Sunday, August 20, 2006

Manuel Rosales: "I won't sit in anyone's lap"

London 20.08.06 | He may not be a gifted orator but he's certainly saying, and doing, all the right things thus far... Governor of Zulia state Manuel Rosales launched his presidential bid yesterday with a rather surprising show of force that no observer was expecting. His candidacy appears to count on a swelling sentiment of unity of purpose, which is apparently shared by many an enemy in Venezuela's opposition ranks. Presidential wannabes Julio Borges and Teodoro Petkoff forbore their aspirations to work with Rosales. And to top it all off Rosales registered his bid at the end of a week that had started with the news that Chavez's nemesis, union leader Carlos Ortega, just walked from a military prison where he was held unlawfully on trumped up charges.

So what's the significance of this? If I'm allowed some hope it means a great deal for Venezuela and its battered democracy. Once upon a time, nearly 30 years ago, a presidencial race was, against all odds, won by an opposition candidate that according to the polls of the day stood no chance. Unexpectedly this opposition candidate's win came about thanks to the vote of Tachira, Merida, Trujillo and Zulia states. The favourites then were baffled, as Chavez seems to be nowadays. The conditions are quite similar; there was a general disgust towards the irresponsible manner in which the defeated administration had managed the enormous income that had come, quite literally, out of the blue following the nationalization of the oil industry; the press was stifled, one of the last actions of the outgoing president was to present charges against a notorious journalist for allegedly having libeled him... Does that ring a bell?

National Director of Strategy for Rosales, Teodoro Petkoff, gave some startling declarations yesterday. Rightly he pointed out at the many failures of the Chavez administration, stressing that Rosales' campaign will be centered on explaining how to redistribute wealth but more importantly on how to create it, something which Chavez is totally avert to.

Manuel Rosales has an excellent track record in the public administration, not only was he reelected in 2004 as governor amid an abusive and unfair smear campaign deployed by Chavez but Zulia state's electorate, the second in number of voters in Venezuela, is squarely behind him, which in real terms means that he's got already almost 2 million voters in the pocket.

Rosales has said that he will govern for all Venezuelans, not only for those who don red t-shirts to get hand outs, contracts, jobs and so on. In a clear appeal to disenchanted chavistas he stressed that the business of pilfering the country's resources in international adventures that bring no real benefits to the people is to end. Alluding to Chavez's disgusting display of serfdom of holding hands with dictator Castro, Rosales, a real patriot, stated "I won't sit in anyone's lap." Touché...

The fact that he has been since 2000 the governor of the most entrepreneurial state of Venezuela and having Petkoff and others on board means that Rosales has a clear understanding of the necessity of wooing foreign investors and provide the required legal framework whereby the sanctity of contracts will be upheld. Again in stark contrast to the attitudes of the current caudillo.

Hugo Chavez himself admitted recently that his dreams of getting 10 million votes is impossible to achieve. His hollow rethoric has stopped trickling down. The premise that the military is fully supportive of his seudo revolution has irremediably been shatered; case in point Ortega's walk from military prison, the alert raised 14 hours after the act.

There are remarkable similarities between Carlos Andres Perez first presidency and Chavez's 7+ years in power. Petkoff expressed his conviction that Chavez is beatable and indeed Rosales may well reenact the feat of Luis Herrera Campins for all the same reasons and more. Should Venezuelans decide to ignore the abstention drive promoted by officialdom and realize the importance of participating massively in the coming elections there's a great deal of chance to revert the current situation.

Manuel Rosales formally registers to run for President of Venezuela

Today Zulia Governor Manuel Rosales, who in a scant two weeks has become the unified candidate of the opposition, formally registered to run for President at the CNE. He held a rally prior to the registration, which I attended. The rally left from the Ateneo and went to Plaza Caracas in front of the CNE, a distance which I guess is maybe three or four Kms. That Rosales would register today was covered by the press, but there was no massive advertising campaign to ask people to go. I was impressed by the attendance, it rained for half the walk and Plaza Caracas was overflowed by the people and when Rosales' speech ended and he went inside the CNE, there were still people trying to get into the square.

