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el_chavista
29th March 2013, 18:39
Chávez's Leninism
by Chris Gilbert

In the many homages to Hugo Chávez in recent weeks, there is an important element that suffers almost complete neglect. For want of a better term we could call it "Leninism." By this, of course, I do not mean the tired, formulaic (and basically anti-Leninist) doctrine that generally bears that name. It is precisely the hegemony of that surrogate doctrine, in addition to the intractability of the real one, that drives the neglect and is also behind the mostly conscious attempts to separate Chávez from what passes for Leninism.

Think of it: "The revolution against Capital" (http://www.marxists.org/archive/gramsci/1917/12/revolution-against-capital.htm)! That is how Gramsci understood Lenin's work; this was Gramsci's shorthand way of indicating how Lenin and company threw off the evolutionist, progressive consensus of their moment which included the Second International (hence the reference to Capital) and the bourgeois intelligentsia.1 This was the "end of history" doctrine of the epoch. Fast-forwarding a century, perhaps we can say that the single most important thing that Chávez and the Venezuelan people did from the 1990s onward was to throw off -- in a revolutionary, Leninist way, if you will -- the "end of history" consensus of our moment, which had infected both left and right.

The parallels with Fidel Castro and the 26 de Julio movement are also evident. By the mid to late 1950s most of the revolutionary fires seemed to be extinguished in the Caribbean region. With Jacobo Árbenz (http://www.gwu.edu/%7Ensarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB4/index.html) taken down and the liberal guerrilla in Colombia generally brought to bay, U.S. functionaries felt confident they had control over the area, their "backyard"; this situation was complemented by a great deal of confusion and defeatism in the ranks of the left. Then, seeming to come out of nowhere, the rapid advance of the 26 de Julio movement, which culminated in the toppling of Batista and the taking of La Habana in 1959, gave the lie to imperialism's confidence; yet it also gave the lie to the Soviet version of the end of history, the tendency toward pacific coexistence with the U.S.

Defying not only Fukuyama but also Zapatista teachings in the air at the time, Chávez -- like Lenin and Fidel -- led a movement that took state power, and like them he was saddled with a million problems for doing so. Georg Lukács, in the best homage to Lenin that I know of, refers to his commentary on Napoleon's saying "On s'engage et puis. . . on voit"; the Bolsheviks engaged in serious battle in October 1917, and then compromised on "such details as the Brest Peace, the New Economic Policy."2 With this reference, Lukács means to identify and characterize the hundreds of pacts, compromises, and concessions that Lenin was forced to make because of the Bolsheviks' taking of power: that is, precisely because of their doing the revolution in what can never be perfect circumstances. He differentiates this kind of pact from opportunistic ones that are made with the aim -- though purportedly in the name of purity or what have you -- of not doing the revolution.

Both before and after taking power, Hugo Chávez made many, many pacts and accords with figures such as Lukashenko, Ahmadinejad, Santos, Miquilena, and (it is commonly believed) even Gustavo Cisneros. The list goes on and includes the most varied powers and people. Since those included range from anti-imperialists such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to the neoliberal businessman Gustavo Cisneros and the tractable social democrat Luis Miquilena, the inevitable question arises over tactics and strategy. What is the strategic line that runs through this most varied gamut of alliances? A similar question can be asked about the many projects that were born and disappeared like night flowers: the Five Motors (https://www.google.com/search?q=cinco+motores+de+la+revoluci%C3%B3n+boliv ariana), the Three Rs (https://www.google.com/search?q=las+tres+r+de+la+revoluci%C3%B3n+bolivari ana), Battalions (https://www.google.com/search?q=batallones+del+PSUV) (of the PSUV), Aló Presidente Teórico (https://www.google.com/search?q=Al%C3%B3+Presidente+Te%C3%B3rico) . . . the list goes on.

Much of this appears to be mere fishtailing, and there can be no doubt that in his surprising trajectory Chávez made serious errors -- errors which could turn out one day to be fatal to the process in Venezuela, since unfortunately no revolutionary process is irreversible. Perhaps the best explanation of this complex trajectory appears when we look at Chávez's process of political formation. As a young military officer, Chávez had links to the Revolutionary Party of Venezuela (PRV by its Spanish acronym, in which his brother was a militant) and other left movements. In prison after 1992, but even before it, Chávez read his way through many Marxist texts, including the most difficult ones. Some of these books came from a collection he bought from a former schoolteacher of his, a communist.

