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Revolutionary Communist Quarterly
2004: Volume 2: Issue 4
Simon Bolivar
Chavez makes an overt
homage to the nationalist Simon Bolivar
(1783-1830), by naming his revolutionary movement after Bolivar:
”Just
two days before George Bush's second electoral victory,
someone Bush and his administration apparently cannot stand, Venezuela's
President
Hugo Chávez, celebrated his ninth consecutive electoral victory
in six
years.
The vote was for state governors and city
mayors
and Chavez's allies swept the vote, winning 20 out of the 22 contested
state
capitals and 270 of the 337 city halls. Altogether,
pro-Chavez
factions won the same percentage of the vote, about 60%…
in these elections as
Chavez himself
did two and a half months earlier, when he defeated a recall
referendum. … Chavez's ninth electoral
victory (including
various referenda on the new constitution) has once again confirmed
that he
does indeed have a mandate to remake Venezuelan society, to continue
his
"Bolivarian Revolution"—which is named after South American
independence hero Simon Bolivar. “
Gregory
Wilpert -
Venezuelanalysis.com: “Venezuela's "Bolivarian Revolution" Continues,
Despite U.S. Resistance”; Jan 01, 2005
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1344
Who then was Bolivar?
Marxist-Leninists
follow the view of Bolivar, written by Marx
for the “American Encyclopedia” [See this at
http://www.allianceml.com/MARX_ENGELS_TXT/MarxBolivar.htm
or http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1858/01/bolivar.htm].
Marx is quite skeptical
of the real virtues of Bolivar.
Up to
a certain point, even the enthusiastic pro-Bolivarian histories would
agree
with Marx [See for example, Miguel Centellas, Editor of the
Bibliotheca
in Bolivar
“El Liberatador” at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/7609/eng/bio.html].
However, while the
Bolivarians exaggerate the
republicanism, heroism and steadfastness of Bolivar, Marx points to
Bolivar’s
irresolution and tendency to don dictatorial powers. While Marx did not
explicitly write about Bolivar’s philosophy of state,
his
biographical notes sound warning
bells that peal alarmingly when Bolivar’s
‘ideal’ state governance is
examined. We
simply here will summarize some un-contested biographical details.
The
bones of Bolivar’s story are not in
doubt.
He was by birth an
aristocratic criollo, who was
influenced by the ideals of the liberal Enlightenment. When in 1808
Napoleon
invaded Spain to install his brother Joseph, as the King of Spain, the
Peninsular War erupted. Both Spain and its colonies in South America –
“new Spain – rebelled.
“The Caracas junta
declared independence from Spain and
Bolívar was sent to England along with Andrés Bello and
Luis López
Mendez on
a
diplomatic mission... Bolívar returned to Venezuela on June 3,
1811,
and
delivered his discourse in favor of independence to the Patriotic
Society.”
[See
Miguel Centellas, Editor of the Bibliotheca in Bolivar “El
Liberatador”;
at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/7609/eng/bio.html].
In
the year 1812, initial battles were successful; however, Bolívar
was
soon
forced to flee to Cartagena, part of New Granada (known now as
Colombia).
There, Bolívar wrote the “Cartagena
Manifesto”,
arguing for a united front against Spain of New Granada and Venezuela.
He
succeeded in
convincing the leaders of New Granada, and in 1813 he invaded
Venezuela, entering Merida eon May 23. He adopted the title
"Libertador".
Bolívar captured Caracas on August 6 and two days later
proclaimed the second Venezuelan republic. But once more,
Bolívar had
to flee,
this time to Jamaica and Haiti.
In
1817, this time with Haitian help, Bolívar returned, and won the
Battle
of
Boyaca of August 7, 1819. That year, Bolívar created the Angostura
Congress
which founded Gran Colombia (a federation of present-day
Venezuela,
Colombia, Panama, and Ecuador). Bolívar adopted the
title of president.
Antonio
José de Sucre
destroyed the Spanish forces at the Battle of Pichincha on May 23,
1822,
thereby liberating the whole of northern
South America. But until Spain was
dislodged from Peru, a continued threat to independence would be
present. On
July 26, 1822, Bolívar
met with José de San
Martín at
Guayaquil, but
could not come to agreement on joining forces against Peruvian
colonists.
San Martín returned to Argentina.