Attendance was quite diverse, not a huge middle class presence, which is good, you know who they are going to vote mostly for. It was clear that the political parties worked at bringing people to the rally. There were buses, but not on the scale of Chavez' last Saturday and clearly people were there because they decided to go. No Government resources at work.

The message was clearly carefully chosen. It is a message of unity, a Government for all Venezuelans and Rosales' speech was clearly directed to Chavistas and those undecided or looking for an alternative to Chavismo. There were posters saying "26 million Venezuelans", "Dare to change" and "Chavista brother, Rosales gives you his hand". Rosales' speech followed that script calling on "all Venezuelans", "a Government for all, without exclusions" and hitting on the Government's incompetence, particularly on poverty, housing and crime.

Clearly Rosales' speech will not mention Chavez directly very much during the upcoming campaign. He certainly avioded any direct references today, but was tough on the President. Rosales said that as President he would care about Venezuelans and "will not hold anyone's hands or sit on anyone's lap" in clear reference to last week's visit by Chavez with Fidel Castro. He also referred to "that guy that said poverty is good is absolutely wrong, we need to erradicate poverty in Venezuela". He critcized the Government's foreign policy, saying that there is no reason for Venezuela to pretend that the US should bow in front of it or to give foreign countries gifts as long as there are so many problems in Venezuela. He took advantage of the rally being in downtown Caracas, which is a dirty mess, to criticize the Government's inaction in this city. He said he felt sorry for Caracas and would, as President, try to make it look as nice and clean as he has made Maracaibo look. In a great phrase carried over the international news, Rosales says: "Nobody here (in Venezuela) will have to wear a red shirt or belong to any party in exchange for anything". Wonder what Hugo will say tomorrow about this?

Above, some pictures of the rally: as we were walking towards the CNE (top left), at Plaza Caracas (top right), some ladies really got enthusiastric waving whatever they had in their hands (Bottom left), a poster saying "we don't want Fidel or Bush" (Bottomo middle and Two ladies with Rosales campaign poster and slogan "Dare to with Rosales...For 26 million". More pictures here.

An interesting beginning and certainly Rosales is getting people more enthused about the election than I had hoped for a month ago. He has also managed to rally around him most political parties in the opposition and seems to have taken the thunder away from the candidacy of comic Conde del Guacharo. A unified candidacy in which he has also named his former competitors to important campaign positions, but he is clearly the leader in how things will proceed. Very exciting.

Written by Miguel Octavio from The Devil's Excrement

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Manuel Rosales: Master lines on his program of government

With the promise to pay a minimum wage monthly stipend to all unemployed Venezuelans until the state is able to provide jobs for everyone, and to supply the “impoverished middle class” with direct subsidies, Zulia state governor Manuel Rosales announced on Wednesday that he will assume the responsibility to run for the presidency as the unity candidate representing the oppositionist movement after Julio Borges and all other pre-candidates declined in his favor

On his speech, he described a preliminary version of what would become his government program should he be elected president of Venezuela on December 3rd.

One of the main promises was the payment of a minimum wage monthly stipend to all unemployed Venezuelans; he also announced the creation of a financial mechanism that would provide an additional source of income to the middle and lower class segments.

He explained that this measure would guarantee that every Venezuelan family would receive between Bs. 600,000 and Bs. 1,000,000 per month depending on the price of oil. “With this measure we aim to add a social dimension to our proposal, by distributing the oil wealth this way, we will enable Venezuelans to leverage their own development”

Regarding the social programs set in motion by the current government, Rosales reiterated that they won’t be eliminated but improved so they become “truly efficient”. He also issued his opinion on the reforms the president wishes to implement on education: “The current model is obsolete and cannot be saved”. The governor guaranteed that all high school graduates will be accepted by both private and public universities.

About the housing deficit, he declared his inconformity with the bureaucratic procedures currently in place; he characterized them as “parapetos that make families move from one place to another in the search of decent living conditions. We will exchange cardboard barracks for decent houses”. He also announced the creation of a mechanism that will allow families to directly contract the services of the people and firms they wish to put in charge of the construction of their houses. He also informed that he will negotiate with the private sector to build massive housing developments.

