bolivarian Revolution]]", Chávez is known for his [[democratic socialism|democratic socialist]] governance, his promotion of [[Latin America]]n integration, and his criticism, which he terms [[anti-imperialism]], of [[neoliberalism|neoliberal]] [[globalization]] and [[foreign relations of the United States|United States foreign policy]].<ref name="O'Keefe_2005">{{Harv|O'Keefe|2005}}.</ref>
'''Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías''' (<!--[[English language|English]] [[IPA chart for English|IPA]]: {{IPA|['ugo(ʊ) ˌɹɑfe(ɪ)'ɛl 'tʃɑbɪz 'fɹiɪs]}}; [[Spanish language|Spanish]] -->[[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]: {{IPA|['uɰo rafa'el 'tʃaβes 'fɾias]}}; born [[July 28]], [[1954]]) is the 53<sup>rd</sup> and current [[List of Presidents of Venezuela|President]] of [[Venezuela]]. As the leader of the [[Bolivarian Revolution]], Chávez is known for his [[democratic socialism|democratic socialist]] governance, his promotion of [[Latin America|Latin American]] integration, and his criticism, which he terms [[anti-imperialism]], of [[neoliberalism|neoliberal]] [[globalization]] and [[foreign relations of the United States|United States foreign policy]].<ref name="O'Keefe_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = O'Keefe
| Given1 = D
| Year = 2005
| Title = Building a Democratic, Humanist Socialism: The Political Challenge of the 21st Century
| Journal = Z Communications
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=40&ItemID=7396
| Access-date = January 21, 2006 }}.</ref>


A career military officer, Chávez founded the [[left-wing politics|leftist]] [[Fifth Republic Movement]] (MVR) after he led a failed [[Venezuelan coup attempt of 1992|1992 coup d'état]]. Chávez was [[Venezuelan presidential election, 1998|elected President in 1998]]<ref name="McCoy_Trinkunas_1999_49">{{Harvard reference
It is highly doubtful that Chávez would have gained any political ground without the increase of oil prices via the invasion of Iraq. As of May 2006, the United States is paying half of the 200 million dollars in daily oil sales. Only the ignorant of Venezuela support this fanatic. He has many STD's and should not be trusted when it comes to using his brain.
| Surname1 = McCoy
| Given1 = J
| Surname2 = Trinkunas
| Given2 = H
| Year = 1999
| Title = Observation of the 1998 Venezuelan Elections: A Report of the Council of Freely Elected Heads of Government
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/1151.pdf
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> on promises of aiding Venezuela's poor majority, and [[Venezuelan presidential election, 2000|reelected in 2000]].<ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_71-72">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McCoy
| Given1 = J
| Surname2 = Neuman
| Given2 = L
| Year = 2001
| Title = Observed Political Change In Venezuela: The Bolivarian Constitution and 2000 Elections: Final Report
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/297.pdf
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> Domestically, Chávez has launched [[Bolivarian Missions]] whose stated goals are to combat disease, illiteracy, malnutrition, poverty, and other social ills. Abroad, Chávez has acted against the [[Washington Consensus]] by supporting alternative models of [[economic development]], and has advocated cooperation among the world's poor nations, especially those in Latin America.


Chávez has been [[Criticism of Hugo Chávez|severely criticized]] during his presidency. He has been accused of [[electoral fraud]], [[human rights violations]], assaulting democracy in favor of dictatorship, and [[political repression]],<ref name="AI_2005">{{Harvard reference
A career military officer, Chávez founded the [[left-wing politics|leftist]] [[Fifth Republic Movement]] after a failed [[Venezuelan coup attempt of 1992|1992 coup d'état]]. Chávez was [[Venezuelan presidential election, 1998|elected President in 1998]]<ref name="McCoy_Trinkunas_1999_49">{{Harv|McCoy|Trinkunas|1999|p=49}}.</ref> on promises of aiding Venezuela's poor majority, and [[Venezuelan presidential election, 2000|reelected in 2000]].<ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_71-72">{{Harv|McCoy|Neuman|2001|pp=71-72}}.</ref> Domestically, Chávez has launched [[Bolivarian Missions]] to combat disease, illiteracy, malnutrition, poverty, and other social ills. Abroad, Chávez has acted against the [[Washington Consensus]] by supporting alternative models of [[economic development]], and has advocated cooperation among the world's poor nations, especially those in Latin America. And yet, no good has been contributed to him except for the riches of the nation that he has pilfered!
| Author = Amnesty International

| Year = 2005
Chávez has been [[Criticism of Hugo Chávez|severely criticized]], mostly by Venezuela's [[middle class|middle]] and [[upper class]]es. He has been accused, unsuccessfully and without evidence, of [[electoral fraud]], severe [[human rights violation]]s, assaulting democracy in favor of dictatorship, and [[political repression]],<ref name="AI_2005">{{Harv|Amnesty International|2005}}.</ref><ref name="HRW_2005">{{Harv|Human Rights Watch|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Diehl_2005">{{Harv|Diehl|2005}}.</ref> and has survived both a brief [[Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002|2002 coup]] and a failed [[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004|2004 recall referendum]] due to his enormous support amongst the poor that represent the vast majority of his constituents.<ref name="Carter_Center_Sep2004">{{Harv|Carter Center|2004|p=7}}.</ref><ref name="">{{Harv|Carter Center|2005|pp=133-134}}.</ref><ref name="Ginden_11Oct2005">{{Harv|Ginden|2005}}.</ref> Whether viewed as a [[liberator]] or [[authoritarianism|authoritarian]] [[demagogy|demagogue]], Chávez remains one of the most complex, controversial, and high-profile figures in modern Latin American politics.
| Title = AI Summary Report 2005: Venezuela
| Journal = AI
| URL = http://web.amnesty.org/report2005/ven-summary-eng
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="HRW_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Human Rights Watch
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela: Curbs on Free Expression Tightened
| Journal = HRW
| URL = http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/03/24/venezu10368.htm
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Diehl_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Diehl
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = Chavez's Censorship: Where 'Disrespect' Can Land You in Jail
| Journal = The Washington Post
| URL = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5755-2005Mar27.html
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> and has survived both a brief [[Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002|2002 coup]] and a failed [[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004|2004 recall referendum]] due to his enormous support amongst the poor that represent the vast majority of his constituents.<ref name="Carter_Center_Sep2004">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Carter Center
| Year = 2004
| Title = Report on an Analysis of the Representativeness of the Second Audit Sample, and the Correlation between Petition Signers and the Yes Vote in the August 15, 2004 Presidential Recall Referendum in Venezuela
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/1834.pdf
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Carter Center 2005">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Carter Center
| Year = 2005
| Title = Observing the Venezuela Presidential Recall Referendum: Comprehensive Report
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/2020.pdf
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Ginden_11Oct2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Gindin
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela and the 'New Democracy
| Journal = Canadian Dimension
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1575
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> Whether viewed as a [[liberator]] or [[authoritarianism|authoritarian]] [[demagogy|demagogue]], Chávez remains one of the most complex, controversial, and high-profile figures in modern Latin American politics.


== Early life (1954&ndash;1992) ==
== Early life (1954&ndash;1992) ==

{{main articles|[[Early life of Hugo Chávez]] and [[Military career of Hugo Chávez]]}}
{{main articles|[[Early life of Hugo Chávez]] and [[Military career of Hugo Chávez]]}}
Chávez was born the second son of poor schoolteachers [[Hugo de los Reyes Chávez]] and [[Elena Frías de Chávez]] in [[Sabaneta, Barinas|Sabaneta]], [[Barinas State|Barinas]]. Of mixed [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Amerindian]], [[Africa]]n, and [[Spanish people|Spanish]] descent, Chávez and his five siblings were raised in a thatched palm leaf house. Later, Chávez and his older brother moved to Sabaneta proper to live with their paternal grandmother, [[Rosa Inés Chávez]]. After elementary school, Chávez attended the Daniel Florencio O'Leary School in Barinas, graduating with a science degree.<ref name="GOV_2005">{{Harv|Government of Venezuela|2005}}.</ref> At eighteen, Chávez attended the [[Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences]], graduating in 1975 as a sub-lieutenant with master's degrees in military science and engineering. Chávez then served for several months in the military, after which he did graduate-level work in political science at [[Caracas]]' [[Universidad Simón Bolívar|Simón Bolívar University]], but left without a degree.
Chávez was born the second son of poor schoolteachers in [[Sabaneta, Barinas|Sabaneta]], [[Barinas State|Barinas]]. He is of mixed [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Amerindian]], [[Africa]]n, and [[Spanish people|Spanish]] descent. Chávez and his five siblings were raised in a thatched palm leaf house. Chávez and his older brother moved to Sabaneta proper to live with their paternal grandmother. Chávez attended the Daniel Florencio O'Leary School in Barinas, graduating with a science degree after elementary school.<ref name="GOV_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Government of Venezuela
| Year = 2005
| Title = Presidente Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías
| Journal = Gobierno En Línea
| URL = http://www.gobiernoenlinea.ve/venezuela/ejecutivo.html
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> Chávez attended the [[Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences]] at eighteen, graduating in 1975 as a sub-lieutenant with master's degrees in military science and engineering. Chávez served for several months in the military. He did graduate-level work in political science at [[Caracas]]' [[Universidad Simón Bolívar|Simón Bolívar University]], but left without a degree.


In his student years, Chávez developed a left-nationalist ideology termed "[[Bolivarianism]]", inspired by the [[Pan-Americanism|pan-Americanist]] philosophies of 19th-century Venezuelan revolutionary [[Simón Bolívar]], [[Peru]]vian left-leaning President Gral. [[Juan Velasco Alvarado|Juan Velasco]], and various socialist and communist leaders. Chávez also played baseball and softball with the ''Criollitos de Venezuela'', who played in the 1969 Venezuelan National Baseball Championships. He also wrote poems, stories, and dramas.<ref name="GOV_2005">{{Harv|Government of Venezuela|2005}}.</ref> After college, Chávez served in a Barinas-based [[counter-insurgency]] battalion. Over the next 17 years, he held various other post, command, and staff positions, eventually becoming a decorated lieutenant colonel. Chávez also taught at the Military Academy of Venezuela, where he was known for his aggressive criticism of the Venezuelan government and socioeconomic status quo.<ref name="Gott_2005b">{{Harv|Gott|2005b}}.</ref> He also founded the [[Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200]] (MBR-200).<ref name="GOV_2005">{{Harv|Government of Venezuela|2005}}.</ref>
Chávez developed a left-nationalist ideology termed "[[Bolivarianism]]", inspired by the [[Pan-Americanism|pan-Americanist]] philosophies of 19th-century Venezuelan revolutionary [[Simón Bolívar]], [[Peru]]vian left-leaning President Gral. [[Juan Velasco Alvarado|Juan Velasco]], and various socialist and communist leaders. After college, Chávez served in a Barinas-based [[counter-insurgency]] battalion in his student years. He held various other posts, command, and staff positions, eventually becoming a decorated lieutenant colonel. Chávez also taught at the Military Academy of Venezuela, where he was known for his aggressive criticism of the Venezuelan government and socioeconomic status quo.<ref name="Gott_2005b">{{Harvard reference
| Authorlink = Richard Gott
| Surname1 = Gott
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Two fingers to America
| Journal = The Guardian
| URL = http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,12716,1555809,00.html
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> He also founded the [[Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200]] (MBR-200).<ref name="GOV_2005">{{Harv|Government of Venezuela|2005}}.</ref>


== Coup attempt (1992) ==
== Chávez coup attempt (1992) ==
[[Image:Chavez 1994 AFP 1.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Reporters interview Chávez following his 1994 release from prison. Although the coup for which Chávez was imprisoned failed, it elevated him into the national spotlight.]]
[[Image:Chavez 1994 AFP 1.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Chávez interviewed following his 1994 release from prison. Although the coup for which Chávez was imprisoned failed, it elevated him into the national spotlight.]]
{{main|1992 Venezuelan coup attempt of Hugo Chávez}}
{{main|Venezuelan coup attempt of 1992}}
Growing unrest and economic decline under the [[neoliberalism|neoliberal]] administration of [[Carlos Andrés Pérez]]<ref name="Schuyler_2001_10">{{Harvard reference
Growing unrest and economic decline under the [[neoliberalism|neoliberal]] administration of [[Carlos Andrés Pérez]]<ref name="Schuyler_2001_10">{{Harv|Schuyler|2001|p=10}}.</ref> caused Chávez to plan a coup d'état.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}.</ref> Initially planned for December, Chávez delayed the MBR-200 coup until the early twilight hours of [[February 4]], [[1992]]. On that date, five army units under Chávez's command barreled into urban Caracas. They planned to overrun key military and communications installations, including the [[Miraflores presidential palace]], the defense ministry, La Carlota military airport, and the Historical Museum. Chávez's main goal was to capture Pérez, who was returning from an overseas trip.
| Surname1 = Schuyler
| Given1 = GW
| Year = 2001
| Title = Health and Neoliberalism: Venezuela and Cuba
| Journal = The Policy Studies Organization
| URL = http://www.ipsonet.org/papers/gws.pdf
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> led Chávez to plan a coup d'état.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Guillermoprieto
| Given1 = Alma
| Year = 2005
| Title = Don't Cry for Me, Venezuela
| Journal = New York Review of Books
| URL = http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18302
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref> Initially planned for December, Chávez delayed the MBR-200 coup until the early twilight hours of [[February 4]], [[1992]]. On that date, five army units under Chávez's command barreled into urban Caracas. They planned to overrun key military and communications installations, including the [[Miraflores presidential palace]], the defense ministry, La Carlota military airport, and the Historical Museum. Chávez's main goal was to capture Pérez, who was returning from an overseas trip.


Chávez held the loyalty of 10% of the military;<ref name="Gott_2005_64">{{Harv|Gott|2005|p=64}}.</ref> yet, numerous betrayals, errors, and other unforeseen circumstances soon left Chávez and others besieged in the Historical Museum and unable to issue orders to other rebels.<ref name="Gott_2005_63">{{Harv|Gott|2005|p=63}}.</ref> Worse, Chávez's allies neither took Caracas nor were able to air a nationwide call for a mass uprising. Meanwhile, Pérez eluded capture. As the coup unfolded, fourteen soldiers were killed while fifty soldiers and eighty civilians were injured.<ref name="Gott_2005_69">{{Harv|Gott|2005|p=69}}.</ref> Nevertheless, rebel forces elsewhere made swift advances, capturing [[Valencia]], [[Maracaibo]], and [[Maracay]].<ref name="Gott_2005_66-67">{{Harv|Gott|2005|pp=66-67}}.</ref> But having failed in Caracas, Chávez gave himself up; later, he was allowed to make a televised nationwide call for all rebel forces to stand down. In the address, he also famously quipped that he had failed only "''por ahora''" &mdash; "for the moment".<ref name="Gott_2005_67">{{Harv|Gott|2005|p=67}}.</ref> With this, Chávez was thrust into the national spotlight, with many poor Venezuelans seeing him as one who stood against corruption and [[kleptocracy]].<ref name="Gott_2005_67">{{Harv|Gott|2005|p=67}}.</ref><ref name="O'Keefe_2005">{{Harv|O'Keefe|2005}}.</ref> Chávez was then sent to Yare prison.
Chávez held the loyalty of 10% of the military;<ref name="Gott_2005_64">{{cite book| authorlink = Richard Gott| last= Gott| first=Richard| year= 2005| title = Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution| publisher = Verso Books| id = ISBN 1-84467-533-5| url=http://www.versobooks.com/books/ghij/g-titles/gott_hugo_chavez.shtml| accessdate = 2006-01-21| pages=63-67}}</ref> yet numerous betrayals, errors, and other unforeseen circumstances soon left Chávez and others besieged in the Historical Museum and unable to issue orders to other rebels.<ref name="Gott_2005_64"/> Further, Chávez's allies neither took Caracas nor were able to air a nationwide call for a mass uprising or capture Pérez. As the coup unfolded, fourteen soldiers were killed, and fifty soldiers and eighty civilians were injured.<ref name="Gott_2005_64"/> Rebel forces elsewhere made swift advances, capturing [[Valencia]], [[Maracaibo]], and [[Maracay]].<ref name="Gott_2005_64"/> But having failed in Caracas, Chávez gave himself up; later, he was allowed to make a televised nationwide call for all rebel forces to stand down. In the address, he also famously quipped that he had failed only "''por ahora''" &mdash; "for the moment".<ref name="Gott_2005_64"/> With this, Chávez was thrust into the national spotlight, with many poor Venezuelans seeing him as one who stood against corruption and [[kleptocracy]].<ref name="Gott_2005_64"/><ref name="O'Keefe_2005">{{Harv|O'Keefe|2005}}.</ref> Chávez was then sent to Yare prison.