SUCRE
SAN MARTIN
Aided
by England, in 1823 Bolívar led an invasion of Peru. On August
6, 1824,
Bolívar
and Sucre jointly defeated the Spanish army in the
Battle of Junín.
On
December 9 Sucre destroyed the last remnant of the Spanish army in the Battle
of Ayacucho. Spain was now ejected
from South America.
On
August 6, 1825, Sucre called the Congress of Upper Peru which created
the
Republic of Bolivia in honor of Bolívar. The Bolivian
Constitution
of 1826,
while never enacted, was written by Bolívar. Also in 1826,
Bolívar
called the Congress
of Panama, the first hemispheric conference.
But
by 1827, due to personal rivalries among the generals of the
revolution, civil
wars exploded which destroyed the South American unity for
which Bolívar had
fought. Surrounded by factional fighting and suffering from
tuberculosis, Simón
Bolívar died on December 17, 1830.
There
is little doubt that the British and the USA and German governments of
the mite
had supported both the Bolivar and San Martin forces.
This comes across clearly
from the incisive history of Bolivar written by Marx (Ibid). All these
governments had a natural interest in the removal
of Spanish rule, in order to
effect their own.
In the years following
the death of Bolivar, the
Venezuelan state became a neo-colony of the British and American
states.
Bolivar is said to be a
Republican, and as opposed to his
being an aristocrat, this is true.
It is said that he derived his views
from
the Enlightenment Ideals of “civil liberties”:
“Simón
Bolívar was a
declared
republican. … Bolívar established his vision for republican
government
which
blended the Enlightenment
ideals of civil liberties with the
Greco-Roman vision
of civic virtue and restraints on the popular will. Bolívar
rejected
monarchic
or
empirical government as both unsuited for Spanish America and
inconsistent
with the principles of liberty and equality. …”
[The Bolivarian
Republic’; Miguel
Centellas; 1995;
at:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/7609/eng/repbol.html].
We will argue that his
allegiance to
the Enlightenment was nominal, since he heavily stressed
the
role of a
central government derived “order”:
“Simón
Bolívar asserted
as early as
1812 in his Cartagena Manifesto that the revolutionary
government's
primary role was to restore
order "without regards for laws or
constitutions until happiness and peace have been destroyed".
[The Bolivarian
Republic’; Miguel
Centellas; Ibid].
Moreover, this order
was largely created by a hereditary
series of bodies, with very limited votes. It is true that as sops to
the
people, a limited
measure of voting rights was allowed. But his well
worked out
system of government proposed that the model state would incorporate
these
following essential principles:
1.
Order
as a most important necessity.
2.
Tricameral
legislature with varied and broad powers composed of
a.
A
hereditary and professional Senate.
b.
A body
of Censors composing the state's "moral authority".
c.
A
popularly elected legislative assembly.
3.
A
life-term executive supported by a strong, active cabinet or ministers.
4.
A
judicial system stripped of legislative powers.
5.
A
representative electoral system.
6.
Military
autonomy. ‘
[The Bolivarian
Republic’; Miguel
Centellas; 1995; this and all below citations are
from:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/7609/eng/repbol.html
It can be seen that
this skeleton of Bolivar’s view, forms
essentially a Benign Dictator
with strong autonomous military
rule. A
despotic regime
underlies the plan, even though he disavowed any such
tendency:
“A strong government
would not be
despotic, but rather would allow the state "to use force in order to
liberate peoples who are
ignorant of the value of their rights" (Cartagena
Manifesto).”
Bolivar’s
accent upon”order”, and of a hereditary portion of the Tri-cameral
governing
body; and of an autonomous army and lastly of a life-long
all indicate
that his
vision was indeed despotic. He stressed “Strong government and order”
to
prevent ‘anarchy’:
"The most perfect
system of government is that which
results in the greatest possible measure of happiness and the maximum
social
security and political stability ... we must hope that security and
stability
will perpetuate this happiness" (Angostura Discourse).
Strong,
central government prevents the anarchy that would destroy true
freedom. The
state, Bolivarism argues "molds the character
of a nation and can set
it
upon the path to greatness, property, and power" (Essay on Education).”