The private property will be respected

Manuel Rosales reiterated that private property is fundamental in the development of a country. “I promise to pay for whatever structures have been built in any land with no known owners; we will then proceed to distribute it among the peasants”.

“Every family must have its own property. We will give them residence permits, because the private property must be respected”.

Economy based on alliances

At the economic front, he proposed to create alliances between the middle class, working class and private firms, to participate in joint ventures where their investments are guaranteed.

Public safety

Regarding public safety, the Zulia state governor emphasized that the only way to defeat crime is through the autonomous and synergic integration of all the branches of government. “We will integrate all the branches of government; we will not allow crime and the Colombian guerrilla and paramilitary groups to continue their reign of terror.”

On the military subject he promised to restitute the members of the Armed Forces to their rightful place: “we will restitute them to the place they have always had, we won’t disrespect them as the current government does”.

Regarding our foreign policy, Rosales indicated that his policy will be to integrate Venezuela and not to “break diplomatic ties with other countries as Chávez does”.

At the same time, the candidate criticized the arms race developed by Chávez as he stated that he will turn tanks into hospitals and he will provide our youth with schools and universities instead of machine guns.

At the end of his speech, Manuel Rosales reiterated that he will take his candidacy “until the end”. “We will be here on December 3rd, we won’t go anywhere”, however he did not clarify whether he will withdraw his candidacy if minimum electoral conditions aren’t given.

Julio Borges read the prologue at the act where he launched his candidacy; all the other pre-candidates were in also attendance and Manuel Rosales thanked them for their effort, hard work and support.

None of the attendees issued any statements because there will be a press conference next Thursday where the candidate will answer some questions.

The governor of Zulia released an official statement indicating that he will register his candidacy before the electoral board authorities next Friday.

Zulia state governor

Manuel Rosales, one of only two oppositionist governors among the 24 federated states, will have to temporarily steo down from his post as state governor of Zulia during the presidential campaign.

A 52-year-old ex-school teacher, Rosales was favored by a decision made by the board of elections last Tuesday that allows him to compete without resigning to his post, within the next few days he will have to decide who will assume the interim governorship in his absence.

It was known out-of-the-record that Nelson Carrasquero, his secretary of government for 6 years may succeed Rosales.

Pablo Pérez, ex candidate to mayor of the city of Maracaibo for the Un Nuevo Tiempo party is also mentioned as a possible substitute. A decision will need to be made before Rosales registers his candidacy before the electoral board authorities.

Source: El Carabobeño

Friday, August 11, 2006

Manuel Rosales becomes the unity candidate

Well, what seemed so tough to attain, a unity candidacy, was achieved last night when Julio Borges agreed to withdraw his candidacy in favor of that of Zulia Governor Manel Rosales. Clearly, Petkoff's withdrawal last week helped quiet a bit, but what was really important was the fact that with Petkoff and Borges openly campaigning, Rosales' somewhat stealth candidacy propelled him to the top of the opposition preferences rather quickly. Reportedly, all of the other candidates who had registered for the primary, but barely appeared in the perefences have accepted to withdraw, leaving Rosales, Smith and Er Conde as the alternatives to Chavez.

While I am sorry that there was no primary, I really think we should start having democracy from below in Venezuela, I am quite pleased with the outcome a unity candidate led by Rosales. My initial preference for Teodoro Petkoff was quickly tempered by his terrible campaigning skills and his refusal to participate in the primary, despite initially indicating that he would participate. Since I have never been impressed by Borges or Smith, then Rosales was my preference and I hope his standing in the polls forces Er Conde to withdraw quickly.