== Political rise (1992&ndash;1999) ==
== Political rise (1992&ndash;1999) ==
{{main|Venezuelan presidential election, 1998}}
{{main|Venezuelan presidential election, 1998}}
After a two-year imprisonment, Chávez was pardoned by President [[Rafael Caldera]] in 1994. Chávez reformed the MBR-200, renaming it the [[Fifth Republic Movement]] (MVR &mdash; ''Movimiento Quinta República'', with the "V" being the Roman numeral five). In 1998, Chávez started campaigning for the presidency and created a platform that drew heavily from Bolivarianism, particularly its anti-corruption and anti-poverty agenda. Chávez also promised to dismantle ''[[puntofijismo]]'', the traditional two-party system of political patronage.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Wilpert_2003">{{Harv|Wilpert|2003}}.</ref> Controversially, foreign banks &mdash; including Spain's [[Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria]] (BBVA) and [[Banco Santander Central Hispano|Banco Santander]], each the owner of one of Venezuela's largest banks &mdash; illicitly funneled millions of dollars into Chávez's campaign.<ref name="Marcano_2005_50">{{Harv|Marcano|2005|p=50}}.</ref><ref name="Toro_2004">{{Harv|Toro|2004}}.</ref>
After a two-year imprisonment, Chávez was pardoned by President [[Rafael Caldera]] in 1994. Chávez reformed the MBR-200, renaming it the [[Fifth Republic Movement]] (MVR &mdash; ''Movimiento Quinta República'', with the "V" being the Roman numeral five). In 1998, Chávez started campaigning for the presidency and created a platform that drew heavily from Bolivarianism, particularly its anti-corruption and anti-poverty agenda. Chávez also promised to dismantle ''[[puntofijismo]]'', the traditional two-party system of political patronage.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Wilpert_2003">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wilpert
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2003
| Title = Venezuela’s Missions to Fight Poverty
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1051
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> Controversially, foreign banks &mdash; including Spain's [[Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria]] (BBVA) and [[Banco Santander Central Hispano]] (BSCH), each the owner of one of Venezuela's largest banks &mdash; illicitly funneled millions of dollars into Chávez's campaign.<ref name="Marcano_2005_50">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Marcano
| Given1 = C
| Surname2 = Barrera Tyszka
| Given2 = A
| Year = 2005
| Title = Hugo Chávez Sin Uniforme: Una Historia Personal
| Publisher = Random House Mondadori
| ID = ISBN 9-80293-284-1
}}.</ref><ref name="Toro_2004">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Toro
| Given1 = F
| Year = 2004
| Title = 100 Good Reasons Not to Believe Venezuela's Chavez
| Journal = Analitica
| URL = http://www.analitica.com/va/ttim/international/4969131.asp
| Access-date = January 21], 2006
}}.</ref>
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0em 0em 1em 1em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0em 0em 1em 1em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
Line 51: Line 180:
|-
|-
| Abstention: || 3,971,239 || 36.24%
| Abstention: || 3,971,239 || 36.24%
|-
|}
|}
|}
|}


Chávez used a charismatic public speaking style &mdash; noted for its aggressive manner and abundance of colloquialisms &mdash; to woo a largely poor and working class base. By May 1998, Chávez had a 30% approval rating in polls; by August he had 39%. On [[December 6]], [[1998]], Chávez won the [[Carter Center]]-endorsed [[Venezuelan presidential election, 1998|1998 presidential election]] with 56.2% of the vote.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}</ref><ref name="McCoy_Trinkunas_1999_49">{{Harv|McCoy|Trinkunas|1999|p=49}}.</ref>
Chávez used a charismatic public speaking style &mdash; noted for its aggressive manner and abundance of colloquialisms &mdash; to woo a largely poor and working class base. By May 1998, Chávez had a 30% approval rating in polls; by August he had 39%. On [[December 6]], [[1998]], Chávez won the [[Carter Center]]-endorsed [[Venezuelan presidential election, 1998|1998 presidential election]] with 56% of the vote.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}</ref><ref name="McCoy_Trinkunas_1999_49">{{Harv|McCoy|Trinkunas|1999|p=49}}.</ref>


== Presidency (1999&ndash;present) ==
== First Presidency (1999&ndash;2000) ==
{{main|Presidency of Hugo Chávez}}
{{main|Presidency of Hugo Chávez}}
[[Image:HugoChavez1823.jpeg|thumb|left|225px|Chávez holds up a miniature copy of the 1999 [[Constitution of Venezuela|Venezuelan Constitution]] at the 2005 [[World Social Forum]] held in [[Brazil]].]]
Chávez's years as president have been characterized by widespread transformation and turmoil. Sweeping moves away from support for neoliberalism and the [[free market]] were accompanied by implementation of quasi-socialist [[income redistribution]] and [[social welfare]] schemes. Chávez also made great changes to Venezuela's constitution and foreign policy. Instead of continuing Venezuela's past support for U.S. and European strategic interests, Chávez has promoted alternative development and integration paradigms for the Third World.
Chávez was sworn in as president on [[February 2]], [[1999]]. Among his first acts was the launching of [[Plan Bolivar 2000]], which included road building, housing construction, and mass [[vaccination]].<ref name="Harnecker_2003">{{Harvard reference
[[Image:HugoChavez1823.jpeg|thumb|left|225px|Chávez holds up a miniature copy of the 1999 [[Constitution of Venezuela|Venezuelan Constitution]] at the 2005 [[World Social Forum]] held in [[Porto Alegre]], [[Brazil]].]]
| Surname1 = Harnecker

| Given1 = M
Chávez has also alienated many upper and middle class Venezuelans, who reported political repression and human rights violations under his rule. Two attempts have been made to unseat him: a 2002 coup d'etat that saw him briefly removed from power but quickly re-instated and a 2004 'recall' referendum. Many believe the US played an important role in both efforts. Nevertheless, Chávez remains a powerful figure in modern politics, seeing himself as a focal point for what he sees as growing opposition to the [[Washington Consensus]] and [[Foreign relations of the United States|United States foreign policy]].
| Year = 2003

| Title = The Military and the Revolution: Harnecker interviews Chávez
=== 1999&ndash;2000 ===
| Journal = Z Communications
Chávez was sworn in as president on [[February 2]], [[1999]], at the age of 44. Among his first acts was the launching of [[Plan Bolivar 2000]], which included road building, housing construction, and mass [[vaccination]].<ref name="Harnecker_2003">{{Harv|Harnecker|2003}}. Not unlike Vladimir Illich Lenin, Mr. Chàvez annulled Venezuelan Congress, the Constitution which allowed him to be elected democratically and named a National Assembly that also immitated pre-Stalin Russia's communist path.</ref> Chávez also halted planned [[privatization]]s of, among others, the national [[social security]] system, aluminum industry holdings, and the oil sector.<ref name="Ellner_2005">{{Harv|Ellner|2005}}.</ref> Nevertheless, Chávez also sought [[foreign direct investment]] to prevent chronic [[capital flight]] and monetary [[inflation]]. Chávez also reduced oil extraction, seeking to gain more revenues from the resulting higher oil prices and lobbying [[OPEC]] to do likewise. Chávez also attempted renegotiation of decades-old agreements with Philips Petroleum and [[ExxonMobil]]<ref name="CCR_2006">{{Harv|Center for Cooperative Research|2006}},</ref> seeking to gain more royalties. He also overhauled the formerly lax tax collection and [[financial audit|auditing]] system &mdash; especially regarding major corporations and landholders &mdash; by increasing its fairness and efficiency.
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=2841
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}. </ref> Chávez also halted planned [[privatization]]s of, among others, the national [[social security]] system, aluminum industry holdings, and the oil sector.<ref name="Ellner_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Ellner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s “Demonstration Effect”: Defying Globalization’s Logic
| Journal = North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA)
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1579
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> Chávez also overhauled the formerly lax tax collection and [[financial audit|auditing]] system &mdash; especially regarding major corporations and landholders &mdash; by increasing its fairness and efficiency.
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0em 0em 1em 1em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0em 0em 1em 1em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
Line 80: Line 221:
| No: || 1,298,105 || 28.22%
| No: || 1,298,105 || 28.22%
|-
|-
| Abstention: || 6,041,743 || 55.63%
|| Abstention: || 6,041,743 || 55.63%
|-
|}
|}
|}
|}
Responding to the stalling of his legislation in the [[National Assembly of Venezuela|National Assembly]], Chávez scheduled two fresh national elections for July 1999, including a referendum for and elections to fill a new constitutional assembly. The Constitutional Assembly was created when the referendum passed with a 71.78% "yes" vote, while the pro-Chávez ''Polo Patriotico'' ("Patriotic Pole") won 95% (120 out of the total 131) of its seats. In August 1999, the Constitutional Assembly's "Judicial Emergency Committee" declared a "legislative emergency" whereby a seven-member committee conducted the National Assembly's functions; meanwhile, the National Assembly was prohibited from holding meetings.<ref name="Mcgirk_27Dec1999">{{Harv|Mcgirk|1999}}.</ref> The Constitutional Assembly drafted the [[Constitution of Venezuela|1999 Venezuelan Constitution]], which included an increase in the presidential term from five to six years, a new presidential two-term limit, and a new provision for presidential [[recall election]]s, expanded presidential powers (including the power to dissolve the National Assembly), conversion of the [[bicameralism|bicameral]] National Assembly into a weakened [[unicameralism|unicameral]] legislature, merit-based appointments of judges, and creation of the Public Defender, an office authorized to regulate the activities of the presidency and the National Assembly. Chávez styled the new Public Defender as guardian of the government's "moral branch", tasked with defending public and moral interests. In December 1999, the new constitution was approved in a nationwide election with a 71.78% "yes" vote. It must be known that the CNE (National Elections Committee) is held by Chàvez partisans who bend rules to accommodate only Chavista candidates. Widespread fraude has stained Venezuelan democracy for years to come.
Responding to the stalling of his legislation in the [[National Assembly of Venezuela|National Assembly]], Chávez scheduled two national elections for July 1999, including a referendum for and elections to fill a new constitutional assembly. The Constitutional Assembly was created when the referendum passed with a 71.78% "yes" vote, while the pro-Chávez ''Polo Patriotico'' ("Patriotic Pole") won 95% (120 out of the total 131) of its seats. In August 1999, the Constitutional Assembly's "Judicial Emergency Committee" declared a "legislative emergency" whereby a seven-member committee conducted the National Assembly's functions; meanwhile, the National Assembly was prohibited from holding meetings.<ref name="Mcgirk_27Dec1999">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McGirk
| Given1 = T
| Year = 1999
| Title = Hugo Chávez Frías
| Journal = Time
| URL = http://www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/1999/1227/chavez.html
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref> The Constitutional Assembly drafted the [[Constitution of Venezuela|1999 Venezuelan Constitution]], which included an increase in the presidential term from five to six years, a new presidential two-term limit, a new provision for presidential [[recall election]]s, renaming of the country to ''República Bolivariana de Venezuela'', expanded presidential powers, conversion of the [[bicameralism|bicameral]] National Assembly into a weakened [[unicameralism|unicameral]] legislature, merit-based appointments of judges, and creation of the Public Defender, an office authorized to regulate the activities of the presidency and the National Assembly.<ref>{{Harvard reference
| Year = 2000
| Title = Bolivarian Constitution of Venezuela
| URL = http://www.embavenez-us.org/constitution/intro.htm
| Access-date = May 25, 2006
}}</ref>


In December 1999, the new constitution was approved in a nationwide election with a 71.78% "yes" vote. On December 15, after weeks of heavy rain, statewide mudslides claimed the lives of an estimated 30,000 people. Critics claim Chávez was distracted by the referendum and that the government ignored a civil defense report, calling for emergency measures, issued the day the floods struck <ref name="BBC_vargas1">{{Harvard reference
=== 2000&ndash;2002 ===
| Author = BBC News
| Year = 1999
| Title = Venezuela disaster 'worst this century'
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/581579.stm
| Access-date = June 7, 2006]
}}.</ref>. The government rejected these claims. <ref name="BBC_vargas1"/> Chávez personally led the relief effort afterwards. <ref name="BBC_vargas2">{{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Year = 1999
| Title = Analysis: Floods a test for Chavez
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/574191.stm
| Access-date = June 7, 2006]
}}.</ref> Subsequent mudslides in 2000 and 2004 left 14 dead.<ref name="red_cross">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Kriner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2000
| Title = Flooding Returns to Venezuela
| Journal = Red Cross
| URL = http://www.redcross.org/news/archives/2000/11-21-00.html
| Access-date = June 7, 2006]
}}.</ref>
<ref name="dartmouth">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Dartmouth
| Year = 2005
| Title = 2004 Global Register of Major Flood Events
| Journal = Dartmouth
| URL = http://www.dartmouth.edu/~floods/Archives/2004sum.htm
| Access-date = June 7, 2006]
}}.</ref>

== Second Presidency (2000&ndash;present) ==
[[Image:Hugo Chávez (2000).jpg|thumb|200px|President Chávez in the year 2000. He is the first President of Venezuela to wear a military uniform since [[Marcos Pérez Jiménez]] in [[1958]].]]
{{main|Venezuelan presidential election, 2000}}
{{main|Venezuelan presidential election, 2000}}
Elections for the new unicameral National Assembly took place on [[July 30]], [[2000]]; meanwhile, Chávez himself stood for reelection. Chávez's coalition won a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly, while [[Venezuelan presidential election, 2000|Chávez was reelected]] with 60% of the votes. The [[Carter Center]] &mdash; reporting a lack of electoral transparency, CNE partiality, and pressure from Chávez to schedule the early elections &mdash; did not validate the CNE-declared results.<ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_71-72">{{Harv|McCoy|Neuman|2001|pp=71-72}}.</ref> On [[December 3]], [[2000]], a referendum (backed by Chávez but condemned by international labor organizations<ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_73">{{Harv|McCoy|Neuman|2001|p=73}}.</ref>) was held. The referendum &mdash; which passed &mdash; forced trade unions to hold state-monitored elections.
Elections for the new unicameral National Assembly took place on [[July 30]], [[2000]]; meanwhile, Chávez himself stood for reelection. Chávez's coalition won a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly, while [[Venezuelan presidential election, 2000|Chávez was reelected]] with 60% of the votes. The [[Carter Center]] stated the elections were "flawed" although "the presidential election legitimately expressed the will of the people".<ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_71-72"/> On [[December 3]], [[2000]], a referendum &mdash; backed by Chávez but condemned by international labor organizations <ref name="McCoy_Neuman_2001_71-72"/> &mdash; was held. The referendum passed, forcing trade unions to hold state-monitored elections.
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: left; margin: 1em 1em 1em 0em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: left; margin: 1em 1em 1em 0em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
Line 106: Line 294:
|-
|-
| Abstention: || 5.120.464 || 43.69%
| Abstention: || 5.120.464 || 43.69%
|-
|}
|}
|- align="center" bgcolor="#F6F6FF"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#F6F6FF"
Line 120: Line 309:
|-
|-
| Abstention: || 8,569,691 || 76.50%
| Abstention: || 8,569,691 || 76.50%
|-
|}
|}
|}
|}
After the mid-2000 elections, Chávez backed passage of the "Enabling Act", which allowed Chávez to [[rule by decree]] for one year. In November 2001, Chávez used it to enact 49 decrees, including the "Hydrocarbons Law" (more government control over the oil sector) and the "Land Law" (land reform and redistribution). The [[Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce|Fedecámaras]] business federation, opposed to the decrees, began a general [[strike action|strike]] on [[December 10]], [[2001]]; this failed to influence Chávez, allowing him to continue previously existing policies ranging from a government-funded free [[healthcare system]] and education up to university level. <ref name="CCR_2006">{{Harv|Center for Cooperative Research|2006}}.</ref> By December 2001, Chávez's capital-control policies reduced inflation from 40% to 12% and generated 4% economic growth; meanwhile, primary school enrollment increased by one million.<ref name="CCR_2006">{{Harv|Center for Cooperative Research|2006}}.</ref>
After the mid-2000 elections, Chávez backed passage of the [[Enabling act]], which allowed Chávez to [[rule by decree]] for one year. In November 2001, Chávez used it to enact 49 decrees, including the "Hydrocarbons Law" (increased government control over the oil sector) and the "Land Law" (land reform and redistribution). The [[Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce|Fedecámaras]] business federation and the [[Confederación de Trabajadores de Venezuela]] opposed the decrees, and began a general [[strike action|strike]] on December 10, 2001,<ref name="Universal_ne">{{Harvard reference
| Author = El Universal
| Year = 2001
| Title = CTV también irá al paro
| Journal = El Universal
| URL = http://www.eluniversal.com/2001/12/05/pol_art_05102AA.shtml
| Access-date = May 31, 2006
}}.</ref> in the hope that the President would reconsider his legislative action and, instead, open a debate about those laws.<ref name="Universal_ne">{{Harvard reference
| Author = El Universal
| Year = 2001
| Title = El 10 de diciembre será la huelga
| Journal = El Universal
| URL = http://buscador.eluniversal.com/2001/11/20/pol_art_20102AA.shtml
| Access-date = May 31, 2006
}}.</ref> However, the strike failed to impact Chávez decision.


=== 2002&ndash;2004 ===
=== Events of April 11, 2002 ===
{{main articles|[[Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002]] and [[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004]]}}
{{main articles|[[Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002]]}}
[[Image:Chavezsurvivescoup.JPG|thumb|right|225px|Chávez makes a dramatic return to power on April 13, 2002.]]
On [[April 11]], [[2002]], some 500,000 anti-Chávez demonstrators and pro-Chávez demonstrators marched to the Miraflores palace and clashed with each other. Alarmed, Chávez commandeered the airwaves. He asked protesters to go home, played pre-recorded speeches, and attempted to stop coverage of the violence. Then, army commander-in-chief Lucas Rincón Romero reported in a nationwide broadcast that Chávez had resigned his presidency. Chávez was taken to a military base while coup leaders made Fedecámaras president [[Pedro Carmona]] interim president. Carmona immediately reversed many of Chávez's policies, including his credit controls and oil production ceilings. Carmona also dissolved the National Assembly, dismissed the Venezuelan judiciary, and reverted Venezuela's official name back to ''República de Venezuela''. Pro-Chávez demonstrations then erupted across Caracas; later, pro-Chávez troops led a counter-coup, freeing Chávez from captivity.<ref name="Gott_2005_234-236">{{Harv|Gott|2005|pp=234-236}}.</ref>
On [[April 11]], [[2002]], anti-Chávez and pro-Chávez demonstrators clashed at the Miraflores palace. Chávez commandeered the airwaves, and asked protesters to go home, played pre-recorded speeches, and attempted to stop media coverage of the violence. Subsequently, Commander of the Army Lucas Rincón Romero reported in a nationwide broadcast that Chávez had resigned his presidency.
[[Image:Chavezsurvivescoup.JPG|thumb|right|225px|Chávez makes a dramatic return to power on [[April 13]], [[2002]] following a [[Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002|two-day coup d'état]].]]

In the early hours of [[April 12]], [[General-in-Chief]] Lucas Rincón Romero announced that Chávez had been asked for his resignation, and had accepted. Since Rincón remains close to Chávez and later, in fact, became the Minister of the Interior and Justice, some Venezuelans argue that the resignation was real and that there was no coup but a power vacuum, despite the succesion order being broken. Venezuela's Supreme Court later ruled that what happened was "Generals merely trying to restore order", and no military officers were ever charged with plotting a coup.<ref>"No Trial for Venezuela Coup Plotters". ''UPI'' 14 August 2002. SIRS Knowledge Source. Accessed 1 March 2003.</ref>On March 11, 2005, the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court ruled that the recusals were unconstitutional, the hearing was invalid, and the military officers (by then retired) may stand trial.<ref name="TSJ">{{Harvard reference
| Author = TSJ
| Year = 2005
| Title = T1 ST04 N5
| Journal = Tribunal Supremo de Justicia
| URL = http://infovenezuela.org/attachments-spanish/T1%20ST04%20N5%20Decisi%F3n%20del%20TSJ%20que%20anula%20la%20sentencia%20de%20agosto%202002.pdf
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref>

Chávez was taken to a military base while Fedecámaras president [[Pedro Carmona]] was installed as interim president. Carmona reversed Chávez's credit controls and oil production ceilings, dissolved the National Assembly, dismissed the Venezuelan judiciary, and reverted Venezuela's official name back to ''República de Venezuela''. Demonstrations erupted, and pro-Chávez troops freed Chávez from captivity.<ref name="Gott_2005_234-236">Gott 2005, pp. 234-236</ref>

On [[April 13]], [[2002]], Chávez resumed as president, and began several investigations, which supported Chávez's claims that the coup was U.S.-sponsored.<ref name="Vulliamy_21Apr2002">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Vulliamy
| Given1 = E
| Year = 2002
| Title = Venezuela coup linked to Bush team
| Journal = The Guardian
| URL = http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,688071,00.html
| Access-date = January 30, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="BBC_Ships">{{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC
| Year = 2002
| Title = US investigates Venezuela coup role
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/1988213.stm
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref>[[U.S. Senator]] [[Christopher Dodd]] D-CT requested an investigation due to "raised concerns that Washington appeared to condone the removal of Mr Chavez". <ref name="BBC_Ships"/><ref name="AP_Fleischer">{{Harvard reference
| Author = AP
| Year = 2002
| Title = Venezuela's Chavez Says United States Must Explain Reaction To Coup
| Journal = Associated Press
| URL = http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0510-05.htm
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref> It found that "U.S. officials acted appropriately and did nothing to encourage an April coup against Venezuela's president".<ref> U.S. Embassy, Caracas, Venezuela. [http://embajadausa.org.ve/wwwh1927.html State Dept. Issues Report on U.S. Actions During Venezuelan Coup: (Inspector General finds U.S. officials acted properly during coup).] Accessed 26 May 2006.</ref><ref>U.S. Department of State and Office of Inspector General. [http://oig.state.gov/documents/organization/13682.pdf A Review of U.S. Policy toward Venezuela, November 2001 - April 2002.] Accessed 26 May 2006.</ref>

===Presidency re-instated, April 13, 2002 &ndash; 2004===

In late 2002, Chávez moved to use [[Petróleos de Venezuela|PDVSA]] revenues to fund his social programs. Opposing this, many PDVSA managers and workers began a two-months strike starting on [[December 2]], [[2002]]. This resulted in shortages of oil and loss of PDVSA revenue. In response, Chávez fired 19,000 PDVSA striking workers and managers, replacing them with Chávez loyalist or neutrals.