Then, on leaving prison, Chávez entered political life and to a certain extent put his Marxism behind him. To use a spatial metaphor we can say he began scouting the territory for himself or even groping his way around in the dark. We should not forget that in 1998 he was still talking about the Third Way of Anthony Giddens, the now forgotten intellectual fad of the moment! What is most important is that, as the years went by and in response to blows from imperialism and some of his own defeats, Chávez found himself reconnecting with Marxism via his practice and via the activities of the mass movement.
One such moment is when, faced with the plurality of movements in the World Social Forum of 2005 in Porto Alegre, Chávez thought of what could possibly unify all of them in their diversity and declared it to be "socialism." Another is when, after trying to construct socialism from above with the constitutional reform of 2007, he took a step back and began to think about constructing it on the street level, working with the communes, thereby recovering the Marxist idea of the auto-emancipation of the working class.

Coming back to Lenin, we can observe that he also took steps back and had his moment of putting Marxism (or rather "Marxism") behind him. Slavoj Zizek's Repeating Lenin very excellently depicts the crisis Lenin entered into just before and during the First World War: a catastrophe that effectively included the disappearance of his movement.3 Lenin then re-encountered or reread Marxism though studying Hegel and through the revolutionary process that opened up in Russia in February 1917, which caught him by surprise. This new Lenin was Lenin at his most agile, most "dialectic"; now come events like those of the Finland Station as well as texts like The State and Revolution (http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/) and the April Theses (http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/apr/04.htm) that continue to astound.

C.L.R. James, when in midlife and confronting the postwar taming of the left in his time, tried to unlock the secret of this Lenin, the most authentic Lenin. With the help of Raya Dunayevskaya, James went directly to the Russian text of Lenin's Philosophical Notebooks. There he was deeply struck by Lenin's marginal note to Hegel's Doctrine of Being: "LEAP, LEAP, LEAP!" Lenin penned in a large script alongside Hegel's paragraphs, in an attempt to summarize how the new comes into existence.4 It is this capacity to leap, to overcome the existing order of things -- call it the neoliberal consensus, the end of history, economicism, or even pacific coexistence -- that is the most important legacy of Lenin and the one that best characterizes Hugo Chávez.
Marxism, like any theory, is susceptible to the processes of fetishism that within capitalism tend to lead to a closed-off view of history. Its mainstream is apt to pact silently with the fatalism that informs intellectual production beneath capitalism. This can be seen in how perhaps the most brilliant Marxist theorist of the second half of the 20th century, Louis Althusser, tended to allow his discoveries regarding structures and combination in capitalism to slide into accepting the inescapability of those very structures. "Leninism," then, would be the name for that moment of rupture with capital, and with its theories, and even with the theories critical of capitalism to the degree that they make peace with fatalism.

This is the Leninism of Chávez. It is a firm no to all fatalism, and a commitment to struggle and even muddle one's way through what appear to be endgame scenarios, with the aim of advancing toward a more just and better society. Marxism, of course, is not a Utopian doctrine in the sense that it does not propose that there is some perfect society and then speculate (impossibly) about how to get there. But it is Utopian in the sense that it teaches that a radically different modernity is not only possible but to some degree latent in the development of the current, capitalist one. Not only that: Marxism says that human beings are not creatures of the hive, but can work towards that alternative modernity's realization.

In his impressive Golpe de timón speech (http://www.aporrea.org/media/2012/12/golpe-de-timon.pdf) of five months ago, which constitutes Chávez's last serious political testament, he recognizes that, the political revolution having been done, the economic changes relevant to the construction of socialism are still unrealized. Then he adds, "I am not saying this so that we feel overwhelmed or daunted; on the contrary, to gather new forces before the complexity of the challenge." I think that in these words -- and really throughout the entire remarkable discourse -- one perceives an attitude very akin to Lenin's dogged resistance to reconcile with "what there is." We could say that this resistance, combined with a perennial disposition to struggle inventively, is the best legacy of Lenin and of Leninists like Chávez -- if it were not also a kind of anti-legacy insofar as it refuses to let one live cozily or complacently with it.