As for Rosales, he may not have the economic knowledge of a Petkoff, but he is first of all a democrat. He has shown that he is a good campaigner and can appeal to the population at large. He woudl also try to be a President for all Venezuelans in contrast to the autocrat. He has been an efficient and effective Governor and continues to enjoy the support of the people in his state. That in itself tells you quite a bit. He has proven he can administer, has better economic know how than the top few dozen people in the Chavez Government (not too hard!) and while he has the old style campaign style, this is not a matter of style, but substance. I think he should have been more decisive about running and not worry so much about the Government forcing him to step down. In fact, they still might try it, so in the end there is little difference.

So, let's see how the Government reacts and how they attempt to disqualify Rosales.The CNE is still a problem, but as we say in Spanish "la pelea es peleando", something like "you have to fight your fights".

Manuel Rosales is the unity candidate: the campaign starts!

No real surprise there as to the name, though a slight surprise at the opposition finally managing to put its act together. I am rather happy to say that this blog had long ago stated that the strength of the Rosales support was underestimated by the Caracas folks that think they control politics in Venezuela. I mean of course “La Republica del Este” for its Eastern heavily anti Chavez suburbs. But eventually reality imposed itself: you could not just dismiss the governor of Venezuela’s biggest state, and THE one that resisted the chavista onslaught in 2004. His stature had not stopped increasing among Venezuelan outside of Caracas, and became nearly unstoppable after December 2005 when he is the one that managed best the “abstention” crisis of that December when he was widely expected to carry almost all of the Zulia seats against all initial odds.

Even the long term valiant effort of Borges to try to reach out of the central region was not enough. He did indeed made sure that PJ became a “national party” but it is still a party with some strength in only about half a dozen states. Rosales without a formal party already was leading in the Western half of the country. Teodoro Petkoff sort of suspected that when he went early to talk to Rosales before he even launched his own presidential bid. But Teodoro could not finish; though he was smart enough to sense where the wind was coming from and withdrew first, launching the inevitable love fest of sorts when all the other candidates withdrew, where Sumate cancelled the primaries, where Manuel Rosales was proclaimed and made his first official (and decent if populist) campaign speech. The unity picture on the right, with Borges, Rosales and Petkoff.

Chavismo was at the same time surprised but ready. Surprised because it was rather obvious that they did not expect that the opposition would unite, because they were probably really counting on a division. Indeed what better argument for Chavez as he cheats his way back to office to say that “but there were several candidates, did you not see them?”. But chavismo was ready anyway. Already tonight at 7 PM the VTV show “Dando y Dando” was nothing but a vicious attack on Rosales, at tax payer expense. Not even the “moderator” pretended any form of objectivity. We also got a “cadena” at 8 PM where for a good ten minutes we got a travelogue of Chavez last trip in that it was just an assemblage of happy pictures of loving African babies and hugs with all the leaders he visited during 2 weeks. This completed with at least 6 "major achievements of the revolution" in Venezuela. My first advice to the Rosales team is to record VTV 24/7 and all cadenas and do continuous reports of all the violations of the electoral code that Chavez is already doing. Start counting also the very few minutes that the state media will grant to Rosales as opposed to the hours and hours that Chavez will literally steal through cadenas and legal and forced governmental advertisements. You will need to document all of that to the international observers when in October the situation becomes unbearable and you might want to start street protests and withdrawal threats. Trust me on that one, chavismo is barely starting its abuses.

I really have not that much to say about Rosales. He is the typical provincial politician that made good. That is, he started on the lowest echelons of AD in the then remote “Sur del Lago” area, the humid and swampy southern side of Zulia. But he climbed steadily until he reached the Maracaibo mayor office, the second one in the country. When the chavismo tidewave came he was smart enough to leave AD and form his own political party, UNT, Un Nuevo Tiempo (a new time). He must have been a rather successful mayor as he was easily elected governor of Zulia when Chavez old buddy Arias Cardenas preferred to run for president and lost. Still, this unassuming provincial politician was not given much credit even if his 2000 victory was stronger than anyone had expected at the height of Chavez REAL popularity. In fact, the conjunction of Arias and Rosales was enough for Chavez to lose Zulia when he was taking every other state. At the time one would have thought that it was the Arias factor but now it seems that the star of Rosales was already rising.