In 2004, a [[Putative Venezuelan coup of 2004|putative 2004 coup attempt]] stirred controversy.<ref name="EP_2004">{{Harvard reference
| Author = El Pais
| Year = 2004
| Title = Condenan a tres militares y 27 colombianos
| Journal = El Pais
| URL = http://elpais-cali.terra.com.co/paisonline/notas/Octubre252005/paras_ven.html
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref>

===Presidential recall referendum, 2004===
{{main articles|[[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004]]}}
During 2003 and 2004, millions of signatures were collected by [[Súmate]], a volunteer civilian organization, to activate the constitutional presidential recall provision. Two previous attempts to collect enough signatures to recall the president halfway through his term were ruled invalid. During the petition signing to recall him, Chávez suggested that even if the recall referendum succeeded, he would not leave office. ''"Not even if we suppose that they hold that referendum and get 90% of the votes, I will not leave. Forget it. I will not leave."'' <ref>Official transcript 'Aló Presidente' N°128, 24 November 2002.</ref> The list of signatories was subsequently collected by the government<ref name="Aló Presidente N°180">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Hugo Chavez
| Year = 2004
| Title = Official transcript 'Aló Presidente' N°180, 1 February 2004
| Journal = Venezuelan State Television
| URL = http://www.gobiernoenlinea.ve/misc-view/sharedfiles/Alo_Presidente_180.pdf
| Access-date = 9 June 2006
}}</ref> for the purpose of reprisal.<ref name="Rangel Avalos y Acosta Carles">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Rangel Avalos y Acosta Carles
| Year = 2004
| Title = http://www.eluniversal.com/2004/03/21/pol_art_21108A.shtml
| Journal = El Universal
| URL = http://www.eluniversal.com/2004/03/21/pol_art_21108A.shtml
| Access-date = 9 June 2006
}}</ref>


In late [[April 13]], [[2002]], Chávez resumed as president. He began several investigations; their results supported Chávez's claims that the coup was U.S.-sponsored.<ref name="Vulliamy_21Apr2002">{{Harv|Vulliamy|2002}}.</ref><ref name="CCR_2006">{{Harv|Center for Cooperative Research|2006}}.</ref> Chávez also replaced the upper echelons of the military command, boosted veterans' benefits, and began several new civilian-military development programs. In late 2002, he also moved to use [[Petróleos de Venezuela|PDVSA]] revenues to fund his social programs. Opposing this, many PDVSA managers and workers began a two-months strike starting on [[December 2]], [[2002]]. This resulted in shortages of oil and loss of PDVSA revenue, putting pressure on Chávez's government. In response, Chávez sacked some 19,000 PDVSA striking workers and managers, replacing them with Chávez loyalist or neutrals, some accused of being inexperienced personnel. PDVSA production is currently close to 2001 levels of production [http://omrpublic.iea.org/omrarchive/14mar06full.pdf] (page 18)
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: left; margin: 1em 1em 1em 0em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
{| cellpadding="1" border="0" style="float: left; margin: 1em 1em 1em 0em; width: 200px; border: 1px #bbbbbb solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
|- align="center" bgcolor="#E0E0FF"
Line 146: Line 415:
|-
|-
| Abstention: || 4,222,269 || 30.08%
| Abstention: || 4,222,269 || 30.08%
|-
|}
|}
|}
|}
In 2003, Chávez created [[Mission Guaicaipuro]] ([[October 12]], [[2003]]), [[Mission Robinson]] (July 2003), [[Mission Sucre]] (late 2003), and [[Mission Ribas]] (November 2003). In July 2004, speaking to 50,000 formerly illiterate Mission Robinson beneficiaries, Chávez stated that "it was truly a world record: in a year, we have graduated 1,250,000 Venezuelans". Additionally, the inflation rate eased from 31% (2002) to 27% (2003). In contrast, setbacks included a [[Putative Venezuelan coup of 2004|putative 2004 coup attempt]], whose significance stirred controversy.<ref name="EP_2004">{{Harv|El Pais|2004}}.</ref> Later, in 2003 and 2004, the opposition collected millions of signatures and activated the 1999 Constitution's presidential recall provision.<ref name="BBC_12Sep2003">{{Harv|BBC News|2003}}.</ref> Amidst riots and allegations of government [[blacklist]]ing of petition signers and anti-Chávez employers' coercion of their workers into signing petitions, a 2,436,830-signature petition was accepted by the CNE and a recall referendum was announced on [[June 8]], [[2004]]. The [[August 15]], [[2004]] vote saw a record turnout. With a 59.25% "no" vote, the recall measure was defeated.<ref name="BBC_2004">{{Harv|BBC News|2004}}.</ref><ref name="Carter_Center_Sep2004">{{Harv|Carter Center|2004|p=7}}.</ref><ref name="Carter Center 2005">{{Harv|Carter Center|2005|pp=133-134}}.</ref> The opposition alleged electoral fraud.


The [[August 15]], [[2004]] vote saw a record turnout. With a 59.25% "no" vote, the recall measure was defeated.<ref name="BBC_2004">{{Harvard reference
=== 2004&ndash;present ===
| Author = BBC News
| Year = 2004
| Title = Venezuelan Audit Confirms Victory
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3587184.stm
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref> The [[Carter Center]] "concluded the results were accurate."<ref name="Carter_Center_Sep2004">{{Harv|Carter Center|2004|p=7}}.</ref><ref name="Carter Center 2005">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Carter Center
| Year = 2005
| Title = Observing the Venezuela Presidential Recall Referendum: Comprehensive Report
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/2020.pdf
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref>A Penn Schoen & Berland Associates exit poll showed the opposite result, and Schoen commented, "I think it was a massive fraud,"<ref>Barone, M. [http://www.usnews.com/usnews/opinion/baroneweb/mb_040820.htm "Exit polls in Venezuela".] ''U.S. News & World Report.'' August 20, 2004.</ref> apparently contradicting five other opposition exit polls.<ref name="AP_Penn">{{Harvard reference
| Author = AP
| Year = 2004
| Title = U.S. Poll Firm in Hot Water in Venezuela
| Journal = Associated Press
| URL = http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/08/296520.html
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref>


Chávez's government subsequently charged the founders of Súmate with treason and conspiracy in receiving foreign funds from the [[National Endowment for Democracy|NED.]]<ref>Human Rights Watch.[http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/07/08/venezu11299.htm Venezuela: Court Orders Trial of Civil Society Leaders.] Accessed 8 June 2006.</ref> <ref>World Movement for Democracy. [http://www.wmd.org/democracyalerts/july1504.html Democracy Activists in Venezuela Threatened.] (July 16, 2004) Accessed 8 June 2006.</ref>
After his referendum victory, Chávez used Venezuela's increasing oil revenues &mdash; from rises in world oil prices &mdash; to focus on expanding social programs. Economic growth also picked up markedly, reaching double-digit growth in 2004, 9.3% growth in 2005 and a projected 7% growth rate for 2006. In late March 2005, the Chávez government criminalized broadcast [[libel]] and [[slander]] directed against public officials, including prison sentences of up to 40 months for serious cases. Yet, when asked if he would ever impose such penalties, Chávez stated that "I don't care if they [the private media] call me names.... As [[Don Quixote]] said, 'If the dogs are barking, it is because we are working.'"<ref name="BBC_Talking_Point_23Oct2005">{{Harv|BBC Talking Point|2005}}.</ref> Chávez also expanded social programs via new Missions: [[Mission Vuelta al Campo]], phases II and III of [[Mission Barrio Adentro]], and [[Mission Miranda]].


=== Post-referendum, 2004 &ndash; present ===
After the recall referendum, Chávez used Venezuela's increasing oil revenues &mdash; from rises in world oil prices &mdash; to focus on expanding social programs. {{fact}} Economic growth also picked up markedly, reaching double-digit growth in 2004, 9.3% growth in 2005 and a projected 7 percent growth rate for 2006. {{fact}} In late March 2005, the Chávez government criminalized broadcast [[libel]] and [[slander]] directed against public officials, {{fact}} including prison sentences of up to 40 months for serious cases. Chávez also expanded social programs via new [[Bolivarian Missions]].


Chávez's foreign policy included [[humanitarian aid]], construction projects, and other agreements with [[Argentina]]'s [[Nestor Kirchner]], [[China]]'s [[Hu Jintao]], [[Cuba]]'s [[Fidel Castro]], and [[Iran]]'s [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]]. On [[March 4]], [[2005]], Chávez publicly declared that the U.S.-backed [[Free Trade Area of the Americas]] (FTAA) was "dead". Chávez also stated his desire for the establishment of a Latin American analogue of [[NATO]]. At Chávez's direction, the military also began shifting armaments procurements to non-U.S. sources, including Brazil, China, Russia, and Spain. Meanwhile, Chávez ordered all active-duty U.S. soldiers to leave Venezuela. In 2005, he created the 1.5 million-strong Mission Miranda "military reserve" program.<ref name="Wagner_25Apr2005">{{Harv|Wagner|2005b}}.</ref> In October 2005, Chávez banished the "[[New Tribes Mission]]" from the country, accusing it of "imperialist infiltration" and collaboration with the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]].<ref name="Alford_14Oct2005">{{Harv|Alford|2005}}.</ref> Chávez's government also gave Amazonian indigenous peoples inalienable titles to 6,800 km&sup2; of lands and launched [[Mission Guaicaipuro]].[[Image:Néstor Kirchner y Hugo Chávez-Venezuela-Julio 2004.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Chávez embraces [[President of Argentina|Argentinian President]] [[Néstor Kirchner]] during the closing of a July 2004 joint press conference held in Venezuela ''(Office of the Argentine Presidency)''.]]
Chávez has directed the military to shift armaments procurements to non-U.S. sources, including Brazil, China, Russia, and Spain. {{fact}} Meanwhile, Chávez ordered all active-duty U.S. soldiers to leave Venezuela. {{fact}} In 2005, he created the 1.5 million-strong Mission Miranda "military reserve" program.<ref name="Wagner_25Apr2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wagner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005b
| Title = U.S.-Venezuela Military Cooperation Indefinitely Suspended
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1599
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref> In October 2005, Chávez banished the "[[New Tribes Mission]]" from the country, accusing it of "imperialist infiltration" and collaboration with the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]].<ref name="Alford_14Oct2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Alford
| Given1 = D
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela to Expel New Tribes Mission
| Journal = Christianity Today
| URL = http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/141/53.0.html
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref> Chávez's government also gave Amazonian indigenous peoples inalienable titles to 6,800 km² of lands and launched [[Mission Guaicaipuro]].


On [[August 20]], [[2005]], Chávez announced the joint establishment of a tuition-free medical school, including 30,000 planned slots for poor students.<ref name="Reed_2005">{{Harvard reference
At a graduation ceremony at Cuba's Latin American School of Medicine on [[August 20]], [[2005]], Chávez announced the joint establishment of a tuition-free medical school, including 30,000 planned slots for poor students.<ref name="Reed_2005">{{Harv|Reed|2005}}.</ref> During his [[Hugo Chávez's speech at the 2005 UN World Summit|speech at the 2005 UN World Summit]], Chávez again denounced neoliberalism and warned of [[hydrocarbon]] depletion.<ref name="Campbell_2005">{{Harv|Campbell|2005}}.</ref> At the [[November 7]], [[2005]] [[Mar del Plata]] [[Fourth Summit of the Americas]], Chávez hailed the stalling of the FTAA proposal and stated that "the taste of victory" was at hand regarding the [[Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas]], started by Venezuela and Cuba on [[December 14]], [[2004]].<ref name="Parma_07Nov2005">{{Harv|Parma|2005c}}.</ref> On March 9, 2006 he made changes to both the [[coat of arms of Venezuela]] and the [[Flag of Venezuela|Venezuelan flag]]. The new flag has an eighth star, the "Bolivarian star" to honour the province of [[Guayana]]'s contribution to the independence struggle in the 19th Century. The change to the coat of arms (which is also displayed on the flag) involved changing the direction of the running horse to the left rather than the right.
| Surname1 = Reed
| Given1 = GA
| Year = 2005
| Title = Where There Were No Doctors: First MDs Graduate from Latin American Medical School
| Journal = MEDICC Review
| URL = http://www.medicc.org/medicc_review/0805/top-story.html
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> In his speech at the 2005 UN World Summit, Chávez denounced neoliberalism and warned of [[hydrocarbon]] depletion.<ref name="Campbell_2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Campbell
| Given1 = CJ
| Year = 2005
| Title = Newsletter No. 59: President Chavez Recognises Peak Oil
| Journal = Association of the Study of Peak Oil and Gas
| URL = http://www.peakoil.ie/newsletters/672
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref> On March 9, 2006 he added an eighth star (the "Bolivarian star") to the [[Flag of Venezuela|Venezuelan flag]]. Another change to the [[coat of arms of Venezuela|coat of arms]] (also displayed on the flag) shows the horse running to the left rather than the right.


== Political impact ==
== Political impact ==
Line 165: Line 489:
The ''[[Unión Nacional de Trabajadores]]'' (UNT &mdash; "National Union of Workers"), a new pro-Chávez union federation, formed in response, and has been growing in membership; it seeks to ultimately supplant the CTV. Several ''Chavista'' unions have withdrawn from the CTV because of their strident anti-Chávez activism, and have instead affiliated with the UNT. In 2003, Chávez chose to send UNT, rather than CTV, representatives to an annual ILO meeting.
The ''[[Unión Nacional de Trabajadores]]'' (UNT &mdash; "National Union of Workers"), a new pro-Chávez union federation, formed in response, and has been growing in membership; it seeks to ultimately supplant the CTV. Several ''Chavista'' unions have withdrawn from the CTV because of their strident anti-Chávez activism, and have instead affiliated with the UNT. In 2003, Chávez chose to send UNT, rather than CTV, representatives to an annual ILO meeting.


Chávez has also [[nationalization|nationalized]] or seized several companies, including [[Venepal]] (a paper and cardboard manufacturing firm in [[January 19]], [[2005]]),{{fact}} some oil fields<ref>Kraul, C. (April 12, 2006). [http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-venezoil12apr12,1,284058.story?coll=la-headlines-business A Political Minefield in Venezuela's Oil Fields.]''LA Times''. Accessed 8 June 2006.</ref> and even a [[Coca-Cola]] plant. Chávez was criticized for violently re-claiming [[soda pop]] "for the masses".<ref>Miller, T. and Iritani, E. "Venezuelan Troops Reclaim Coca-Cla for the Masses." ''Los Angeles Times'' 18 January, 2003. SIRS Knowledge Source. Accessed 1 March 2003.</ref>
At the request of its workers, Chávez [[nationalization|nationalized]] Venepal, a formerly closed paper and cardboard manufacturing firm, on [[January 19]], [[2005]]. Workers had occupied the factory floor and restarted production, but following a failed deal with management and amidst management threats to liquidate the firm's equipment, Chávez ordered the nationalization, extended a line of credit to the workers, and ordered that the Venezuelan educational missions purchase more paper products from the company. <!--This paragraph, and the section in general, needs clarifying and expansion. Merely listing names and terms with minimal descriptions does not tell new readers the information they need, nor does it set proper context; for example, what's the significance of the nationalization of Venepal? -->


=== Economy ===
=== Economic and Social Impact ===
Chávez ranks among [[Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries|OPEC]]'s price hawks, pushing for strict production quotas and high price targets. He has broadened the customer base of [[Petróleos de Venezuela]] (PDVSA - Venezuela's state-owned oil company), striking joint exploration deals with [[Argentina]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[India]], and others. Record oil prices have meant more funding for his social programs, but also left the economy increasingly dependent on Chávez's policies and PDVSA.
{{main|Bolivarian Missions}}
Using Venezuela's key oil industry, Chávez ranks among [[Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries|OPEC]]'s price hawks, pushing for strict production quotas and high price targets. He also broadened PDVSA's customer base, striking joint exploration deals with [[Argentina]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[India]], and others. Record oil prices have meant more funding for his social programs, but also left the economy increasingly dependent on Chávez's policies and PDVSA. [[Image:Chavez in Arab SouthAmerica Summit.jpeg|thumb|left|225px|Chavéz attends the Arab-South America Summit held on [[May 5]], [[2005]] in [[Brasília]], [[Brazil]]. He is flanked by [[Qatar]]i Emir [[Hamad bin Khalifa]] and [[Lebanon|Lebanese]] Prime Minister [[Najib Mikati]] ''(Agência Brasil)''.]]


[[Image:Chavez in Arab SouthAmerica Summit.jpeg|thumb|left|225px|Chavéz, flanked by [[Qatar]]i Emir [[Hamad bin Khalifa]] and [[Lebanon|Lebanese]] Prime Minister [[Najib Mikati]], attends the Arab-South America Summit held on [[May 5]], [[2005]] in [[Brazil]]. ''(Agência Brasil)''.]]
Chávez has redirected the focus of [[Petróleos de Venezuela]] (PDVSA), Venezuela's state-owned oil company, by bringing it more closely under the direction of the Energy Ministry. He has also attempted to repatriate more oil funds to Venezuela by raising royalty percentages on joint extraction contracts that are payable to Venezuela. Chávez has also explored the liquidation of some or all of the assets belonging to PDVSA's U.S.-based subsidiary, [[CITGO]]. The oil ministry has been successful in restructuring CITGO's profit structure,<ref name="Ramirez_2005">{{Harv|Ramirez|2005}}.</ref> resulting in large increases in dividends and income taxes from PDVSA. In 2005, CITGO announced the largest dividend payment to PDVSA in over a decade, $400 million. Venezuela is also adhearing to OPEC quotas that lowered production compared to the previous administration that disregarded them.