Bolivar
stressed a tricameral legislature to offset any tendency in a bicameral
parliament to a stalemate. Only a part was subject to the will of the
people in
a free vote – the Tribune. The
tricameral
government followed Montesquieu and was to consist of:
(i)
“a Senate to "enact the
codes of
law and the ecclesiastical regulations and supervise the courts and
public
worship ... appoint the
prefects, district judges, governors,
corregidores, and
all the lesser officials of the department of justice"; Following
Montesquieu,
Bolívar asserted that the "representative assembly should
exercise no active function. It should only make laws and determine
whether
or
not those laws are enforced" (Angostura Discourse).
Bolívar
envisioned this as a "neutral force" in the state. But its
inspiration was Roman, British and Plato's Republic; being an
hereditary,
not an elective, body.
Bolívar's
Senate would be “a moderating force
between the
people and the government to prevent either from usurping too much power”
(Angostura Discourse).
If as
envisaged, the Senate was to form a:
“Future Senators are to
be educated
in "a colegio designed especially to train these guardians and
future legislators of the nation ...
From childhood they should
understand the
career for which they have been destined by Providence"
(Angostura
Discourse). “
(ii)
A
body of Censors would "exercise a political and moral power ... [as]
persecuting attorneys against the government in defense
of the
Constitution and
popular rights ... [and] the power of national judgment, which is to
decide
whether or not the administration
of the executive is satisfactory".
(Message
to the Congress of Bolivia).
Bolívar,
in his Message to the Congress of
Bolivia, described them as:
Bolívar
proposed this as the main legislative body, referred to as the
"government".
This
was a voted body, but without ‘complete sovereignty’:
“In his Message to
the Grand
Convention of Ocaña, Bolívar insisted that the
legislative branch
"should have only limited sovereignty",
clearly distinguishing that
its role, while central, must not be that of complete sovereignty over
the
state.”
Undoubtedly
Bolivar saw the need to placate the people with some measure of
democracy.
But
this was to be severely limited, in essence to the Tribunes (one of the
tricameral bodies), and local government:
“While limiting the
positions
available to direct popular election, Bolívar recognized that
there is
"Nothing more important to a citizen than the right to elect his
legislators, governors, judges, and pastors" (Message to the
Congress
of Bolivia). The central republican state -- with the exception of
the
Tribunes -- is not popularly elected, but local government is left to
the hands
of the citizens. For the republic, Bolívar proposed a
representative
electoral
system where "[every ten citizens will elect one elector" (Message
to the Congress of Bolivia). The electors are the citizens that
will
actually vote in republican elections. An elector is not required to
own
property, but he must "be able to write out his ballot, sign his name,
and
read the laws" (Message to the Congress of Bolivia). In the Angostura
Discourse, the Libertador also divided citizenship into the
classifications
of "active" and "passive" citizenship. Only active citizens
participate as electors in the republic and act as a "check on popular
license" (Angostura Discourse) to prevent the masses from
inadvertently acting against their own interests.
To cap
the governmental edifice, stood the President who would be allowed to
appoint
his own successor.
For some reason this office was considered not ‘hereditary’:
“Bolívar headed
his
model republic
with a restricted, life-term President who appoints his own successor
"but
his office will never
be hereditary" (Jamaica Letter). …..
The government functions without the personal direction of the
President; the
Bolivarist republic,
once set into motion, continues on with its own
momentum.
The personal demands on the President are not great, he is there to act
as a
symbol or hero for the republic and cannot constitutionally become a
tyrant,
nor can he hinder the republic with ineffective
leadership. "Should the
president be a man of no great talent or virtue ... he will be able to
discharge his duties satisfactorily ...
the ministry, managing
everything by
itself, will carry the burdens of the state" (Angostura Discourse).
Even
the courts were only "the arbiters of private affairs" (Message to
the Congress of Bolivia), without:
Finally
the accent on the position of the military is clearly designed for
military
supremacy:
“The last foundation of
the
Bolivarist republic is an autonomous military. In his 1828 Message
to the
Grand Convention of Ocaña,
Bolívar declared that the army "was the
glory of freedom ... its obedience to the law, to the chief of state,
and to
its general were
worthy of the heroic age of republican virtues" …"The
liberators ... are entitled to occupy forever a high rank in the
Republic that
they have brought into existence" (Angostura Discourse). “
Centas, Ibid.
Conclusions:
All this is quite
consistent with a view of government that
follows a paternalistic, military based despotism. It is not one that
socialists would follow.
Those advocating that the Chavez's “Bolivarian
Revolution” is socialist, do not discuss the historical figure in whom
Chavez
places such respect.