Rosales went on to become a constructive opposition leader. At first he tried to build bridges with Caracas which, if anything, reflects well on his desire to fulfill his pledge to Zulia voters before promoting his own personal ambition. Some people even considered the UNT as a junior party of the Chavez majority. But by 2002 he was in the leading edge of the opposition, being awkwardly filmed, rather embarrassed, signing the infamous Carmona decree (I personally remember as I watched TV that April 12 whether he was going to sign so awkward was his demeanor). Since then Chavez has marked him. But it did not help because in spite of the biggest attack machine that Chavez designed he could not unseat Rosales in 2004.

Because this is a fact: for all its threats against the Carmona decree signatories, the legality is on such shaky grounds that we are still waiting for the massive trial promised. The reason is simple, if such trial is ever held chavismo will also have to take a stand in the trial and chavismo has as much to fear from a close investigation of April 2002 than the opposition. How else can we explain that 4 years have passed and nothing has been done except a few indictments and citations? Rosales being recently one of the targets by the way: we will see if the sold out judiciary dares to jail him during the campaign.

I would not dismiss Rosales easily if I were chavismo (I do not think they do considering what I already saw today, Carmona decree pictures included)). He might be an old fashioned populist politician but he holds several big cards from the start.

1) His reelection in Zulia shows that he has achieved something there, that people like him, that he reached them. No matter what dirt Chavez tries to throw at him (VTV is ripe of cheap adds about dissatisfied Zulianos), Rosales has at least as much to show for than Chavez in Venezuela, all proportions guarded.

2) Rosales cannot be tied to Caracas old politics. Rosales has never held a Caracas office. All his career is in Zulia state and all the huge rallies he has called were in Zulia, not in Caracas. In addition he bailed out of AD early enough and has been careful to surrender himself with local pols (then again he might be provincial enough to be wary of anyone not from Zulia). These days Chavez looks everyday more like just another Caracas distant pol for us in the provinces.

3) He has a rather plain speaking tone. A nice respite from the Chavez exhausting speech. After 8 years of permanent confrontation a candidate that promises good management, to bring back the bucks sent away, in a more measured tone, might have a surprising effect.

4) His face his poke marked, he is short, he looks almost as mestizo as Chavez and certainly not white, not Caracas type at all. Think province lawyer. Playing race and elite with him will not go far. Frijolito 3 will not work well with Rosales.

But Rosales has some big problems too. He will need to find fast the right confrontational tone with the CNE. He will need to solidify the opposition unity as an electoral alliance with a minimal but concrete government plan. He will need to steady himself against the Chavez formidable vulgarity onslaught. He will need to watch out for betrayal maneuvers from people such as AD or some hard right folks that might be the ones behind some other disturbing candidacies. He will need to find money. He will have barely three months to set up a support group to make sure that elections are not stolen from him. As I had written months ago: Rosales should have been a unity candidate late May, at the latest. Two full months have been wasted in intrigues.

Thus is Rosales, an accidental candidate, the one that nobody expected, the one that probably never thought he would even leave the “Sur del Lago”. Yet today he carries on his shoulders all the weight to save Venezuelan democracy. I have seen him once. A couple of years ago I was at the Eurobuilding of Caracas on a business diner. This was in the sad post recall election days. Rosales was then trying to organize the regional campaign for the elections which saw the loss of all but 2 states to Chavez. Rosales was with a small group of 2-3 people, standing up at the bar area but not drinking, waiting for someone. Nobody was stopping to say hi. Nobody was staring. He had a certain “had been look” as all the opposition leaders had these days. The conversation was serious, no one was smiling. As a blogger I was tempted to go and introduce myself but I was on business and I could not drop my party. I had a rather favorable impression of the guy: non assuming, quiet, serious, slightly undaunted to be in such a public place without any escort, not even an obvious assistant, taking himself his cell phone calls (he was the governor of the main Venezuelan state, an assistant would have been expected!). Today the sycophantic tide is turning his way. I hope, I even think that his provincial nature will protect him from them. All that he has he owes it apparently to himself alone: he owes nothing politically. He seems of the no nonsense type. He might be the man after all. We will see.