Chávez has redirected the focus of PDVSA by bringing it more closely under the direction of the Energy Ministry; attempted to repatriate more oil funds to Venezuela by raising royalty percentages on joint extraction contracts; and explored the liquidation of some or all of the assets belonging to PDVSA's U.S.-based subsidiary, [[CITGO]]. The oil ministry has been successful in restructuring CITGO's profit structure,<ref name="Ramirez_2005">{{Harvard reference
Chávez's domestic policy is embodied by the [[Bolivarian Missions]], a series of [[social justice]] programs that have radically altered the economic and cultural landscape of Venezuela. Although recent economic activity under Chávez has been robust under these programs,<ref name="Latin Business Chronicle 2005">{{Harv|Latin Business Chronicle|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Weisbrot_2005">{{Harv|Weisbrot|2005}}.</ref> per-capita [[gross domestic product|GDP]] in 2004 has dropped around 1% from 1999 levels.<ref name="CIA 2005">{{Harv|Central Intelligence Agency|2005}}.</ref><ref name="CIA_1999">{{Harv|Central Intelligence Agency|1999}}.</ref> However, as of September 2005, there have also been significant drops since 1999 in unemployment<ref name="VA_2005">{{Harv|Venezuela Analysis|2005b}}.</ref> and in the government's definition of "poverty",<ref name="Venezuela Analysis 14 Oct 2005">{{Harv|Venezuela Analysis|2005}}.</ref> and there have been marked improvements in national health indicators between 1998 and 2005.<ref name="CIA 1998">{{Harv|Central Intelligence Agency|1998}}.</ref><ref name="CIA 2005">{{Harv|Central Intelligence Agency|2005}}.</ref>
| Surname1 = Ramirez
{{Bolivarian Missions Infobox 1}}
| Given1 = R
Aims of the Bolivarian Missions have included the launching of massive government anti-[[poverty]] initiatives,<ref name="Niemeyer_2004_36">{{Harv|Niemeyer|2004|p=36}}.</ref><ref name="UNICEF_2005">{{Harv|UNICEF|2005}}.</ref> the construction of thousands of free medical clinics for the poor,<ref name="Kuiper 28 Jul 2005">{{Harv|Kuiper|2005}}.</ref> the institution of educational campaigns that have reportedly made more than one million adult Venezuelans literate,<ref name="Niemeyer_2004_14">{{Harv|Niemeyer|2004|p=14}}.</ref><ref name="Burbach_2005">{{Harv|Burbach|2005}}.</ref> and the enactment of food<ref name="Niemeyer_2004_15">{{Harv|Niemeyer|2004|p=15}}.</ref> and housing subsidies.<ref name="VA_01Aug2005">{{Harv|Venezuela Analysis|2005b}}.</ref> The Missions have overseen widespread state-supported experimentation in citizen- and worker-managed governance,<ref name="Albert_2005">{{Harv|Albert|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Ellsworth_2005">{{Harv|Ellsworth|2005}}.</ref> as well as the granting of thousands of free land titles ([[Mission Zamora]]) formerly landless poor and indigenous communities.<ref name="Wilpert_12sep2005">{{Harv|Wilpert|2005a}}.</ref> In contrast, several large landed estates and factories have been, or are in the process of being, expropriated.
| Year = 2005
| Title = A National, Popular, and Revolutionary Oil Policy for Venezuela
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1474
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> resulting in increased dividends and income taxes from PDVSA. Venezuela is adhering to OPEC quotas that lowered production compared to the previous administration that disregarded them.

Chávez's domestic social policy is embodied by the [[Bolivarian Missions]], a series of [[grassroots]] programs that have altered the economic and social landscape of Venezuela. Recent economic activity under Chávez has been robust under these programs.<ref name="Latin Business Chronicle 2005">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Latin Business Chronicle
| Year = 2005
| Title = GDP Growth: Venezuela Best
| Journal = Latin Business Chronicle
| URL = http://www.latinbusinesschronicle.com/reports/reports/1005/gdp.htm
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref> There has also been a 6.4% drop since 1999 in official unemployment<ref name="INE_99">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Instituto Nacional de Estadística
| Year = 1999
| Title = Indicadores Globales de Fuerza de Trabajo
| Journal = INE
| URL = http://www.ine.gov.ve/hogares/Hogares2.asp?Periodo=M&Ano=1999&R_Desde=Ene&R_Hasta=Ene
| Access-date = May 29, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="INE_06">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Instituto Nacional de Estadística
| Year = 2006
| Title = Indicadores Globales de Fuerza de Trabajo
| Journal = INE
| URL = http://www.ine.gov.ve/hogares/Hogares2.asp?Periodo=M&Ano=2006&R_Desde=Abr&R_Hasta=Abr
| Access-date = May 29, 2006
}}.</ref>and 6% in the poverty rates for households<ref name="CEPR_2006">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Weisbrot
| Given1 = M
| Surname2 = Sandoval
| Given2 = L
| Surname3 = Rosnick
| Given3 = D
| Year = 2006
| Title = Poverty Rates In Venezuela: Getting The Numbers Right
| Journal = Center for Economic and Policy Research
| URL = http://www.cepr.net/publications/venezuelan_poverty_rates_2006_05.pdf
| Format = PDF
| Access-date = May 31, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Panorama_poverty">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Panorama
| Year = 2006
| Title = World Bank: Venezuela decreased poverty
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1979
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref> and there has been improvement in the infant mortality rate.<ref name="CIA 1998">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Central Intelligence Agency
| Year = 1998
| Title = Venezuela
| Journal = The World Factbook
| URL = http://www.umsl.edu/services/govdocs/wofact98/259.htm
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="CIA 2005">{{cite web| author= Central Intelligence Agency| year = November 1, 2005 | title = The World Factbook: Venezuela: Economy | url = http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ve.html#Econ | accessdate = 2006-03-02}}</ref>

On March 2006 the Communal Council Law was approved, whereby communities that decide to organize themselves into a council can be given official state recognition and access to federal funds and loans for community projects. This skips the local and state governments that are perceived as corrupt. <<ref name="Consejos_comunales">{{Harvard reference
| Author = Conexion social
| Year = 2006
| Title = Law Of Communal Councils. Final Draft
| Journal = Conexion social
| URL = http://conexionsocial.org.ve/wk/Law_Of_Communal_Councils._Final_Draft
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref> Critics state that the councils are another avenue for corruption.


=== Foreign affairs ===
=== Foreign affairs ===
{{main|Foreign policy of Hugo Chávez}}
{{main|Foreign policy of Hugo Chávez}}
[[Image:Kircher Chavez.jpg|thumb|left|225px|Chávez and Argentine President [[Néstor Kirchner|Kirchner]] discuss energy and trade integration projects for South America. They met in November, 2005 as a gesture of solidarity in their opposition to the [[Washington Consensus]] and the [[FTAA]] proposal ''(Office of the Argentine Presidency)''.]]
Chávez has refocused Venezuelan foreign policy on Latin American economic and social integration by enacting bilateral trade and reciprocal aid agreements, including his "oil diplomacy".<ref name="Economist_2005">{{Harv|Economist|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Wagner_01Feb2005">{{Harv|Wagner|2005}}.</ref> Examples include [[PetroCaribe]], Petrosur, and [[Telesur]]. Bilateral trade relationships with other Latin American countries have also played a major role in his policy, with Chávez increasing arms purchases from Brazil, forming oil-for-expertise trade arrangements with Cuba,<ref name="Macbeth_2005">{{Harv|Macbeth|2005}}.</ref> funding an approximately $300 million ''ex gratia'' oil pipeline built to provide discounted natural gas to Colombia,<ref name="El Tiempo_25Nov2005">{{Harv|El Tiempo|2005}}.</ref> and initiating barter arrangements that, among other things, exchange Venezuelan petroleum for cash-strapped Argentina's meat and dairy products. Additionally, Chávez worked closely with other Latin American leaders following the 1997 [[Summit of the Americas]] in many areas &mdash; especially energy integration &mdash; and championed the [[Organization of American States|OAS]] decision to adopt the Anti-Corruption Convention. Chávez's government also participates in the [[United Nations]] Friends groups for [[Haiti]], and is pursuing efforts to join and engage the [[Mercosur]] trade bloc to expand the hemisphere's trade integration prospects. Abroad, Chávez denounces both [[neocolonialism]] and [[neoliberalism]], including U.S. foreign policy regarding Iraq, Haiti, and the [[Free Trade Area of the Americas]]; meanwhile, he had severed military ties with the U.S. Chávez's has also lobbied OPEC producers to decrease production ceilings. Pursuing this goal, Chávez made a ten-day tour of OPEC countries; he thus became the first [[head of state]] to meet [[Saddam Hussein]] since the [[Gulf War]].<ref name="CNN 10 Aug 2000">{{Harv|CNN|2000}}.</ref>
Chávez has refocused Venezuelan foreign policy on Latin American economic and social integration by enacting bilateral trade and reciprocal aid agreements, including his "oil diplomacy".<ref name="Economist_2005">{{Harvard reference
[[Image:Kircher Chavez.jpg|thumb|left|225px|Chávez and Argentine President [[Néstor Kirchner]] discuss energy and trade integration projects for South America. They met on [[November 21]], [[2005]] in [[Venezuela]] as a gesture of mutual solidarity in their opposition to the [[Washington Consensus]] and the [[FTAA]] proposal ''(Office of the Argentine Presidency)''.]]
| Author = The Economist
| Surname1 = Economist
| Year = 2005
| Title = Using Oil to Spread Revolution
| Journal = The Economist
| URL = http://www.economist.com/world/la/displaystory.cfm?story_id=4232330
| Access-date = January 21, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Wagner_01Feb2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wagner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela and Argentina Expand Cooperation in Food for Fuel Trade and with TeleSur
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1489
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref> Abroad, Chávez denounces both [[neocolonialism]] and [[neoliberalism]], including U.S. foreign policy regarding Iraq, Haiti, and the [[Free Trade Area of the Americas]] (he favors the [[Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas]]<ref name="Parma_07Nov2005">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Parma
| Given1 = A
| Year = 2005c
| Title = Chavez Claims Victory Over Bush in Argentina Summit
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1808
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref>); meanwhile, he has severed military ties with the U.S. Chávez went on a ten-day tour of OPEC countries to decrease production ceilings, thus becoming the first [[head of state]] to meet [[Saddam Hussein]] since the [[Gulf War]].<ref name="CNN 10 Aug 2000">{{Harvard reference
| Author = CNN
| Year = 2000
| Title = Chávez's tour of OPEC nations arrives in Baghdad
| Journal = CNN
| URL = http://archives.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/meast/08/10/iraq.chavez.02/
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref>


In 2001, Peru voiced suspicions that Chávez's administration was protecting and hiding [[Vladimiro Montesinos]][http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1414431.stm][http://www.worldpress.org/Americas/160.cfm#down], a former Peruvian intelligence director wanted for corruption. Montesinos was found in June of that year in Venezuela and later deported to Peru to face charges of corruption, bribery and human-rights violations. Months before, the Venezuelan press reported Montesinos presence. Chavez described the media's reports as part of an international campaign against his reputation.
In 2001, a dispute with [[Peru]] occurred over suspicions that Chávez's administration was protecting and hiding [[Vladimiro Montesinos]],<ref name = PeruVenSpat>BBC News. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1414431.stm Peru in diplomatic spat with Venezuela.] Accessed 23 May 2006.</ref>a former Peruvian intelligence director under [[Alberto Fujimori]] administration wanted for corruption. Montesinos was captured in Venezuela in June of that year. A dipolomatic dispute with [[Colombia]], referred to as the [[Rodrigo Granda affair]], occurred in 2004, after the [[kidnapping|kidnap]] of Rodrigo Granda, a high ranking member of the political wing of the [[FARC]].


After [[Hurricane Katrina]] battered the U.S. in late 2005, Chávez's administration was the first government to offer aid to its "North American brothers". Later, in November 2005, officials in [[Massachusetts]] signed an agreement with Venezuela to provide discounted heating oil to low income families via [[CITGO]], a PDSVA subsidiary.<ref name="BBC_2005d">{{Harvard reference
In 2004 a diplomatic crisis, this time with Colombia, happened after the [[kidnapping|kidnap]] by individual Venezuelan officials (with the aid of Colombian agents) of Rodrigo Granda, a high ranking member of the [[FARC]], in a case known as the [[Rodrigo Granda affair]]. At the time, Colombian President [[Álvaro Uribe]] condemned Chávez's lack of cooperation in implementing law enforcement actions against the FARC. Chávez responded by temporarily cutting diplomatic and trade ties with Colombia [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4176347.stm]. The issue was put to rest in a Summit of the two Presidents in February of 2005.
| Author = BBC News
| Year = 2005d
| Title = Venezuela gives US cheap oil deal
| Journal = BBC News
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4461946.stm
| Access-date = February 1, 2006
}}.</ref>


[[Image:Hugorilla.JPG|thumb|right|150px|Peruvian media depicting Hugo Chávez as a gorilla after his comments on the 2006 Presidential election process.]]
After [[Hurricane Katrina]] battered the U.S. in late 2005, Chávez's administration was the first government to offer aid to its "North American brothers", offering to donate tons of food, water, mobile hospital units, medical specialists, power generators, and one million barrels of petroleum. Additionally, he proposed to sell 66,000 barrels of steeply discounted heating fuel directly to affected poor communities. The Bush administration refused this aid.<ref name="Martin_02Sep2005">{{Harv|Martin|2005}}.</ref> Later, in November 2005, officials in [[Massachusetts]] signed an agreement with Venezuela to provide heating oil at a 40% discount to low income families via [[CITGO]], a PDSVA subsidiary.<ref name="BBC_2005d">{{Harv|BBC News|2005d}}.</ref> Chávez has stated that such aid comprises "a strong oil card to play on the geopolitical stage" and that "[i]t is a card that we are going to play with toughness against the toughest country in the world, the United States."<ref name="blum_22Nov2005">{{Harv|Blum|2005}}.</ref> Venezuela's foreign affairs are also accompanied by Chávez's comments criticising [[George W. Bush]] (who he labelled a ''[[pendejo]]'' ("dumbass")), [[Condoleezza Rice]] (a "complete illiterate" with regards to comprehending Latin America.<ref name="Ministerio de Comunicación e Información 1999">{{Harv|Ministerio de Comunicación e Información|1999}}.</ref><ref name="Diehl_2005">{{Harv|Diehl|2005}}.</ref><ref name="People's_Daily_12Jan2004">{{Harv|People's Daily|2004}}.</ref>), and [[Vicente Fox]] (who was "bleeding from his wounds" and was warned not to "mess" with him<ref name="BBC_14Nov2005">{{Harv|BBC News|2005c}}.</ref>). The latter comments resulted in the severing of diplomatic ties between Mexico and Venezuela.
Venezuela's foreign affairs are also accompanied by Chávez's controversial comments. He called [[George W. Bush]] a ''[[pendejo]]'' ("dumbass")); [[Condoleezza Rice]] a "complete illiterate" with regards to comprehending Latin America;<ref name="Ministerio de Comunicación e Información 1999">{{Harvard reference
[[Image:Hugorilla.JPG|thumb|right|150px|Peruvian media depicting Hugo Chavez as a gorilla after his comments on the 2006 Presidential election process.[http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?no=288798&rel_no=1 1]]]
| Author = Ministerio de Comunicación e Información
During his weekly address ''Aló Presidente'' of March 18, 2006, Chavez responded to a US [[White House]] report which characterized him as a "demagogue who uses Venezuela's oil wealth to destabilize democracy in the region". During the address Chavez rhetorically called [[George W. Bush]] "a donkey." He repeated it several times adding ''"eres un cobarde"'' (you are a coward), ''"eres un asesino, un genocida"'' (you are an assassin, a mass-murderer), and ''"eres un borracho"'' (you are a drunk). [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/03/20/uchavez.xml&sSheet=/portal/2006/03/20/ixportaltop.html]
| Year = 1999

| Title = Marcha Defensa de la Soberanía
Between January and March of 2006, Chavez has made ample comments on the candidates of the 2006 Peruvian Presidential election, openly backing [[Ollanta Humala]] while referring to [[Alan García]] as a "thief" and a "crook" and considering [[Lourdes Flores]] a "candidate of the oligarchy". Chavez's comments have led the Peruvian goverment and the press to consider that Chavez is persistently interfering in Peru's affairs in breach of international law. Both countries have recalled their ambassadors[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4959220.stm][http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4972158.stm].
| Journal = Government of Venezuela

| URL = http://www.minci.gov.ve/imagnot/23-ENE-2005%20-%20MARCHA%20-%20CORREGIDO.DEFINITIVO..doc
=== Media treatment ===
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
{{main|Media representation of Hugo Chávez}}
}}.</ref><ref name="Diehl_2005">{{Harv|Diehl|2005}}.</ref><ref name="People's_Daily_12Jan2004">{{Harvard reference
Even before the April 2002 coup, most major media openly opposed Chávez's policies. {{citation needed}} They also reported that Chávez used gangs to intimidate their journalists, the [[Bolivarian Circles]]. {{citation needed}} In turn, Chávez alleges that such media serve U.S. interests via corporate "[[propaganda model|propaganda]]". He often voices such views on his live talk &mdash; ''[[Aló, Presidente!]]'' ("Hello, President!"), which airs Sundays at 11:00 AM on [[Venezolana de Televisión]] and features hours-long tours and speeches by Chávez.<ref name="Lakshmanan_2005">{{Harv|Lakshmanan|2005}}.</ref> Chávez also launched [[Telesur]] on [[July 25]], [[2005]] which, as a pan-American homologue of [[Al-Jazeera]], seeks to challenge the dominant U.S.-based [[CNN en Español]] and [[Univision]] networks.<ref name="Wilpert_2005b">{{Harv|Wilpert|2005b}}.</ref>
| Author = People's Daily

== Bolivarianism ==
[[Image:ChavezPeace.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Chávez speaks about Bolivarianism to ''[[chavista]]s'' on Caracas's Avenida Bolívar on [[May 16]], [[2004]]. Chávez political philosophy mostly developed during his student days.]]