Notes
1 Antonio Gramsci, "La revolución contra 'El Capital'" in Antonio Gramsci: Antología (http://books.google.com/books?id=qHCoQSH6b4kC) (Siglo XXI, 1970): 34-7.
2 Georg Lukács, Lenin: A Study of the Unity of His Thought (http://www.marxists.org/archive/lukacs/works/1924/lenin/ch06.htm) (1924).
3 Slavoj Zizek, Repeating Lenin (http://www.lacan.com/replenin.htm) (Lacan.com, 1997).
4 C.L.R. James, Notes on Dialectics (http://www.marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/dialecti/james4.htm) (Allison & Busby, 1980).

This article owes a great deal to conversations with my friend Gabriel Gil, who has insisted on Chávez's Leninism and helped me to understand many elements of Chávez's development and practice as a revolutionary.
Chris Gilbert is professor of Political Science at the Universidad Bolivariana de Venezuela.

Brutus
29th March 2013, 19:00
Chavez took over the bourgeois state. One can not head towards socialism with a bourgeois state. Chavez, whom you say is a Leninist, quite obviously either didn't read or ignored Lenin when he said: "we must smash the bourgeois state to atoms."

el_chavista
29th March 2013, 19:17
The interesting thing for us is how reformists can move the masses with a populist-demagogic approach.

Brutus
29th March 2013, 19:26
Exactly. We need to learn from the reformists! I disagree with Chavez's theory of socialism of the 21st century, it's reformist rubbish. What we do need to look at is how they inspire the masses, and that we can, and should do the same.

Comrade Alex
30th March 2013, 21:04
Chavez although not perfect was a good man and tried to make a peaceful road to socialism
He did many good things and we will remember him
Patria o muerte
Hasta siempre commandante

one10
4th April 2013, 14:14
What Hugo Chavez did in Venezuela during his years as president was remarkable. Though I'm not an advocate of reform, I feel that leftists world wide should show support for any government that fights imperialism and promotes Socialist ideals.

Brutus
4th April 2013, 14:56
Yes, but in fighting imperialism sides with dictators and those who oppress the working class.

one10
4th April 2013, 15:02
Yes, but in fighting imperialism sides with dictators and those who oppress the working class.

Which dictators?

Brutus
4th April 2013, 15:09
Ahmadinejad, Gadaffi, Al Asad, Mugabe.
That's the problem with so called 'anti imperialists.'

one10
4th April 2013, 15:37
Ahmadinejad, Gadaffi, Al Asad, Mugabe.
That's the problem with so called 'anti imperialists.'

That's following "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" saying.

I disagree with such sentiments, but I can see why a country like Venezuela associated with such dictators as they share a common distaste for American politics and imperialism.

I was stating that what Chavez did for Venezuela should be applauded, despite what you may think of his politics and affiliations with other world leaders.

Art Vandelay
4th April 2013, 20:50
I'll never understand why so many leftists will support or 'applaud' anything that drapes itself in a red flag. Yeah what Chavez did was so great, he lead a bourgeois state. :rolleyes:

one10
4th April 2013, 21:24
I'll never understand why so many leftists will support or 'applaud' anything that drapes itself in a red flag. Yeah what Chavez did was so great, he lead a bourgeois state. :rolleyes:

So you don't see the need to applaud the fact that Venezuela's poverty went from 48.6% to 29.5% under Chavez?

Or the Bolivarian Missions that provide health care, education, housing, and nutrition to a portion of the impoverished population that never had such things?

How about the worker managed cooperatives and communal councils that resulted from Nationalizing Venezuela's key industries?

"I am not a Marxist, but I am not anti-Marxist. I am not communist, but I am not anti-communist." - Hugo Chavez

He waves the red flag because it represents socialism. His reforms and political views were definitely socialist in nature.

There is no denying that Chavez was a man for the people, a critic of capitalism, anti-imperialist, and one of the great leftist politicians of the last 15 years.

May his legacy live on in Venezuela, Latin America, and the rest of the world.

Brutus
4th April 2013, 21:31
A critic of capitalism who concentrated capital into fewer and fewer hands, namely his and his bourgeois state's. Stalin improved life expectancy and decreased poverty in the USSR, but we're not singing his praises.

