I watched Venezuela President Hugo Chávez on TV today, doing his weekly "Alo Presidente!" program, and speaking about this week's "repair process" for invalid signatures by those seeking a recall referendum to cut short his six-year term.
Narco News School of Authentic Journalism professor Martín Sánchez also watched it, and has already published his observations on Venezuelanalysis.com.
Martín and I got the same impression from watching the democratically-elected president do his popular television call-in program: Chávez is ready and at fighting weight to campaign and win yet another crushing electoral victory in that referendum if it happens.
Of course, the squalid oligarchs who can't shoot straight may still screw up their extra extra chance to validate signatures that they claimed publicly were valid, but that their leaders were caught on tape admitting privately they were not valid, back when they filed the petitions filled with forgeries, signatures of dead people, and multiple signatures from the same persons...
Martín Sánchez writes:
During his weekly live TV show, Chavez urged those who had the intention of signing against him, but whose signatures were invalidated, to go and revalidate them. However, he said that if really had control over the courts or over electoral authorities, as his opponents suggest, he would have declared invalid the petitions with irregularities, and not given the opportunity for repair. "The coup plotters who right now are free, would be in jail if I controlled the judicial system," said Chavez...
The President complained that his signature against opposition lawmakers was declared invalid by electoral authorities with no possibility for repair. It is unknown why the leaders signature was tossed out, but we must respect the arbiters decision, said Chavez.
The President highlighted the fact that it was him who made the initial proposal to the elected Constituency Assembly to incorporate recall and law nullity referenda in the new Constitution drafted in 1999. Opposition delegates to the Constituency Assembly actually voted against the referenda proposal at the time....
"I don't know what's going to happen on Thursday, but I have a premonition. If they [the opposition] repair enough signatures, we will welcome it because the knockout they will receive in an eventual referendum would be historical. The best thing for the opposition would be that there was no referendum... I would actually prefer it if the referendum was held," said the President...
This statement of course may come as a surprise to the poorly-informed North American and English-language media news consumer, who has been fed a constant stream of falsehoods claiming that the opposition's own ineptness and electoral frauds are somehow Chávez's fault.
From Juan Forero to John Kerry to, of course, the anti-democracy lobby in the Bush-Reich Latin American politburo, they scream on the one hand that Chávez is some kind of authoritarian while, on the other hand, they complain that he won't issue authoritarian orders violating the Constitution and the laws to impose a referendum whose sponsors harbor sole blame for screwing it up.
As I watched Chávez, again, today on his popular Sunday TV program, again I saw him constantly pick up the little blue book that contains Venezuela's new, most-democratic in América, national Constitution, written and approved by the people in 1999, and savored the irony that, despite all the nasty and dishonest claims against him by those who fail again and again to back up their claims with facts, this is a president and a democratic government that walks its talk: there is no country in the hemisphere today that more scrupulously honors its own Constitution and democracy than Venezuela.
And I think the time is fast coming to start kicking the asses of those who dishonestly accuse otherwise while failing to tell the truth or base their statements on facts.
A referendum in Venezuela? We'll see. That's up to the Constitution and whether those who claim to want it really follow it. But if it happens, well... "Bring It On!"
Forgery tape
Submitted May 26, 2004 - 7:57 am by Jules SiegelIf you could post some references to this, I'll be happy to get the story around among my contacts.