Chávez's main influences are [[Simón Bolívar]], [[Ezequiel Zamora]], [[Simón Rodríguez]], [[Marxism|Marxist]] historian [[Federico Brito Figueroa]], [[Jorge Eliécer Gaitán]], [[Fidel Castro]], [[Che Guevara]], and [[Salvador Allende]]. Later, Chávez stated that [[democratic socialism]] ([[socialism]] emphasizing grassroots democracy) was key to his policies, working through such organizations as the [[Bolivarian Circles]].<ref name="Sanchez_2003">{{Harv|Sanchez|2003}}.</ref><ref name="burke_30Jul2003">{{Harv|Burke|2003}}.</ref> He reiterated this at the 2005 [[World Social Forum]] and the 4th Summit on the Social Debt, stating that humanity must embrace "a new type of socialism, a [[humanism|humanist]] one, which puts humans, and not machines or the state, ahead of everything."<ref name="Sojo_2005">{{Harv|Sojo|2005}}.</ref> The central points of Chávez's Bolivarianism are:<ref name="Wilpert_27Aug2003">{{Harv|Wilpert|2003a}}.</ref><ref name="Wilpert_2003">{{Harv|Wilpert|2003}}.</ref>

:{|style="border:1px; border: none; background-color:#f6f6FF; margin:20px;" cellpadding="10"
|-
|
# Venezuelan economic and political sovereignty.
# Grassroots political participation via popular votes and referendums ([[participatory democracy]]).
# Comprehensive economic self-sufficiency (in food, consumer durables, ''et cetera'').
# Instilling a national sentiment of [[patriotism|patriotic]] service.
# Equitable distribution of Venezuela's vast oil revenues.
# Elimination of [[political corruption|corruption]].
# Elimination of ''[[puntofijismo]]'' by way of constitutional reforms.
|}

== Criticism ==
[[Image:Anti-chavez march.jpg|thumb|left|225px|An anti-Chávez march in the capital [[Caracas]]. This protest was in favor of a "yes" vote in the [[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004|2004 recall referendum]].]]
{{main|Criticism of Hugo Chávez}}
Chávez is much-criticized, both in Venezuela and in international comments. His most vociferous opponents see him as a dangerous and [[authoritarianism|authoritarian]] [[militarism|militarist]] who threatens Venezuelan democracy and global oil prices. Critics report that poverty, unemployment, and corruption figures under Chávez have not seen improvement.<ref name="Jorquera_2005">{{Harv|Jorquera|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Parma_2005b">{{Harv|Parma|2005b}}.</ref> They also note the 1% drop in Venezuela's per-capita [[gross domestic product|GDP]] under Chávez.{{citation needed}} The opposition cites the many public hospitals that lack basic supplies, while others describe Chávez as a demagogue with a personality cult.{{citation needed}} They also question the payments to poor Venezuelans enrolling in Chávez's social programs, worrying that such dependency corrupts their work ethic and predispose them being pro-Chávez.
[[Image:National Review 11 Apr 2005 Chavez Castro.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Chávez and Cuban leader [[Fidel Castro]] on the [[2005-04-11]] cover of the conservative magazine, the [[National Review]]. Chávez and Castro are often reported by the [[United States|American]] media as being among the most dangerous threats facing democracy, free trade, and security in the Western Hemisphere.]]

Chavez has been widely criticized by proponents of free speech, for controversial moves to restrict the abilities of private media to publicly criticize Chavez and his policies, and general censorship for certain other types of 'unfavourable' content.

Chávez also stands accused of electoral fraud and political repression, including keeping anti-Chávez activists as [[political prisoner]]s.<ref name="Boyd_04Jul2005">{{Harv|Boyd|2005}}.</ref> Others claim that Chávez is not fulfilling promises regarding labor and land reform.<ref name="Fuentes_26Sep2005">{{Harv|Fuentes|2005}}.</ref><ref name="marquez_05Apr2005">{{Harv|Márquez|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Parma_20Oct2005">{{Harv|Parma|2005a}}.</ref> Abroad, Chávez is reported as being a confrontational ideologue<ref name="Sanchez 25 Aug 2005">{{Harv|Sanchez|2005}}.</ref> , and American public figures have accused him of supporting and training [[terrorism|terrorists]].<ref name="Robinson_2003">{{Harv|Robinson|2003}}.</ref><ref name="Wilpert_2003">{{Harv|Wilpert|2003}}.</ref> While [[Amnesty International]] and [[Human Rights Watch]] have catalogued but not confirmed human rights violations under Chávez,<ref name="AI_2005">{{Harv|Amnesty International|2005}}.</ref><ref name="HRW_2005">{{Harv|Human Rights Watch|2005}}.</ref> scores of deaths and hundreds of injuries inflicted during both opposition and pro-Chávez demonstrations saw little official investigation. Meanwhile, Chávez faces allegations of both [[censorship]] and ill treatment or [[torture]] of his opponents. Chávez supporters counter by alleging repression of Chávez supporters and social workers by anti-Chávez mayors; using this claim, the Chávez government is attempting to place local police forces under federal control. Meanwhile, relatives of victims who were killed in the April 11, 2002 clashes filed a case against Chávez and others at the [[International Criminal Court]] (ICC), stating that Chávez committed [[crime against humanity|crimes against humanity]]. In February 2006, [[Luis Moreno Ocampo]], Chief Prosecutor of the ICC, concluded that, thus far, the requirements to continue the investigation have not been satisfied according to the [[Rome Statute]]. [http://www.icc-cpi.int/library/organs/otp/OTP_letter_to_senders_re_Venezuela_9_February_2006.pdf].

There have additionally been unproven allegations that Chavez's large purchases of military hardware are for reasons other than the defence of his country in the event of the "imminent US invasion" which he has repeatedly claimed will take place, and has used as a reason to justify these large transactions. Reasons cited by critics include covert or otherwise intervention in other South American countries in order to further political objectives in the region.

Finally, Chávez is criticized for his controversial statements, including his January 2006 statement that “[t]he world is for all of us, then, but it so happens that a minority, the descendants of the same ones that crucified Christ, the descendants of the same ones that kicked Bolívar out of here and also crucified him in their own way over there in Santa Marta, in Colombia. A minority has taken possession all of the wealth of the world...”<ref name="Wiesenthal_2006">{{Harv|Wiesenthal|2006}}.</ref> The [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]] omitted the reference to Bolívar without ellipsis, stated that Chávez was referring to [[Jew]]s, and denounced the remarks as [[antisemitism|antisemitic]] by way of his allusions to wealth. Meanwhile, the [[American Jewish Committee]], the [[American Jewish Congress]], and the Confederation of Jewish Associations of Venezuela defended Chávez, stating that he was speaking not of Jews, but of South America's white [[oligarchy]].<ref name="Perelman_2006">{{Harv|Perelman|2006}}.</ref> Other journalists have also questioned the interpretation of Chavez's speech (to a leftist [[Catholic]] association on [[Christmas Eve]]), with one article calling it "manipulation of a mutilated statement" [http://www.voltairenet.org/article134010.html].

== Personal life ==
[[Image:Chavezninas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Chávez and his three daughters: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela and Rosa Inés.]]
{{main|Personal life of Hugo Chávez}}
Hugo Chávez has been married twice. He first married [[Nancy Colmenares]], a woman from a poor family originating in Chávez's own hometown of Sabaneta. Chávez and Colmenares remained married for eighteen years, during which time they had three children: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Hugo Rafael. They separated soon after Chávez's 1992 coup attempt, but have remained good friends since then.<ref name="La Semana 2000">{{Harv|La Semana|2000}}.</ref> During his first marriage, Chávez also had an affair with young historian [[Herma Marksman]]; they had a relationship which lasted nine years.<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Byrne_2005">{{Harv|Byrne|2005}}.</ref> At present, Chávez is separated from his second wife, journalist [[Marisabel Rodríguez de Chávez]]. Chávez had another daughter, Rosa Inés, through that marriage, in addition to a son-in-law, Raúl "Raúlito" Alfonzo. Chávez also has one granddaughter, Gabriela.<ref name="Palast_2005">{{Harv|Palast|2005}}.</ref>

Chávez is of [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]] extraction, and is currently a practicing Christian. Nevertheless, he has had a series of bitter disputes with both the Venezuelan Catholic clergy and [[Protestantism|Protestant]] church hierarchies.<ref name="Kozloff_2005">{{Harv|Kozloff|2005}}.</ref><ref name="Morsbach_2006">{{Harv|Morsbach|2006}}.</ref> Although he has traditionally kept his own faith a private matter, Chávez has over the course of his presidency become increasingly open to discussing his religious views, stating that both his faith and his interpretation of [[Jesus]]' personal life and ideology have had a profound impact on his leftist views (for comparison see also [[liberation theology]], [[Christian socialism]]):

:{|style="border:1px; border: none; background-color:#f6f6FF; margin:20px;" cellpadding="10"
|-
|"He [Jesus] accompanied me in difficult times, in crucial moments. So Jesus Christ is no doubt a historical figure &mdash; he was someone who rebelled, an anti-imperialist guy. He confronted the Roman Empire.... Because who might think that Jesus was a capitalist? No. Judas was the capitalist, for taking the coins! Christ was a revolutionary. He confronted the religious hierarchies. He confronted the economic power of the time. He preferred death in the defense of his [[humanism|humanistic]] ideals, who fostered change.... He is our Jesus Christ."<ref name="Chávez 2005b">{{Harv|Chávez|2005b}}.</ref>
|}

----
{{Life of Hugo Chávez}}

== See also ==
{{Topics related to Hugo Chávez}}

== Notes ==
<div class="references-small">
<references/>
</div>

== References ==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
<div class="references-small">
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Albert
| Given1 = M
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela's Path
| Journal = Z Communications
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=9067
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Alford
| Given1 = D
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela to Expel New Tribes Mission
| Journal = Christianity Today
| URL = http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/141/53.0.html
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--14Oct2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Alvarez
| Given1 = I
| Year = 2004
| Year = 2004
| Title = Venezuela's Hugo Chavez investigated by the International Criminal Court
| Title = Chavez calls Condoleezza Rice an 'illiterate' following sharp criticism
| Journal = El Universal
| Journal = People's Daily
| URL = http://www.vcrisis.com/index.php?content=letters/200401310730
| URL = http://english.people.com.cn/200401/12/eng20040112_132386.shtml
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref> and said that [[Vicente Fox]] was "bleeding from his wounds" and warned him not to "mess" with him.<ref name="BBC_14Nov2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--31 Jan 2004-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Amnesty International
| Surname1 = Amnesty International
| Year = 2005
| Title = AI Summary Report 2005: Venezuela
| Journal = AI
| URL = http://web.amnesty.org/report2005/ven-summary-eng
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Author = BBC News
| Surname1 = BBC
| Year = 2003
| Title = Chavez poll petition rejected
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3105186.stm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--12 Sep 2003-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Surname1 = BBC
| Year = 2004
| Title = Venezuelan Audit Confirms Victory
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3587184.stm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Surname1 = BBC
| Year = 2005a
| Title = Profile: Hugo Chávez
| Journal = BBC News
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3517106.stm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Surname1 = BBC News
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Hugo Chavez describe on why he thinks the US plans to invade
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4359386.stm#
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--20 Oct 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC News
| Surname1 = BBC News
| Year = 2005c
| Year = 2005c
| Title = Chavez and Fox recall ambassadors
| Title = Chavez and Fox recall ambassadors
| Journal = BBC News
| Journal = BBC News
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4437024.stm
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4437024.stm
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref> The latter comments resulted in Mexico recalling their ambassador.
}}.<!--14 Nov 2005-->

* {{Harvard reference
Between January and March of 2006, Chávez commented on the candidates of the 2006 Peruvian Presidential election, openly backing [[Ollanta Humala]] while referring to [[Alan García]] as a "thief" and a "crook" and considering [[Lourdes Flores]] a "candidate of the oligarchy". Chávez's comments led the Peruvian government to consider that he was interfering in Peru's affairs in breach of international law. Both countries recalled their ambassadors.<ref>BBC News. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4959220.stm Peru recalls Venezuela ambassador.] Accessed 23 May 2006.</ref><ref>BBC News.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4972158.stm Venezuela recalls envoy to Peru.] Accessed 23 May 2006.</ref> The defeat of Humala (the Chávez-backed candidate) in Peru and the reelection of Chávez nemesis and U.S. ally, [[Álvaro Uribe]], in Colombia can be seen as a rebuke to Chávez. <ref>Chauvin, L. [http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0606/p01s03-woam.html García win in Peru a loss for Venezuela's Chávez.] ''The Christian Science Monitor'' (June 6, 2006). Accessed 9 June 2006.</ref> <ref>Harman, D. [http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/1117/p06s02-woam.html Chávez roils Mexico's presidential race.] ''The Christian Science Monitor'' (November 17, 2005). Accessed 9 June 2006.</ref><ref> [http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-chavez08jun08,0,4823596.story?coll=la-news-comment-editorials "The Chavez effect".] ''LA Times''. Accessed 8 June 2006.</ref>
| Author = BBC News

| Surname1 = BBC News
== Bolivarianism ==
| Year = 2005d
[[Image:ChavezPeace.jpg|thumb|right|225px|Chávez speaks to ''[[chavista]]s'' on Caracas's Avenida Bolívar in May, 2004.]]
| Title = Venezuela gives US cheap oil deal

| Journal = BBC News
Chávez is mainly influenced by the ideas of [[Simón Bolívar]], lending the name of the [[Bolivarianism]] movement to his namesake, others like [[Ezequiel Zamora]], [[Simón Rodríguez]], [[Marxism|Marxist]] historian [[Federico Brito Figueroa]], [[Jorge Eliécer Gaitán]], [[Fidel Castro]], [[Che Guevara]], [[Salvador Allende]] and [[Norberto Ceresole]] would also play an influential role. Later, Chávez stated that [[democratic socialism]] ([[socialism]] emphasizing grassroots democracy) was key to his policies, working through such organizations as the [[Bolivarian Circles]].<ref name="Sanchez_2003">{{Harvard reference
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4461946.stm
| Surname1 = Sanchez
| Access-date = [[February 1]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--23 Nov 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = BBC Talking Point
| Surname1 = BBC Talking Point
| Year = 2005
| Title = Transcript of BBC's Robin Lustig interview to Hugo Chavez
| Journal = BBC
| URL = http://www.vcrisis.com/index.php?content=letters/200510251056
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--23 Oct 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Blum
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = Chavez Pushes Petro-Diplomacy
| Journal = The Washington Post
| URL = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/21/AR2005112101800.html
| Access-date = [[January 30]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Boudin
| Given1 = C
| Surname2 = Chávez
| Given2 = H
| Surname3 = Harnecker
| Given3 = Marta
| Year = 2005
| Title = Understanding the Venezuelan Revolution: Hugo Chávez Talks to Marta Harnecker
| Publisher = Monthly Review Press
| ID = ISBN 1-58367-127-7
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Boyd
| Given1 = A
| Given1 = A
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2003
| Title = List of missing persons and political prisoners in Venezuela
| Title = Bolivarian Circles: A Grassroots Movement
| Journal = VCrisis
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.vcrisis.com/index.php?content=letters/200403020624
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1026
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="burke_30Jul2003">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--04Jul2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Burbach
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005
| Title = Bush Versus Chavez
| Journal = CounterPunch
| URL = http://www.counterpunch.org/burbach11082005.html
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Burke
| Surname1 = Burke
| Given1 = T
| Given1 = T
Line 401: Line 658:
| Journal = Z Communications
| Journal = Z Communications
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=3971
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=3971
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref> He reiterated this at the 2005 [[World Social Forum]] and the 4th Summit on the Social Debt, stating that humanity must embrace "a new type of socialism, a [[humanism|humanist]] one, which puts humans, and not machines or the state, ahead of everything."<ref name="Sojo_2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.
| Surname1 = Sojo
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Byrne
| Given1 = CA
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s Chávez Closes World Social Forum with Call to Transcend Capitalism
| Title = Venezuela &mdash; Bolivarian Revolution
| Journal = Foreign Correspondent
| URL = http://www.abc.net.au/foreign/stories/s882059.htm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Campbell
| Given1 = CJ
| Year = 2005
| Title = Newsletter No. 59: President Chavez Recognises Peak Oil
| Journal = Association of the Study of Peak Oil and Gas
| URL = http://www.peakoil.ie/newsletters/672
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Carter Center
| Surname1 = Carter Center
| Year = 2004
| Title = Report on an Analysis of the Representativeness of the Second Audit Sample, and the Correlation between Petition Signers and the Yes Vote in the August 15, 2004 Presidential Recall Referendum in Venezuela
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/1834.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Carter Center
| Surname1 = Carter Center
| Year = 2005
| Title = Observing the Venezuela Presidential Recall Referendum: Comprehensive Report
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/2020.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Center for Cooperative Research
| Surname1 = Center for Cooperative Research
| Year = 2006
| Title = Profile: Hugo Chavez Frias
| Journal = CCR
| URL = http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/entity.jsp?entity=hugo_chavez_frias
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Chávez
| Given1 = H
| Year = 2005
| Title = Transcript: Hugo Chávez Interview
| Journal = ABC News / Nightline
| URL = http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/International/story?id=1134098&page=1
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Chávez
| Given1 = H
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Untitled Speech delivered at the Latino Pastoral Action Center in Bronx, New York City
| Journal = Democracy Now!
| URL = http://www.archive.org/download/Chávez-nyc-speech/Chávez-english_64kb.mp3
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Chávez
| Given1 = H
| Surname2 = Deutschmann
| Given2 = D
| Surname3 = Salado
| Given3 = J
| Year = 2004
| Title = Chávez: Venezuela and the New Latin America
| Publisher = Ocean Press
| ID = ISBN 1-92088-800-4
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Chomsky
| Given1 = N
| Year = 1998
| Title = Profit Over People
| Publisher = Seven Stories Press
| ID = ISBN 1-88836-382-7
| URL = http://www.sevenstories.com/Book/index.cfm?GCOI=58322100100330
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Central Intelligence Agency
| Surname1 = Central Intelligence Agency
| Year = 1998
| Title = Venezuela
| Journal = The World Factbook
| URL = http://www.umsl.edu/services/govdocs/wofact98/259.htm
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Central Intelligence Agency
| Surname1 = Central Intelligence Agency
| Year = 1999
| Title = Venezuela: Economy
| Journal = The World Factbook
| URL = http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/lps35389/1999/306.htm#econ
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Central Intelligence Agency
| Surname1 = Central Intelligence Agency
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela: Economy
| Journal = The World Factbook
| URL = http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ve.html#Econ
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--01 Nov 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = CNN
| Surname1 = CNN
| Year = 2000
| Title = Chávez's tour of OPEC nations arrives in Baghdad
| Journal = CNN
| URL = http://archives.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/meast/08/10/iraq.chavez.02/
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--10 Aug 2000-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = CNN
| Surname1 = CNN
| Year = 2003
| Title = Venezuelan president names two generals to key posts
| Journal = CNN
| URL = http://archives.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/meast/08/10/iraq.chavez.02/
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--19 Jan 2003-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Country Watch
| Surname1 = CW
| Year = 2005
| Title = Country Fact Sheet: Venezuela
| Journal = International Finance Center (Yahoo! Finance)
| URL = http://biz.yahoo.com/ifc/ve.html
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Diehl
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = Chavez's Censorship: Where 'Disrespect' Can Land You in Jail
| Journal = The Washington Post
| URL = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5755-2005Mar27.html
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = DiJohn
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2004
| Title = The Political Economy of Economic Liberalisation in Venezuela
| Journal = Crisis States Programme, Development Research Centre, LSE
| URL = http://www.crisisstates.com/download/wp/wp46.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = The Economist
| Surname1 = Economist
| Year = 2005
| Title = Using Oil to Spread Revolution
| Journal = The Economist
| URL = http://www.economist.com/world/la/displaystory.cfm?story_id=4232330
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Ellner
| Given1 = S
| Surname2 = Hellinger
| Given2 = D
| Year = 2004
| Title = Venezuelan Politics in the Chávez Era: Class, Polarization, and Conflict
| Publisher = Lynne Rienner
| ID = ISBN 1-58826-297-9
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Ellner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s “Demonstration Effect”: Defying Globalization’s Logic
| Journal = North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA)
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1579
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Ellsworth
| Given1 = B
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela tries the worker-managed route
| Journal = The New York Times
| URL = http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/08/02/business/worker.php#
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = El Pais
| Surname1 = El Pais
| Year = 2004
| Title = Condenan a tres militares y 27 colombianos
| Journal = El Pais
| URL = http://elpais-cali.terra.com.co/paisonline/notas/Octubre252005/paras_ven.html
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = El Tiempo
| Surname1 = El Tiempo
| Year = 2005
| Title = Presidente de Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, Ofreció Petróleo a Colombia, por Trueque
| Journal = El Tiempo
| URL = http://eltiempo.terra.com.co/economia/2005-11-25/ARTICULO-WEB-_NOTA_INTERIOR-2626010.html
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--25Nov2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
| Surname1 = Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
| Year = 2005
| Title = Parade Magazine's Chavez Smear: Venezuelan president a terrorist funder?
| Journal = FAIR
| URL = http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2697
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Fuentes
| Given1 = F
| Year = 2005
| Title = Challenges for Venezuela's Workers’ Movement
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1564
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1486
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.
}}.</ref>