Art Vandelay
4th April 2013, 21:33
All of those things are great and I'm glad the lot of the Bolivian people improved, that being said I'm a revolutionary, not a reformist. The socialist transformation of society begins with the destruction of the bourgeois state, not its strengthening. This man is nothing more then a bourgeois populist, he had 14 years to begin dismantling the state in Venezuela, he chose not to. As a Marxist I don't pick favorites out of bourgeois nation-state; they must all be destroyed.


"I am not a Marxist, but I am not anti-Marxist. I am not communist, but I am not anti-communist." - Hugo Chavez

What a useless platitude.

one10
4th April 2013, 22:05
A critic of capitalism who concentrated capital into fewer and fewer hands, namely his and his bourgeois state's. Stalin improved life expectancy and decreased poverty in the USSR, but we're not singing his praises.

He used that same capital to build schools and homes in impoverished areas, feed the poor, and provide health care for them. While I don't entirely agree with his notion of "socialism in the 21st century", it has notable accomplishments that are worthy of praise.

And are you seriously comparing Chavez to Stalin? Sure, Stalin improved life expectancy and decreased poverty in the USSR, but at what cost? By working people to death? The ends didn't justify the means in his case.

How did Chavez's government achieve such feats? At the expense of the bourgeois class for the benefit of the working class, the impoverished, and indigenious populations.


All of those things are great and I'm glad the lot of the Bolivian people improved, that being said I'm a revolutionary, not a reformist. The socialist transformation of society begins with the destruction of the bourgeois state, not its strengthening. This man is nothing more then a bourgeois populist, he had 14 years to begin dismantling the state in Venezuela, he chose not to. As a Marxist I don't pick favorites out of bourgeois nation-state; they must all be destroyed.



So because something didn't happen the way you believe it needs to happen strips it of any credibility?

I'm not arguing revolution vs. reform here, I myself hold revolutionary principles, I'm simply stating that the accomplishments of Chavez's Bolivarian Revolution deserve applause and that Leftist should support other Leftist in the fight against Neoliberalism and Imperialism, despite ideological differences.

Once the world is red, we can fight each other and argue about which ideology is right, but as of right now, the leftist movements and leftist governments need support. It will be nearly impossible for any country to achieve the end goal of a classless society in a world dominated by Neoliberalism and capitalist globalization.

Our fight should be against Neoliberalism, not against each other.

Brutus
4th April 2013, 22:31
His movement is not very leftist, as it is still a bourgeois movement. David Lloyd George implemented many reforms that improved the working class' lives greatly, but should every leftist applaud him? What me and 9mm are saying is we shouldn't Just support anyone who claims to be socialist. These people are bourgeois, and whilst we are not denying the accomplishments they have made, we do not think they should be applauded.

Now what you are saying is that we should applaud anybody who improves the lives of the working class? Let's have a big hand to Obama for Obamacare! You're overlooking the workers strikes and protests crushed by the Chavistas.

Paul Pott
4th April 2013, 23:13
Goodbye Chavez, you'll go down in history with Arbenz, Allende, and other anti-imperialist reformists. You'll get a park named after you.

Art Vandelay
5th April 2013, 05:11
His movement is not very leftist, as it is still a bourgeois movement. David Lloyd George implemented many reforms that improved the working class' lives greatly, but should every leftist applaud him? What me and 9mm are saying is we shouldn't Just support anyone who claims to be socialist. These people are bourgeois, and whilst we are not denying the accomplishments they have made, we do not think they should be applauded.

Now what you are saying is that we should applaud anybody who improves the lives of the working class? Let's have a big hand to Obama for Obamacare! You're overlooking the workers strikes and protests crushed by the Chavistas.

My one point of contention is that this isn't really a fair comparison, but I understand you were engaging in hyperbole. A better example would be the head of state of some social democratic European Country. Or to any of the other heads of states in South America who have been apart of this anti-globalization movement.

SuchianFrog735
5th April 2013, 05:31
@Odysseus Yeah, I think these movements need more objective looks. Statistics provide hard evidence but without some context it's somewhat meaningless. People should be asking "at what cost"?

Art Vandelay
5th April 2013, 05:54
@Odysseus Yeah, I think these movements need more objective looks. Statistics provide hard evidence but without some context it's somewhat meaningless. People should be asking "at what cost"?