Congratulations Manuel Rosales, now let’s get to work: here are some pointers!

Manuel Rosales is not new to politics and this much is abundantly evident after taking a quick look at his résumé, he has single-handedly managed to climb up the political ladder from the relative obscurity of the lower ranks in the historical Acción Democrática party, to a serious bid for the presidency representing a broad sector of the oppositionist political spectrum that has unanimously acclaimed him as our best chance to unseat Hugo Chávez.

I must admit that he wasn’t my first choice, but we must not lose sight of the fact that this presidential election is first and foremost a popularity contest and to a lesser extent, a debate of ideas and a clash of ideologies. Manuel Rosales is not Rómulo Betancourt but we could do far worse.

Alas, I have reluctantly accepted the fact that Teodoro Petkoff is simply an unacceptable choice for vast sectors of our society. I guess you could say that he is a casualty of democracy, but fortunately it appears that he can do Manuel Rosales a lot of good as he resumes his role as editor of Tal Cual, just take a look at what he wrote today!

I believe there are a few issues that Manuel Rosales should talk about and on his quest to gain the favor of the undecided/confused and light-chavismo, exposing this regime as the enormous fraud it is in a way that relates to the poor and resentful vast majority is key if we want anything accomplished:

a) Housing deficit: Hugo Chávez promised the completion of 150,000 housing units by the end of this year, the most optimistic projections indicate that we would be lucky to build half as many. He also admitted that his administration has built about 110,000 housing units in 7 years when the average 4th republican government built around 500,000 units every 5 years.

Always living up to his reputation as a violent brute, he repeatedly encourages his beloved lumpen to invade and take over private property; this creates a vicious cycle: a regime that attempts to ameliorate the crisis through invasions that scare away any serious private investors resulting in less houses being built which adds to an ever-increasing housing deficit.

b) Infrastructure development: Hugo Chávez being the great communicator he undeniably is, has launched a goebbelian propagandistic campaign to highlight the massively delayed completion of some iconic 4th republican projects (a 4-station subway line, a 42-Km train line and a 2-Km trocha). What he won’t tell you is that Marcos Pérez Jiménez built 5,500Kms of highways and the despised 4th republican governments left us an impressive roadway network of 95,510Kms.

c) Crime: Numbers speak for themselves, about 4,500 Venezuelans were murdered in 1998, this number climbed to almost 13,000 in 2004 and we should be at around 16,000 this year. We are officially the most dangerous country in the continent! How we could beat Colombia with its guerrilla, drug-related violence and paramilitary groups is simply unconceivable!

d) Disproportionate expenses in foreign aid: This regime has given away US$16,452,828,275.00 according to Hugo Chávez himself (who knows what the real sum really is); this is Bs. 35,373,580,791,250.00 that’s half our external debt folks!

e) Major corruption scandals remain unsolved: Click here for comprehensive coverage on the latest corruption scandals that have shaken the public opinion within the past few months: Central agro-industrial azucarero Ezequiel Zamora (CAAEZ), Fondo nacional para el desarrollo pesquero, forestal y afines (FONDAFA); Judicial city Lebrún; Antonio José de Sucre highway and the Orinoco river bridge among others.

f) Declining economic indexes: Take a look at the steep hike on the inflation rate for 2006, the external and internal debt figures have increased 30% and a whooping 1,500% (all this with a 70$+ oil barrel) and the unemployment figures are completely unreliable because they exclude those benefiting from subsidies issued within the framework of a handful of social programs.

g) Industry collapse and obliteration of PDVSA (state oil company): Click here for a complete independent analysis on the dismal performance exhibited by the former #2 energy corporation in the world. Take a look at some stats taken from the OPEC website regarding our diminished oil production capacity.

I must say I am very optimistic about this recent turn of events. Manuel Rosales seems to be saying the right things and targeting the right audience. He is an able politician and seems to have merged some proposals put forth by Teodoro Petkoff and Julio Borges into his own program.

If the conditions for clean elections are given, he can count on my vote!