* {{Harvard reference
== Media treatment ==
| Surname1 = Gindin
{{main|Media representation of Hugo Chávez}}
The private media is generally hostile against the government, and accused of putting [[Journalism ethics and standards|journalism ethics]] aside. A prominent journalist deemed it "the darkest moment in the history of Venezuelan journalism".<ref name="CJR_media">{{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Dinges
| Given1 = J
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela and the 'New Democracy
| Title = Soul Search
| Journal = Canadian Dimension
| Journal = Columbia Journalism Review
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1575
| URL = http://www.cjr.org/issues/2005/4/dinges.asp
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = June 9, 2006
}}.</ref> During the April 2002 coup, major networks and newspapers decided to not air or print news of the crumbling Carmona government. <ref name="CJR_media"/> They justified the inaction claiming it was not safe to report the news, fearing harrasment from Chávez supporters.<ref name="CJR_media"/> Chávez alleges that the oposition media serve U.S. interests via corporate "[[propaganda model|propaganda]]". He often voices such views on his live talk &mdash; ''[[Aló, Presidente!]]'' ("Hello, President!"), which airs Sundays at 11:00 AM on [[Venezolana de Televisión]], ViVe Televisión, ANTV Televisión and CatiaTVe and features hours-long tours and speeches by Chávez.<ref name="Lakshmanan_2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--11 Oct 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Golinger
| Given1 = E
| Title = El Código Chávez: Descifrando la Intervención de los Estados Unidos en Venezuela
| Publisher = Editorial de Ciencias Sociales
| Year = 2005
| ID = ISBN 9-59060-723-3
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Authorlink = Richard Gott
| Surname1 = Gott
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2001
| Title = In the Shadow of the Liberator: The Impact of Hugo Chávez on Venezuela and Latin America
| Publisher = Verso Books
| ID = ISBN 1-85984-365-4
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Authorlink = Richard Gott
| Surname1 = Gott
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005
| Title = Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution
| Publisher = Verso Books
| ID = ISBN 1-84467-533-5
| URL = http://www.versobooks.com/books/ghij/g-titles/gott_hugo_chavez.shtml
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Authorlink = Richard Gott
| Surname1 = Gott
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Two fingers to America
| Journal = The Guardian
| URL = http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,12716,1555809,00.html
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Government of Venezuela
| Surname1 = Government of Venezuela
| Year = 2005
| Title = Presidente Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías
| Journal = Gobierno En Línea
| URL = http://www.gobiernoenlinea.ve/venezuela/ejecutivo.html
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Guillermoprieto
| Given1 = Alma
| Year = 2005
| Title = Don't Cry for Me, Venezuela
| Journal = New York Review of Books
| URL = http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18302
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Harnecker
| Given1 = M
| Year = 2003
| Title = The Military and the Revolution: Harnecker interviews Chávez
| Journal = Z Communications
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=45&ItemID=2841
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Human Rights Watch
| Surname1 = Human Rights Watch
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela: Curbs on Free Expression Tightened
| Journal = HRW
| URL = http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/03/24/venezu10368.htm
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Martin
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = While Bush prevaricates, Venezuela offers help to US poor
| Journal = In Defense of Marxism
| URL = http://www.marxist.com/venezuela-hurricane-bush020905.htm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--02Sep2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Jorquera
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005
| Title = Notes on the Bolivarian Revolution
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1479
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Kozloff
| Given1 = N
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s War of Religion
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1584
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
</div>
{{col-2}}
<div class="references-small">
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Kuiper
| Given1 = J
| Year = 2005
| Title = Barrio Adentro II: Victim of its Own Success
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1510
| Access-date = [[January 30]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--28 Jul 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Lakshmanan
| Surname1 = Lakshmanan
| Given1 = I
| Given1 = I
Line 762: Line 686:
| Journal = The Boston Globe
| Journal = The Boston Globe
| URL = http://www.boston.com/news/world/latinamerica/articles/2005/07/27/channeling_his_energies/?page=1
| URL = http://www.boston.com/news/world/latinamerica/articles/2005/07/27/channeling_his_energies/?page=1
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref> Chávez also launched [[Telesur]] on [[July 25]], [[2005]] which seeks to challenge the dominant U.S.-based [[CNN en Español]] and [[Univision]] networks.<ref name="BBC_Telesur">{{Harvard reference
}}.
| Author = BBC News
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Latin Business Chronicle
| Surname1 = Latin Business Chronicle
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = GDP Growth: Venezuela Best
| Title = Venezuela sets up 'CNN rival'
| Journal = Latin Business Chronicle
| Journal = BBC News
| URL = http://www.latinbusinesschronicle.com/reports/reports/1005/gdp.htm
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4620411.stm
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = June 1, 2006
}}.
}}.</ref>

* {{Harvard reference
After the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001, and with preparations for war in the U.S., Latin America could not compete for international media coverage. [[Moises Naim]], a former Venezuelan minister of trade and industry and editor of [[Foreign Policy]] magazine, argued in the ''[[Financial Times]]'' that Washington has mattered little in the Venezuelan crisis, and that "Fidel Castro's Cuba ... (had) been far more influential in Caracas than George W. Bush's mighty US", with sustained and effective attention towards its goal of keeping Chávez in power. Naim said, "Venezuela's disintegration is a story the world can no longer ignore." <ref>Naim, Moises. [http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=1160 "Venezuela gets a hand from nimble Castro."] ''Financial Times'' 21 Jan. 2003: 12.</ref>
| Surname1 = Macbeth

| Given1 = H
== Criticism ==
| Year = 2005
[[Image:Anti-chavez march.jpg|thumb|left|225px|An anti-Chávez march in the capital [[Caracas]]. This protest was in favor of a "yes" vote in the [[Venezuelan recall referendum, 2004|2004 recall referendum]].]]
| Title = The Not So Odd Couple: Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and Cuba’s Fidel Castro
{{main|Criticism of Hugo Chávez}}
| Journal = Council on Hemispheric Affairs
Chávez has been criticized both in Venezuela and in international media. His most vociferous opponents see him as a dangerous and [[authoritarianism|authoritarian]] [[militarism|militarist]] who threatens Venezuelan democracy and global oil prices.
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1485

| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
Chávez has also been criticized by proponents of free speech, particularly for the institution of the "Ley Resorte" which strengthened libel and slander laws, and most notably insult laws against the presidency. He has been accused of electoral fraud and political repression, including keeping anti-Chávez activists as [[political prisoner]]s. Critics report that poverty, unemployment, and corruption figures under Chávez have not seen improvement.<ref name="Jorquera_2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.
| Surname1 = Jorquera
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Marcano
| Given1 = C
| Surname2 = Barrera Tyszka
| Given2 = A
| Year = 2005
| Title = Hugo Chávez Sin Uniforme: Una Historia Personal
| Publisher = Random House Mondadori
| ID = ISBN 9-80293-284-1
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Márquez
| Given1 = H
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela's Indigenous Peoples Protest Coal Mining
| Journal = Inter Press Service
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1414
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Marshall
| Given1 = R
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2004
| Title = New Coup Plot Uncovered
| Journal = Green Left Weekly
| URL = http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2004/583/583p18b.htm
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--26 May 2004-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McCoy
| Given1 = JL
| Surname2 = Myers
| Given2 = DJ
| Year = 2004
| Title = The Unraveling of Representative Democracy in Venezuela
| Publisher = Johns Hopkins University Press
| ID = ISBN 0-80187-960-4
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McCoy
| Given1 = J
| Surname2 = Neuman
| Given2 = L
| Year = 2001
| Title = Observed Political Change In Venezuela: The Bolivarian Constitution and 2000 Elections: Final Report
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/297.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McCoy
| Given1 = J
| Surname2 = Trinkunas
| Given2 = H
| Year = 1999
| Title = Observation of the 1998 Venezuelan Elections: A Report of the Council of Freely Elected Heads of Government
| Journal = Carter Center
| URL = http://www.cartercenter.org/documents/1151.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = McGirk
| Given1 = T
| Year = 1999
| Title = Hugo Chávez Frías
| Journal = Time
| URL = http://www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/1999/1227/chavez.html
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--27 Dec 1999-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Ministerio de Comunicación e Información
| Surname1 = Ministerio de Comunicación e Información
| Year = 1999
| Title = Marcha Defensa de la Soberanía
| Journal = Government of Venezuela
| URL = http://www.minci.gov.ve/imagnot/23-ENE-2005%20-%20MARCHA%20-%20CORREGIDO.DEFINITIVO..doc
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--27 Dec 1999-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Morsbach
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2006
| Title = Venezuela head angry at cardinal
| Journal = BBC News
| URL = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4615776.stm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Niemeyer
| Given1 = RT
| Year = 2004
| Title = Under Attack: Morning Dawn in Venezuela
| Publisher = iUniverse
| ID = ISBN 0-59566-208-0
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = O'Donoghue
| Given1 = PJ
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = Historian Details Presidential Interest In Controversial Barinas Landed Estate
| Title = Notes on the Bolivarian Revolution
| Journal = V Headline
| URL = http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=45975
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = O'Keefe
| Given1 = D
| Year = 2005
| Title = Building a Democratic, Humanist Socialism: The Political Challenge of the 21st Century
| Journal = Z Communications
| URL = http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=40&ItemID=7396
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Palast
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela President Hugo Chavez: Interview
| Journal = BBC Newsnight
| URL = http://www.gregpalast.com/detail.cfm?artid=184&row=2
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Parma
| Given1 = A
| Year = 2005a
| Title = Pro-Chavez Union Leaders in Venezuela Urge Chavez to Do Better
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1780
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1479
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = January 25, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Parma_2005b">{{Harvard reference
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Parma
| Surname1 = Parma
| Given1 = A
| Given1 = A
Line 920: Line 718:
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1790
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1790
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Boyd_04Jul2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--08 Oct 2005-->
| Surname1 = Boyd
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Parma
| Given1 = A
| Given1 = A
| Year = 2005c
| Title = Chavez Claims Victory Over Bush in Argentina Summit
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1808
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--07 Nov 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = People's Daily
| Given1 = People's Daily
| Year = 2004
| Title = Chavez calls Condoleezza Rice an 'illiterate' following sharp criticism
| Journal = People's Daily
| URL = http://english.people.com.cn/200401/12/eng20040112_132386.shtml
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--12 Jan 2004-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Perelman
| Given1 = M
| Year = 2006
| Title = Venezuela's Jews Defend Leftist President in Flap Over Remarks
| Journal = The Forward
| URL = http://www.forward.com/articles/7189
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Ramirez
| Given1 = R
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = A National, Popular, and Revolutionary Oil Policy for Venezuela
| Title = List of missing persons and political prisoners in Venezuela
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = VCrisis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1474
| URL = http://www.vcrisis.com/index.php?content=letters/200403020624
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Fuentes_26Sep2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.
| Surname1 = Fuentes
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Reed
| Given1 = F
| Given1 = GA
| Year = 2005
| Year = 2005
| Title = Challenges for Venezuela's Workers’ Movement
| Title = Where There Were No Doctors: First MDs Graduate from Latin American Medical School
| Journal = MEDICC Review
| URL = http://www.medicc.org/medicc_review/0805/top-story.html
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Robinson
| Given1 = L
| Year = 2003
| Title = Terror Close to Home
| Journal = US News and World Report
| URL = http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/031006/6venezuela.htm
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Sanchez
| Given1 = A
| Year = 2003
| Title = Bolivarian Circles: A Grassroots Movement
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1026
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1564
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 15, 2006
}}.</ref> Abroad, Chávez is reported as being a confrontational ideologue,<ref name="Sanchez 25 Aug 2005">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--30 Sep 2003-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Sanchez
| Surname1 = Sanchez
| Given1 = M
| Given1 = M
Line 992: Line 742:
| Journal = The Washington Post
| Journal = The Washington Post
| URL = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/25/AR2005082501420.html
| URL = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/25/AR2005082501420.html
| Access-date = [[February 2]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = February 2, 2006
}}.</ref> and American public figures have accused him of supporting and training [[terrorism|terrorists]].<ref name="Robinson_2003">{{Harvard reference
}}.<!--25 Aug 2005-->
| Surname1 = Robinson
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Schuyler
| Given1 = L
| Given1 = GW
| Year = 2001
| Title = Health and Neoliberalism: Venezuela and Cuba
| Journal = The Policy Studies Organization
| URL = http://www.ipsonet.org/papers/gws.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = La Semana
| Given1 = La Semana
| Year = 2000
| Title = Entrevista Hugo Chavez: Me declaro amigo de Colombia
| Journal = La Semana
| URL = http://semana.terra.com.co/opencms/opencms/Semana/articulo.html?id=36699
| Access-date = [[February 02]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Sojo
| Given1 = CA
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s Chávez Closes World Social Forum with Call to Transcend Capitalism
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1486
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Toro
| Given1 = F
| Year = 2004
| Title = 100 Good Reasons Not to Believe Venezuela's Chavez
| Journal = Analitica
| URL = http://www.analitica.com/va/ttim/international/4969131.asp
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = UNICEF
| Surname1 = UNICEF
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela’s Barrio Adentro: A Model of Universal Primary Health Care
| Journal = UNICEF
| URL = http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/files/IPlusQuarterlyeNewsletterJanMarch2005.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Universidad Católica Andrés Bello
| Surname1 = Universidad Católica Andrés Bello
| Year = 1999
| Title = Cuadro de Presidentes Venezolanos
| Journal = Universidad Católica Andrés Bello
| URL = http://www.ucab.edu.ve/estudiantes/venezuela/geoehist/historia/presiden.htm
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Venezuela Analysis
| Surname1 = Venezuela Analysis
| Year = 2005a
| Title = Unemployment Drops 3.7% in Venezuela
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1695
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--20 Jul 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Venezuela Analysis
| Surname1 = Venezuela Analysis
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Chavez Disappointed with His Government’s Public Housing Achievements
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1704
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--01Aug2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Venezuela Analysis
| Surname1 = Venezuela Analysis
| Year = 2005c
| Title = Poverty and Unemployment Down Significantly in Venezuela in 2005
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1785
| Access-date = [[January 25]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--14 Oct 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Vulliamy
| Given1 = E
| Year = 2002
| Title = Venezuela coup linked to Bush team
| Journal = The Guardian
| URL = http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,688071,00.html
| Access-date = [[January 30]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wagner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005
| Title = Venezuela and Argentina Expand Cooperation in Food for Fuel Trade and with TeleSur
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1489
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wagner
| Given1 = S
| Year = 2005b
| Title = U.S.-Venezuela Military Cooperation Indefinitely Suspended
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1599
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--25 Apr 2005-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Weisbrot
| Given1 = M
| Year = 2005
| Title = Economic Growth is a Home Run in Venezuela
| Journal = Center for Economic and Policy Research
| URL = http://www.cepr.net/columns/weisbrot/2005_11_01.htm
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = Wiesenthal Center
| Surname1 = Wiesenthal Center
| Year = 2006
| Title = SWC Condemns antisemitic statements by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez - demands public apology
| Journal = Wiesenthal Center
| URL = http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/apps/nl/content.asp?c=fwLYKnN8LzH&b=312458&content_id={17D5A467-8F24-4ADA-BCD3-DE4476D7F462}&notoc=1
| Access-date = [[February 15]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--21Jan2006-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wilpert
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2003a
| Title = Venezuela’s New Constitution
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1003
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.<!--27 Aug 2003-->
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wilpert
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2003
| Year = 2003
| Title = Venezuela’s Missions to Fight Poverty
| Title = Terror Close to Home
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| Journal = US News and World Report
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1051
| URL = http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/031006/6venezuela.htm
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
| Access-date = January 26, 2006
}}.</ref><ref name="Wilpert_2003">{{Harv|Wilpert|2003}}.</ref> [[Amnesty International]] and [[Human Rights Watch]] have catalogued but not confirmed human rights violations under Chávez<ref name="AI_2005">{{Harv|Amnesty International|2005}}.</ref><ref name="HRW_2005">{{Harv|Human Rights Watch|2005}}.</ref> Chávez supporters counter by alleging repression of Chávez supporters and social workers by anti-Chávez mayors.
}}.