'The end justify's the means, as long as there is something to justify the end.'

one10
5th April 2013, 13:12
Now what you are saying is that we should applaud anybody who improves the lives of the working class? Let's have a big hand to Obama for Obamacare! You're overlooking the workers strikes and protests crushed by the Chavistas.

First Stalin and now Obama? You've got to be pulling my leg. Hugo Chavez is clearly on the left and Barack Obama is clearly on the right, if you think otherwise, then you are delusional.

And Obamacare is less than useful, but that's another topic.

I didn't say applaud anybody who improves the lives of the working class. Nor did I say applaud for that matter. I said that we should show support for leftist movements/governments.

The only thing I mentioned that deserves applause are the accomplishments of the Bolivarian Missions carried out by Hugo Chavez, would you not agree that it deserves applause?

Brutus
5th April 2013, 14:35
You're under the delusion that Chavez is a leftist. He's a populist! Juan Peron improved Argentina, but should we support the peronistas? Should we support any liberal waving a red flag? Yes we should show support for leftist movements, but not for populists that blurt out socialistic rhetoric! Should we applaud the achievements of Libyan 'socialism'?

Chávez was head of a bourgeois state, and as communists we must smash all bourgeois states to atoms!

one10
5th April 2013, 17:11
You're under the delusion that Chavez is a leftist. He's a populist! Juan Peron improved Argentina, but should we support the peronistas? Should we support any liberal waving a red flag? Yes we should show support for leftist movements, but not for populists that blurt out socialistic rhetoric! Should we applaud the achievements of Libyan 'socialism'?

Chávez was head of a bourgeois state, and as communists we must smash all bourgeois states to atoms!

Now you are comparing Chavez to Peron? The guy was a border-line Fascist that supported corporatism. What is next? Adolf Hitler improved the living standards of most Germans, should we applaud him? You are missing the point. It's not about improving the country, it's about HOW the country was improved. You need to go back and read about the Bolivarian Missions if you are comparing those efforts to that of Stalin and Peron.

He is not a revolutionary leftist, but he is definitely a reformist left-winger. If Chavez was nothing more than a liberal waving a red flag, then find me another liberal waving a red flag that has built homes, schools, and provided nutrition/health care to the impoverished at no cost.

And wouldn't you consider Chavez nationalizing key industries (with plans to continue) in Venezuela as leftist?

Brutus
5th April 2013, 17:16
You do know that power was being concentrated more and more into Chavez's hands, so nationalising industry would help him in obtaining more power. Now, my battery is low, so I will reply in more depth later.

one10
5th April 2013, 17:30
You do know that power was being concentrated more and more into Chavez's hands, so nationalising industry would help him in obtaining more power. Now, my battery is low, so I will reply in more depth later.

I understand this, that's why I'm saying that I disagree with his notion of "21st century socialism".

He figures that he can take all the power and then use his power to help the impoverished (which is exactly what he's been doing). But one should not ignore the worker cooperatives he installed in these nationalized industries to bring democracy to the work environment, or the Communal Councils formed of neighborhood elected members that oversee the development of their communities.

The policies of Chavez's political ideology, Chavismo, oppose neoliberalism, support social welfare programs, and include the nationalization of Venezuelan industries. While not far-left like most of us, it is indeed leftist.

So allow me to reiterate, I'm not in agreement with his methods, but I applaud what he was able to achieve and how he has able to achieve it. At the end of the day, which movements you chose to support is subjective in accordance with your ideals and political views.

Brutus
5th April 2013, 17:58
Do you think he helped the poor as he is selfless? He helped the poor to build up support- it was how he got to power, promising to improve living standards. The working class are the majority, and improving their lives means support, so if they majority supported him he would be ensured power. These welfare programs were ensuring he stayed in power, not some selfless act of a socialist.
Chavez is a nationalist who uses populist rhetoric, not a socialist.

one10
5th April 2013, 18:23
Do you think he helped the poor as he is selfless? He helped the poor to build up support- it was how he got to power, promising to improve living standards. The working class are the majority, and improving their lives means support, so if they majority supported him he would be ensured power. These welfare programs were ensuring he stayed in power, not some selfless act of a socialist.
Chavez is a nationalist who uses populist rhetoric, not a socialist.

He lived up to his promise and the entire aim of his presidency was to help the poor.

Are you incinuating that Chavez helped the poor to stay in power for the sake of staying in power? If so, I strongly disagree with your sentiments.