* {{Harvard reference
== Personal life ==
| Surname1 = Wilpert
[[Image:Chavezninas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Chávez and his daughters: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela and Rosa Inés.]]
| Given1 = G
Hugo Chávez has been married twice. He first married [[Nancy Colmenares]], a woman from a poor family originating in Chávez's hometown of Sabaneta. They were married for eighteen years and had three children: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Hugo Rafael. They separated after Chávez's 1992 coup attempt, but have remained friends since then.During his first marriage, Chávez also had a nine-year affair with young historian [[Herma Marksman]].<ref name="Guillermoprieto_2005">{{Harv|Guillermoprieto|2005}}.</ref><ref>Byrne, J. (2005), [http://www.abc.net.au/foreign/stories/s882059.htm Venezuela &mdash; Bolivarian Revolution,] ''Foreign Correspondent''. Accessed 25 January 2006.</ref> Chávez is separated from his second wife, journalist [[Marisabel Rodríguez de Chávez]], with whom he had another daughter, Rosa Inés, in addition to a son-in-law, Raúl "Raúlito" Alfonzo. Chávez also has one granddaughter, Gabriela.<ref>Palast, G (2005), [http://www.gregpalast.com/detail.cfm?artid=184&row=2 Venezuela President Hugo Chavez: Interview,] ''BBC Newsnight'', Accessed 26 January 2006.</ref>
| Year = 2003a

| Title = U.S. News & World Report Spreads Disinformation about Chavez Government Support for Terrorism
Chávez is a [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]], but has had disputes with both the Venezuelan Catholic clergy and [[Protestantism|Protestant]] church hierarchies.<ref>Kozloff, N (2005). [http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1584 Venezuela’s War of Religion,] ''Venezuela Analysis'', Accessed 25 January 2006.</ref><ref>Morsbach, G (2006). [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4615776.stm Venezuela head angry at cardinal,] ''BBC News'', Accessed 25 January 2006.</ref> Although he has traditionally kept his own faith a private matter, Chávez has become increasingly open to discussing his religious views, stating that both his faith and his interpretation of [[Jesus]]' personal life and ideology have had a profound impact on his leftist views: "He [Jesus] accompanied me in difficult times, in crucial moments. So Jesus Christ is no doubt a historical figure &mdash; he was someone who rebelled, an anti-imperialist guy. He confronted the Roman Empire.... Because who might think that Jesus was a capitalist? No. Judas was the capitalist, for taking the coins! Christ was a revolutionary. He confronted the religious hierarchies. He confronted the economic power of the time. He preferred death in the defense of his [[humanism|humanistic]] ideals, who fostered change.... He is our Jesus Christ."<ref>Chávez, H (2005). [http://www.archive.org/download/Chávez-nyc-speech/Chávez-english_64kb.mp3 Untitled Speech delivered at the Latino Pastoral Action Center in Bronx, New York City,] ''Democracy Now!'' Accessed 21 January, 2006.</ref>
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis

| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1027
== See also ==
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
{{Topics related to Hugo Chávez}}
}}.

* {{Harvard reference
== Notes ==
| Surname1 = Wilpert
<div class="references-small">
| Given1 = G
<references/>
| Year = 2005a
| Title = Venezuela’s Quiet Housing Revolution: Urban Land Reform
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1551
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wilpert
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2005b
| Title = Venezuela Launches Telesur
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1699
| Access-date = [[January 26]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Surname1 = Wilpert
| Given1 = G
| Year = 2005c
| Title = Chavez Highlights Venezuela’s Land Reform with Broadcast from Seized Farm
| Journal = Venezuela Analysis
| URL = http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=1766
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}.
* {{Harvard reference
| Author = World Health Organization
| Surname1 = WHO
| Year = 2004
| Title = República Bolivariana de Venezuela: Cumpliendo las Metas del Milenio
| Journal = World Health Organization
| URL = http://www.ops-oms.org.ve/site/venezuela/docs/Cumpliendo_las_Metas_del_Milenio_2004.pdf
| Access-date = [[January 21]], [[2006]]
}}. {{PDFlink}}
</div>
</div>
{{col-end}}


==External links==
==External links==
Line 1,199: Line 780:
* [[Democracy Now!]]: [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/19/1336214 Part I] and [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/20/1330218 Part II] of a [[September 16]], [[2005]] interview in New York City.
* [[Democracy Now!]]: [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/19/1336214 Part I] and [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/20/1330218 Part II] of a [[September 16]], [[2005]] interview in New York City.
* [[ABC News]]/[[Nightline]]: [http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/International/story?id=1134098&page=1 Interview of Chávez] on [[September 16]], [[2005]] by [[Ted Koppel]].
* [[ABC News]]/[[Nightline]]: [http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/International/story?id=1134098&page=1 Interview of Chávez] on [[September 16]], [[2005]] by [[Ted Koppel]].
* [[The Guardian]]: [http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,,1775763,00.html The world according to Chávez] on [[May 16]], [[2006]] by [[Duncan_Campbell_%28The_Guardian%29|Duncan Campbell]] and [[Jonathan Steele]].
* [[The Guardian]]: [http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,,1775763,00.html The world according to Chávez] on [[May 16]], [[2006]] by [[Duncan Campbell (The Guardian)|Duncan Campbell]] and [[Jonathan Steele]].


;Other
;Media articles
* [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1769146,00.html The New Kid on the ''barrio''], Peter Beaumont, ''[[The Observer]]'' (UK), 7 May 2006
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,1774918,00.html Not a difficult choice at all]. "Chávez and Venezuela deserve the support of all who believe in social justice and democracy", [[Ken Livingstone]], ''[[the Guardian]]'', 15 may 2006.

;Critical links
* [http://www.lp.org/lpnews/article_800.shtml Given an actual choice, would Americans choose socialism?] by Kory Richards

;Official links
* [http://www.alopresidente.gob.ve/ Aló Presidente] &mdash; Website of Chávez's weekly talk show.
* [http://www.alopresidente.gob.ve/ Aló Presidente] &mdash; Website of Chávez's weekly talk show.
* [http://www.shark.cc/ Latin News Blog], President Hugo Chávez News Blog
* [http://www.alternativabolivariana.org/ Portal ALBA: Alternativa Bolivariana para América] &mdash; Web portal detailing Chávez's trade agenda and proposals.
* [http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=22622 Chavez's Incredible Shrinking Revolution] by Lowell Pointe

;Unofficial links
* [http://www.shark.cc/ Latin News Blog] .Venezuela President Hugo Chávez News Blog

</div>
{{col-2}}
{{commons|Hugo Chávez}}
{{wikiquote|Hugo Chávez}}
{{wikinews|Hugo Chávez}}
{{col-end}}

<!-- Succession tables -->
<!-- Succession tables -->
{{start box}}
{{start box}}
Line 1,226: Line 792:
{{Venezuela succession box|title=[[List of Presidents of Venezuela|President]] <small>of</small> [[Venezuela]]|before=[[Diosdado Cabello|Diosdado Cabello Rondón]]|after=''[[incumbent]]''| years=[[April 13]], [[2002]] – [[present (time)|present]]}}
{{Venezuela succession box|title=[[List of Presidents of Venezuela|President]] <small>of</small> [[Venezuela]]|before=[[Diosdado Cabello|Diosdado Cabello Rondón]]|after=''[[incumbent]]''| years=[[April 13]], [[2002]] – [[present (time)|present]]}}
{{end box}}
{{end box}}

{{commons|Hugo Chávez}}
{{wikiquote|Hugo Chávez}}


{{VEpresidents}}
{{VEpresidents}}
{{featured article}}
{{featured article}}


[[Category:1954 births|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:1954 births|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Current events|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Current national leaders|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Current national leaders|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:History of Venezuela|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:History of Venezuela|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Hugo Chávez|*]]
[[Category:Hugo Chávez|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Living people|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Living people|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Military writers|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Military writers|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Presidents of Venezuela|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Presidents of Venezuela|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Rebels|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Rebels|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Revolutionaries|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Revolutionaries|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Socialists|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Socialists|Chavez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic politicians|Chávez, Hugo]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic politicians|Chavez, Hugo]]



{{link FA|de}}
{{link FA|de}}
Line 1,248: Line 815:
[[ar:هوغو شافيز]]
[[ar:هوغو شافيز]]
[[ast:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ast:Hugo Chávez]]
[[id:Hugo Chávez]]
[[be:Уга Чавэс]]
[[be:Уга Чавэс]]
[[bs:Hugo Chávez]]
[[bs:Hugo Chávez]]
Line 1,260: Line 826:
[[es:Hugo Chávez]]
[[es:Hugo Chávez]]
[[eo:Hugo Chávez]]
[[eo:Hugo Chávez]]
[[fi:Hugo Chávez]]
[[fr:Hugo Chávez]]
[[fr:Hugo Chávez]]
[[gl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[gl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ko:우고 차베스]]
[[io:Hugo Chávez Frías]]
[[it:Hugo Chávez]]
[[he:הוגו צ'אווס]]
[[he:הוגו צ'אווס]]
[[hr:Hugo Chávez]]
[[hr:Hugo Chávez]]
[[hu:Hugo Chávez]]
[[id:Hugo Chávez]]
[[io:Hugo Chávez Frías]]
[[it:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ja:ウゴ・チャベス]]
[[ko:우고 차베스]]
[[lv:Hugo Čavess]]
[[lv:Hugo Čavess]]
[[mk:Хуго Чавез]]
[[mk:Хуго Чавез]]
[[nl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[nl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ja:ウゴ・チャベス]]
[[no:Hugo Chávez]]
[[no:Hugo Chávez]]
[[oc:Hugo Chávez Frías]]
[[oc:Hugo Chávez Frías]]
[[pl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ps:هوګو چاوېز]]
[[ps:هوګو چاوېز]]
[[pl:Hugo Chávez]]
[[pt:Hugo Chávez]]
[[pt:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ru:Чавес Фриас, Уго Рафаэль]]
[[ru:Чавес Фриас, Уго Рафаэль]]
[[fi:Hugo Chávez]]
[[sv:Hugo Chávez]]
[[sv:Hugo Chávez]]
[[ta:குகொ சவெஸ்]]
[[ta:குகொ சவெஸ்]]

Revision as of 19:29, 9 June 2006

You must add a |reason= parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|16 May 2006|reason=<Fill reason here>}}, or remove the Cleanup template.
Template:Venezuelan presidents infobox Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías (IPA: ['uɰo rafa'el 'tʃaβes 'fɾias]; born July 28, 1954) is the 53rd and current President of Venezuela. As the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution, Chávez is known for his democratic socialist governance, his promotion of Latin American integration, and his criticism, which he terms anti-imperialism, of neoliberal globalization and United States foreign policy.[1]

A career military officer, Chávez founded the leftist Fifth Republic Movement (MVR) after he led a failed 1992 coup d'état. Chávez was elected President in 1998[2] on promises of aiding Venezuela's poor majority, and reelected in 2000.[3] Domestically, Chávez has launched Bolivarian Missions whose stated goals are to combat disease, illiteracy, malnutrition, poverty, and other social ills. Abroad, Chávez has acted against the Washington Consensus by supporting alternative models of economic development, and has advocated cooperation among the world's poor nations, especially those in Latin America.

Chávez has been severely criticized during his presidency. He has been accused of electoral fraud, human rights violations, assaulting democracy in favor of dictatorship, and political repression,[4][5][6] and has survived both a brief 2002 coup and a failed 2004 recall referendum due to his enormous support amongst the poor that represent the vast majority of his constituents.[7][8][9] Whether viewed as a liberator or authoritarian demagogue, Chávez remains one of the most complex, controversial, and high-profile figures in modern Latin American politics.

Early life (1954–1992)

Chávez was born the second son of poor schoolteachers in Sabaneta, Barinas. He is of mixed Amerindian, African, and Spanish descent. Chávez and his five siblings were raised in a thatched palm leaf house. Chávez and his older brother moved to Sabaneta proper to live with their paternal grandmother. Chávez attended the Daniel Florencio O'Leary School in Barinas, graduating with a science degree after elementary school.[10] Chávez attended the Venezuelan Academy of Military Sciences at eighteen, graduating in 1975 as a sub-lieutenant with master's degrees in military science and engineering. Chávez served for several months in the military. He did graduate-level work in political science at Caracas' Simón Bolívar University, but left without a degree.

Chávez developed a left-nationalist ideology termed "Bolivarianism", inspired by the pan-Americanist philosophies of 19th-century Venezuelan revolutionary Simón Bolívar, Peruvian left-leaning President Gral. Juan Velasco, and various socialist and communist leaders. After college, Chávez served in a Barinas-based counter-insurgency battalion in his student years. He held various other posts, command, and staff positions, eventually becoming a decorated lieutenant colonel. Chávez also taught at the Military Academy of Venezuela, where he was known for his aggressive criticism of the Venezuelan government and socioeconomic status quo.[11] He also founded the Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement-200 (MBR-200).[10]

Chávez coup attempt (1992)

File:Chavez 1994 AFP 1.jpg
Chávez interviewed following his 1994 release from prison. Although the coup for which Chávez was imprisoned failed, it elevated him into the national spotlight.

Growing unrest and economic decline under the neoliberal administration of Carlos Andrés Pérez[12] led Chávez to plan a coup d'état.[13] Initially planned for December, Chávez delayed the MBR-200 coup until the early twilight hours of February 4, 1992. On that date, five army units under Chávez's command barreled into urban Caracas. They planned to overrun key military and communications installations, including the Miraflores presidential palace, the defense ministry, La Carlota military airport, and the Historical Museum. Chávez's main goal was to capture Pérez, who was returning from an overseas trip.

Chávez held the loyalty of 10% of the military;[14] yet numerous betrayals, errors, and other unforeseen circumstances soon left Chávez and others besieged in the Historical Museum and unable to issue orders to other rebels.[14] Further, Chávez's allies neither took Caracas nor were able to air a nationwide call for a mass uprising or capture Pérez. As the coup unfolded, fourteen soldiers were killed, and fifty soldiers and eighty civilians were injured.[14] Rebel forces elsewhere made swift advances, capturing Valencia, Maracaibo, and Maracay.[14] But having failed in Caracas, Chávez gave himself up; later, he was allowed to make a televised nationwide call for all rebel forces to stand down. In the address, he also famously quipped that he had failed only "por ahora" — "for the moment".[14] With this, Chávez was thrust into the national spotlight, with many poor Venezuelans seeing him as one who stood against corruption and kleptocracy.[14][1] Chávez was then sent to Yare prison.

Political rise (1992–1999)

After a two-year imprisonment, Chávez was pardoned by President Rafael Caldera in 1994. Chávez reformed the MBR-200, renaming it the Fifth Republic Movement (MVR — Movimiento Quinta República, with the "V" being the Roman numeral five). In 1998, Chávez started campaigning for the presidency and created a platform that drew heavily from Bolivarianism, particularly its anti-corruption and anti-poverty agenda. Chávez also promised to dismantle puntofijismo, the traditional two-party system of political patronage.[13][15] Controversially, foreign banks — including Spain's Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) and Banco Santander Central Hispano (BSCH), each the owner of one of Venezuela's largest banks — illicitly funneled millions of dollars into Chávez's campaign.[16][17]

Hugo Chávez's Election Results
1998 presidential election
Candidate Votes %
Chávez: 3,673,685 56.20%
Salas: 2,613,161 39.97%
Valid votes: 6,537,304
Abstention: 3,971,239 36.24%

Chávez used a charismatic public speaking style — noted for its aggressive manner and abundance of colloquialisms — to woo a largely poor and working class base. By May 1998, Chávez had a 30% approval rating in polls; by August he had 39%. On December 6, 1998, Chávez won the Carter Center-endorsed 1998 presidential election with 56% of the vote.[13][2]

First Presidency (1999–2000)

File:HugoChavez1823.jpeg
Chávez holds up a miniature copy of the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution at the 2005 World Social Forum held in Brazil.

Chávez was sworn in as president on February 2, 1999. Among his first acts was the launching of Plan Bolivar 2000, which included road building, housing construction, and mass vaccination.[18] Chávez also halted planned privatizations of, among others, the national social security system, aluminum industry holdings, and the oil sector.[19] Chávez also overhauled the formerly lax tax collection and auditing system — especially regarding major corporations and landholders — by increasing its fairness and efficiency.

Hugo Chávez's Election Results
1999 referendum
Enact the new constitution?
Option Votes %
Yes: 3,301,475 71.78%
No: 1,298,105 28.22%
Abstention: 6,041,743 55.63%

Responding to the stalling of his legislation in the National Assembly, Chávez scheduled two national elections for July 1999, including a referendum for and elections to fill a new constitutional assembly. The Constitutional Assembly was created when the referendum passed with a 71.78% "yes" vote, while the pro-Chávez Polo Patriotico ("Patriotic Pole") won 95% (120 out of the total 131) of its seats. In August 1999, the Constitutional Assembly's "Judicial Emergency Committee" declared a "legislative emergency" whereby a seven-member committee conducted the National Assembly's functions; meanwhile, the National Assembly was prohibited from holding meetings.[20] The Constitutional Assembly drafted the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution, which included an increase in the presidential term from five to six years, a new presidential two-term limit, a new provision for presidential recall elections, renaming of the country to República Bolivariana de Venezuela, expanded presidential powers, conversion of the bicameral National Assembly into a weakened unicameral legislature, merit-based appointments of judges, and creation of the Public Defender, an office authorized to regulate the activities of the presidency and the National Assembly.[21]

In December 1999, the new constitution was approved in a nationwide election with a 71.78% "yes" vote. On December 15, after weeks of heavy rain, statewide mudslides claimed the lives of an estimated 30,000 people. Critics claim Chávez was distracted by the referendum and that the government ignored a civil defense report, calling for emergency measures, issued the day the floods struck [22]. The government rejected these claims. [22] Chávez personally led the relief effort afterwards. [23] Subsequent mudslides in 2000 and 2004 left 14 dead.[24] [25]

Second Presidency (2000–present)

File:Hugo Chávez (2000).jpg
President Chávez in the year 2000. He is the first President of Venezuela to wear a military uniform since Marcos Pérez Jiménez in 1958.

Elections for the new unicameral National Assembly took place on July 30, 2000; meanwhile, Chávez himself stood for reelection. Chávez's coalition won a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly, while Chávez was reelected with 60% of the votes. The Carter Center stated the elections were "flawed" although "the presidential election legitimately expressed the will of the people".[3] On December 3, 2000, a referendum — backed by Chávez but condemned by international labor organizations [3] — was held. The referendum passed, forcing trade unions to hold state-monitored elections.

Hugo Chávez's Election Results
2000 presidential election
Candidate Votes %
Chávez: 3,757,773 59.76%
Arias: 2,359,459 37.52%
Valid votes: 6,288,578
Abstention: 5.120.464 43.69%
2000 referendum
State-monitored labor union elections?
Option Votes %
Yes: 1,632,750 62.02%
No: 719,771 27.34%
Abstention: 8,569,691 76.50%

After the mid-2000 elections, Chávez backed passage of the Enabling act, which allowed Chávez to rule by decree for one year. In November 2001, Chávez used it to enact 49 decrees, including the "Hydrocarbons Law" (increased government control over the oil sector) and the "Land Law" (land reform and redistribution). The Fedecámaras business federation and the Confederación de Trabajadores de Venezuela opposed the decrees, and began a general strike on December 10, 2001,[26] in the hope that the President would reconsider his legislative action and, instead, open a debate about those laws.[26] However, the strike failed to impact Chávez decision.

Events of April 11, 2002

File:Chavezsurvivescoup.JPG
Chávez makes a dramatic return to power on April 13, 2002.

On April 11, 2002, anti-Chávez and pro-Chávez demonstrators clashed at the Miraflores palace. Chávez commandeered the airwaves, and asked protesters to go home, played pre-recorded speeches, and attempted to stop media coverage of the violence. Subsequently, Commander of the Army Lucas Rincón Romero reported in a nationwide broadcast that Chávez had resigned his presidency.

In the early hours of April 12, General-in-Chief Lucas Rincón Romero announced that Chávez had been asked for his resignation, and had accepted. Since Rincón remains close to Chávez and later, in fact, became the Minister of the Interior and Justice, some Venezuelans argue that the resignation was real and that there was no coup but a power vacuum, despite the succesion order being broken. Venezuela's Supreme Court later ruled that what happened was "Generals merely trying to restore order", and no military officers were ever charged with plotting a coup.[27]On March 11, 2005, the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court ruled that the recusals were unconstitutional, the hearing was invalid, and the military officers (by then retired) may stand trial.[28]

Chávez was taken to a military base while Fedecámaras president Pedro Carmona was installed as interim president. Carmona reversed Chávez's credit controls and oil production ceilings, dissolved the National Assembly, dismissed the Venezuelan judiciary, and reverted Venezuela's official name back to República de Venezuela. Demonstrations erupted, and pro-Chávez troops freed Chávez from captivity.[29]

On April 13, 2002, Chávez resumed as president, and began several investigations, which supported Chávez's claims that the coup was U.S.-sponsored.[30][31]U.S. Senator Christopher Dodd D-CT requested an investigation due to "raised concerns that Washington appeared to condone the removal of Mr Chavez". [31][32] It found that "U.S. officials acted appropriately and did nothing to encourage an April coup against Venezuela's president".[33][34]

Presidency re-instated, April 13, 2002 – 2004

In late 2002, Chávez moved to use PDVSA revenues to fund his social programs. Opposing this, many PDVSA managers and workers began a two-months strike starting on December 2, 2002. This resulted in shortages of oil and loss of PDVSA revenue. In response, Chávez fired 19,000 PDVSA striking workers and managers, replacing them with Chávez loyalist or neutrals.

In 2004, a putative 2004 coup attempt stirred controversy.[35]

Presidential recall referendum, 2004

During 2003 and 2004, millions of signatures were collected by Súmate, a volunteer civilian organization, to activate the constitutional presidential recall provision. Two previous attempts to collect enough signatures to recall the president halfway through his term were ruled invalid. During the petition signing to recall him, Chávez suggested that even if the recall referendum succeeded, he would not leave office. "Not even if we suppose that they hold that referendum and get 90% of the votes, I will not leave. Forget it. I will not leave." [36] The list of signatories was subsequently collected by the government[37] for the purpose of reprisal.[38]

Hugo Chávez's Election Results
2004 recall referendum
Recall Hugo Chávez?
Option Votes %
No: 5,800,629 59.10%
Yes: 3,989,008 40.64%
Abstention: 4,222,269 30.08%

The August 15, 2004 vote saw a record turnout. With a 59.25% "no" vote, the recall measure was defeated.[39] The Carter Center "concluded the results were accurate."[7][8]A Penn Schoen & Berland Associates exit poll showed the opposite result, and Schoen commented, "I think it was a massive fraud,"[40] apparently contradicting five other opposition exit polls.[41]

Chávez's government subsequently charged the founders of Súmate with treason and conspiracy in receiving foreign funds from the NED.[42] [43]

Post-referendum, 2004 – present

After the recall referendum, Chávez used Venezuela's increasing oil revenues — from rises in world oil prices — to focus on expanding social programs. [citation needed] Economic growth also picked up markedly, reaching double-digit growth in 2004, 9.3% growth in 2005 and a projected 7 percent growth rate for 2006. [citation needed] In late March 2005, the Chávez government criminalized broadcast libel and slander directed against public officials, [citation needed] including prison sentences of up to 40 months for serious cases. Chávez also expanded social programs via new Bolivarian Missions.

Chávez has directed the military to shift armaments procurements to non-U.S. sources, including Brazil, China, Russia, and Spain. [citation needed] Meanwhile, Chávez ordered all active-duty U.S. soldiers to leave Venezuela. [citation needed] In 2005, he created the 1.5 million-strong Mission Miranda "military reserve" program.[44] In October 2005, Chávez banished the "New Tribes Mission" from the country, accusing it of "imperialist infiltration" and collaboration with the CIA.[45] Chávez's government also gave Amazonian indigenous peoples inalienable titles to 6,800 km² of lands and launched Mission Guaicaipuro.

On August 20, 2005, Chávez announced the joint establishment of a tuition-free medical school, including 30,000 planned slots for poor students.[46] In his speech at the 2005 UN World Summit, Chávez denounced neoliberalism and warned of hydrocarbon depletion.[47] On March 9, 2006 he added an eighth star (the "Bolivarian star") to the Venezuelan flag. Another change to the coat of arms (also displayed on the flag) shows the horse running to the left rather than the right.

Political impact

Labor

Chávez has had a combative relationship with the nation's largest trade union confederation, the Confederación de Trabajadores de Venezuela (CTV), which is historically aligned with the Acción Democrática party. During the December 2000 local elections, Chávez placed a referendum measure on the ballot that would mandate state-monitored elections within unions. The measure, which was condemned by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) as undue interference in internal union matters, passed by a large margin on a very low electoral turnout. In the ensuing CTV elections, Carlos Ortega declared his victory and remained in office as CTV president, while Chavista (pro-Chávez) candidates declared fraud.

The Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (UNT — "National Union of Workers"), a new pro-Chávez union federation, formed in response, and has been growing in membership; it seeks to ultimately supplant the CTV. Several Chavista unions have withdrawn from the CTV because of their strident anti-Chávez activism, and have instead affiliated with the UNT. In 2003, Chávez chose to send UNT, rather than CTV, representatives to an annual ILO meeting.

Chávez has also nationalized or seized several companies, including Venepal (a paper and cardboard manufacturing firm in January 19, 2005),[citation needed] some oil fields[48] and even a Coca-Cola plant. Chávez was criticized for violently re-claiming soda pop "for the masses".[49]

Economic and Social Impact

Chávez ranks among OPEC's price hawks, pushing for strict production quotas and high price targets. He has broadened the customer base of Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA - Venezuela's state-owned oil company), striking joint exploration deals with Argentina, Brazil, China, India, and others. Record oil prices have meant more funding for his social programs, but also left the economy increasingly dependent on Chávez's policies and PDVSA.

Chavéz, flanked by Qatari Emir Hamad bin Khalifa and Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, attends the Arab-South America Summit held on May 5, 2005 in Brazil. (Agência Brasil).

Chávez has redirected the focus of PDVSA by bringing it more closely under the direction of the Energy Ministry; attempted to repatriate more oil funds to Venezuela by raising royalty percentages on joint extraction contracts; and explored the liquidation of some or all of the assets belonging to PDVSA's U.S.-based subsidiary, CITGO. The oil ministry has been successful in restructuring CITGO's profit structure,[50] resulting in increased dividends and income taxes from PDVSA. Venezuela is adhering to OPEC quotas that lowered production compared to the previous administration that disregarded them.

Chávez's domestic social policy is embodied by the Bolivarian Missions, a series of grassroots programs that have altered the economic and social landscape of Venezuela. Recent economic activity under Chávez has been robust under these programs.[51] There has also been a 6.4% drop since 1999 in official unemployment[52][53]and 6% in the poverty rates for households[54][55] and there has been improvement in the infant mortality rate.[56][57]

On March 2006 the Communal Council Law was approved, whereby communities that decide to organize themselves into a council can be given official state recognition and access to federal funds and loans for community projects. This skips the local and state governments that are perceived as corrupt. <[58] Critics state that the councils are another avenue for corruption.

Foreign affairs

Chávez and Argentine President Kirchner discuss energy and trade integration projects for South America. They met in November, 2005 as a gesture of solidarity in their opposition to the Washington Consensus and the FTAA proposal (Office of the Argentine Presidency).

Chávez has refocused Venezuelan foreign policy on Latin American economic and social integration by enacting bilateral trade and reciprocal aid agreements, including his "oil diplomacy".[59][60] Abroad, Chávez denounces both neocolonialism and neoliberalism, including U.S. foreign policy regarding Iraq, Haiti, and the Free Trade Area of the Americas (he favors the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas[61]); meanwhile, he has severed military ties with the U.S. Chávez went on a ten-day tour of OPEC countries to decrease production ceilings, thus becoming the first head of state to meet Saddam Hussein since the Gulf War.[62]

In 2001, a dispute with Peru occurred over suspicions that Chávez's administration was protecting and hiding Vladimiro Montesinos,[63]a former Peruvian intelligence director under Alberto Fujimori administration wanted for corruption. Montesinos was captured in Venezuela in June of that year. A dipolomatic dispute with Colombia, referred to as the Rodrigo Granda affair, occurred in 2004, after the kidnap of Rodrigo Granda, a high ranking member of the political wing of the FARC.

After Hurricane Katrina battered the U.S. in late 2005, Chávez's administration was the first government to offer aid to its "North American brothers". Later, in November 2005, officials in Massachusetts signed an agreement with Venezuela to provide discounted heating oil to low income families via CITGO, a PDSVA subsidiary.[64]

File:Hugorilla.JPG
Peruvian media depicting Hugo Chávez as a gorilla after his comments on the 2006 Presidential election process.

Venezuela's foreign affairs are also accompanied by Chávez's controversial comments. He called George W. Bush a pendejo ("dumbass")); Condoleezza Rice a "complete illiterate" with regards to comprehending Latin America;[65][6][66] and said that Vicente Fox was "bleeding from his wounds" and warned him not to "mess" with him.[67] The latter comments resulted in Mexico recalling their ambassador.

Between January and March of 2006, Chávez commented on the candidates of the 2006 Peruvian Presidential election, openly backing Ollanta Humala while referring to Alan García as a "thief" and a "crook" and considering Lourdes Flores a "candidate of the oligarchy". Chávez's comments led the Peruvian government to consider that he was interfering in Peru's affairs in breach of international law. Both countries recalled their ambassadors.[68][69] The defeat of Humala (the Chávez-backed candidate) in Peru and the reelection of Chávez nemesis and U.S. ally, Álvaro Uribe, in Colombia can be seen as a rebuke to Chávez. [70] [71][72]

Bolivarianism

File:ChavezPeace.jpg
Chávez speaks to chavistas on Caracas's Avenida Bolívar in May, 2004.

Chávez is mainly influenced by the ideas of Simón Bolívar, lending the name of the Bolivarianism movement to his namesake, others like Ezequiel Zamora, Simón Rodríguez, Marxist historian Federico Brito Figueroa, Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Salvador Allende and Norberto Ceresole would also play an influential role. Later, Chávez stated that democratic socialism (socialism emphasizing grassroots democracy) was key to his policies, working through such organizations as the Bolivarian Circles.[73][74] He reiterated this at the 2005 World Social Forum and the 4th Summit on the Social Debt, stating that humanity must embrace "a new type of socialism, a humanist one, which puts humans, and not machines or the state, ahead of everything."[75]

Media treatment

The private media is generally hostile against the government, and accused of putting journalism ethics aside. A prominent journalist deemed it "the darkest moment in the history of Venezuelan journalism".[76] During the April 2002 coup, major networks and newspapers decided to not air or print news of the crumbling Carmona government. [76] They justified the inaction claiming it was not safe to report the news, fearing harrasment from Chávez supporters.[76] Chávez alleges that the oposition media serve U.S. interests via corporate "propaganda". He often voices such views on his live talk — Aló, Presidente! ("Hello, President!"), which airs Sundays at 11:00 AM on Venezolana de Televisión, ViVe Televisión, ANTV Televisión and CatiaTVe and features hours-long tours and speeches by Chávez.[77] Chávez also launched Telesur on July 25, 2005 which seeks to challenge the dominant U.S.-based CNN en Español and Univision networks.[78]

After the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001, and with preparations for war in the U.S., Latin America could not compete for international media coverage. Moises Naim, a former Venezuelan minister of trade and industry and editor of Foreign Policy magazine, argued in the Financial Times that Washington has mattered little in the Venezuelan crisis, and that "Fidel Castro's Cuba ... (had) been far more influential in Caracas than George W. Bush's mighty US", with sustained and effective attention towards its goal of keeping Chávez in power. Naim said, "Venezuela's disintegration is a story the world can no longer ignore." [79]

Criticism

An anti-Chávez march in the capital Caracas. This protest was in favor of a "yes" vote in the 2004 recall referendum.

Chávez has been criticized both in Venezuela and in international media. His most vociferous opponents see him as a dangerous and authoritarian militarist who threatens Venezuelan democracy and global oil prices.

Chávez has also been criticized by proponents of free speech, particularly for the institution of the "Ley Resorte" which strengthened libel and slander laws, and most notably insult laws against the presidency. He has been accused of electoral fraud and political repression, including keeping anti-Chávez activists as political prisoners. Critics report that poverty, unemployment, and corruption figures under Chávez have not seen improvement.[80][81][82][83] Abroad, Chávez is reported as being a confrontational ideologue,[84] and American public figures have accused him of supporting and training terrorists.[85][15] Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have catalogued but not confirmed human rights violations under Chávez[4][5] Chávez supporters counter by alleging repression of Chávez supporters and social workers by anti-Chávez mayors.

Personal life

File:Chavezninas.jpg
Chávez and his daughters: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela and Rosa Inés.

Hugo Chávez has been married twice. He first married Nancy Colmenares, a woman from a poor family originating in Chávez's hometown of Sabaneta. They were married for eighteen years and had three children: Rosa Virginia, María Gabriela, and Hugo Rafael. They separated after Chávez's 1992 coup attempt, but have remained friends since then.During his first marriage, Chávez also had a nine-year affair with young historian Herma Marksman.[13][86] Chávez is separated from his second wife, journalist Marisabel Rodríguez de Chávez, with whom he had another daughter, Rosa Inés, in addition to a son-in-law, Raúl "Raúlito" Alfonzo. Chávez also has one granddaughter, Gabriela.[87]

Chávez is a Roman Catholic, but has had disputes with both the Venezuelan Catholic clergy and Protestant church hierarchies.[88][89] Although he has traditionally kept his own faith a private matter, Chávez has become increasingly open to discussing his religious views, stating that both his faith and his interpretation of Jesus' personal life and ideology have had a profound impact on his leftist views: "He [Jesus] accompanied me in difficult times, in crucial moments. So Jesus Christ is no doubt a historical figure — he was someone who rebelled, an anti-imperialist guy. He confronted the Roman Empire.... Because who might think that Jesus was a capitalist? No. Judas was the capitalist, for taking the coins! Christ was a revolutionary. He confronted the religious hierarchies. He confronted the economic power of the time. He preferred death in the defense of his humanistic ideals, who fostered change.... He is our Jesus Christ."[90]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "O'Keefe_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "McCoy_Trinkunas_1999_49" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b c Template:Harvard reference.
  4. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "AI_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "HRW_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "Diehl_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  7. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "Carter_Center_Sep2004" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference.
  9. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  10. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "GOV_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  11. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  12. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  13. ^ a b c d Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "Guillermoprieto_2005" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  14. ^ a b c d e f Gott, Richard (2005). Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution. Verso Books. pp. 63–67. ISBN 1-84467-533-5. Retrieved 2006-01-21.
  15. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "Wilpert_2003" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  17. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  18. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  19. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  20. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  21. ^ Template:Harvard reference
  22. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference.
  23. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  24. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  25. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  26. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference. Cite error: The named reference "Universal_ne" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  27. ^ "No Trial for Venezuela Coup Plotters". UPI 14 August 2002. SIRS Knowledge Source. Accessed 1 March 2003.
  28. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  29. ^ Gott 2005, pp. 234-236
  30. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  31. ^ a b Template:Harvard reference.
  32. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  33. ^ U.S. Embassy, Caracas, Venezuela. State Dept. Issues Report on U.S. Actions During Venezuelan Coup: (Inspector General finds U.S. officials acted properly during coup). Accessed 26 May 2006.
  34. ^ U.S. Department of State and Office of Inspector General. A Review of U.S. Policy toward Venezuela, November 2001 - April 2002. Accessed 26 May 2006.
  35. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  36. ^ Official transcript 'Aló Presidente' N°128, 24 November 2002.
  37. ^ Template:Harvard reference
  38. ^ Template:Harvard reference
  39. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  40. ^ Barone, M. "Exit polls in Venezuela". U.S. News & World Report. August 20, 2004.
  41. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  42. ^ Human Rights Watch.Venezuela: Court Orders Trial of Civil Society Leaders. Accessed 8 June 2006.
  43. ^ World Movement for Democracy. Democracy Activists in Venezuela Threatened. (July 16, 2004) Accessed 8 June 2006.
  44. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  45. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  46. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  47. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  48. ^ Kraul, C. (April 12, 2006). A Political Minefield in Venezuela's Oil Fields.LA Times. Accessed 8 June 2006.
  49. ^ Miller, T. and Iritani, E. "Venezuelan Troops Reclaim Coca-Cla for the Masses." Los Angeles Times 18 January, 2003. SIRS Knowledge Source. Accessed 1 March 2003.
  50. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  51. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  52. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  53. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  54. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  55. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  56. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  57. ^ Central Intelligence Agency (November 1, 2005). "The World Factbook: Venezuela: Economy". Retrieved 2006-03-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  58. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  59. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  60. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  61. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  62. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  63. ^ BBC News. Peru in diplomatic spat with Venezuela. Accessed 23 May 2006.
  64. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  65. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  66. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  67. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  68. ^ BBC News. Peru recalls Venezuela ambassador. Accessed 23 May 2006.
  69. ^ BBC News.Venezuela recalls envoy to Peru. Accessed 23 May 2006.
  70. ^ Chauvin, L. García win in Peru a loss for Venezuela's Chávez. The Christian Science Monitor (June 6, 2006). Accessed 9 June 2006.
  71. ^ Harman, D. Chávez roils Mexico's presidential race. The Christian Science Monitor (November 17, 2005). Accessed 9 June 2006.
  72. ^ "The Chavez effect". LA Times. Accessed 8 June 2006.
  73. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  74. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  75. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  76. ^ a b c Template:Harvard reference.
  77. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  78. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  79. ^ Naim, Moises. "Venezuela gets a hand from nimble Castro." Financial Times 21 Jan. 2003: 12.
  80. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  81. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  82. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  83. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  84. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  85. ^ Template:Harvard reference.
  86. ^ Byrne, J. (2005), Venezuela — Bolivarian Revolution, Foreign Correspondent. Accessed 25 January 2006.
  87. ^ Palast, G (2005), Venezuela President Hugo Chavez: Interview, BBC Newsnight, Accessed 26 January 2006.
  88. ^ Kozloff, N (2005). Venezuela’s War of Religion, Venezuela Analysis, Accessed 25 January 2006.
  89. ^ Morsbach, G (2006). Venezuela head angry at cardinal, BBC News, Accessed 25 January 2006.
  90. ^ Chávez, H (2005). Untitled Speech delivered at the Latino Pastoral Action Center in Bronx, New York City, Democracy Now! Accessed 21 January, 2006.