The Ebb of the Pink Tide , livre ebook

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Following the election of Hugo Chavez to the Venezuelan presidency, and the Cochabamba water wars, Latin American politics were radicalised and their governments populated with former activists and trade union leaders. In this book, renowned Latin Americanist Mike Gonzalez explores the course of the Left in Latin American politics.



In the last few years, Latin America’s Left have suffered many setbacks and reactionary challenges, which has led many to wonder if the ‘Pink Tide’ is on the wane. Gonzalez argues that whilst left-wing developments have been widely celebrated, less has been written to address the problems that have arisen. Through examination of the successes and failings of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador and Venezuela, Gonzalez is able to identify weaknesses and strengths and suggest possible future pathways for the Left in nations across Latin America.



Providing a critical but sympathetic analysis of the records of the left governments across the continent, Gonzalez offers a refreshing reflection on the prospects and future of Latin American politics, asking whether Chavez’s vision of twenty-first century socialism may ever be realised.
Introduction: Neoliberalism on the Attack

1. From the Caracazo to Chavez

2. Bolivia Rises

3. Evo Morales in Power

4. Ecuador and the Battle for Yasuni

5. Venezuela: Decline and Fall

6. On the Margins of the Pink Tide: Mexico, Brazil, Argentina

Conclusion

Notes

Index
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Date de parution

20 novembre 2018

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0

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9781786803405

Langue

English

The Ebb of the Pink Tide
The Ebb of the Pink Tide
The Decline of the Left in Latin America
Mike Gonzalez
First published 2019 by Pluto Press
345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright Mike Gonzalez 2019
The right of Mike Gonzalez to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 9997 3 Hardback
ISBN 978 0 7453 9996 6 Paperback
ISBN 978 1 7868 0339 9 PDF eBook
ISBN 978 1 7868 0341 2 Kindle eBook
ISBN 978 1 7868 0340 5 EPUB eBook
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Riverside Publishing Solutions, Salisbury, United Kingdom
Simultaneously printed in the United Kingdom and United States of America
Contents
Introduction Neo-liberalism on the Attack
1 From the Caracazo to Ch vez
2 Bolivia Rises
3 Evo Morales in Power
4 Ecuador and the Battle for Yasuni
5 Venezuela: Decline and Fall
6 On the Margins of the Pink Tide: Mexico, Brazil, Argentina
Conclusion
Notes
Index
For Nella, who lived it all
Introduction
Neo-liberalism on the attack
Nautical metaphors can be risky; comparing social processes to the movement of the tides might suggest that the rise of Latin America s left governments, and their subsequent crises, belong to a natural cycle. It would be an absurdly inaccurate explanation for the complex and profound political developments with which this book is concerned. Indeed, it seems to me that the term pink tide has an ironic, critical implication. It was first coined in 2006 by the New York Times correspondent in Montevideo, Frank Lehrer, in reference to the government of Tabar V zquez in Uruguay, with more than a hint of mockery as if the election of left governments in several Latin American countries was all sound and fury, signifying nothing. Diane Raby subsequently attributed the phrase to Hugo Ch vez, which is an error, but one intended to invest it with a more positive meaning. But the reality is that it has now been generally adopted as an analytical tool in the discussion and interpretation of the experience of left governments in Latin America, which may prove to be unhelpful.
The process begins, by common consent, with the election of Hugo Ch vez to the Venezuelan presidency in 1998. Reflecting back on that moment from the perspective of 2018 is a demoralising experience. Hugo Ch vez died in bizarre circumstances in 2013, to be succeeded by Nicol s Maduro who has overseen what is undeniably the catastrophic collapse of the Venezuelan economy, and whose government represents, to me at least, a grotesque parody of the society promised by the Bolivarian revolution. Rafael Correa, a relatively late recruit to the Bolivarian project, has left the presidency of Ecuador to which he was elected in 2007, denouncing many of the social movements that carried him to power. Bolivia continues under a government led by Evo Morales, a figure as representative of the Bolivarian project as Ch vez himself; but the grassroots rebellion that carried him triumphantly to the Casa Quemada in La Paz has fragmented, with many of its components distancing themselves from Morales. In Argentina, the administrations of N stor and later Cristina Kirchner, inheritors of the Peronist mantle, promised - beginning in 2003 - a progressive project in the wake of the mass protests embraced by the Argentinazo of December 2001. It ended with an election in 2015 which brought to power Mauricio Macri, a trenchant advocate of neoliberal strategies which he is imposing on the country with relentless determination. And in Nicaragua, as the 40 th anniversary of the 1979 Sandinista revolution approaches, Sandinista police and military are firing live bullets at demonstrators protesting at austerity policies imposed by Daniel Ortega, the leader of the Sandinista revolution now reborn as an authoritarian ruler. He has delivered the country into the hands of Chinese multinationals intending to build the transoceanic canal which has regularly re-emerged as a dream project for multinational capital. 1
There was nothing predestined or inevitable about these developments; no simple movement of the tides. The corruption and centralisation of power that have accompanied them are not attributable to human nature or the character of certain leaders. There are features common to each national experience - above all the turn back towards extractivism. There are also elements which have to do with the specific history of each nation and its state formation. And in every case the particular characteristics of its bourgeoisie, the history of the class struggle and its many and different manifestations, interspersed with issues of race and tradition, and with the internal contradictions within the left, combined in different ways. It is important to identify these particularities, as well as the impact and influence of external forces, in particular the U.S. government and multinational capital, a category which today must include China and Russia as material actors in Latin America. The concept of a pink tide , therefore, can identify the common framing conditions, but the specificity of each experience alone can allow us to discuss how to overcome the present circumstances, and continue the process of social transformation whose first steps were marked by the early flow of the pink tide.
It is instructive to cast our mind back to the moment of Ch vez s election to the presidency, or perhaps more significantly to the Cochabamba Water War that inaugurated the twenty-first century. Both marked an ending and a beginning, or at the very least a turning point in global politics, though that would only become clear after the event.
It was the ending of a decade which had begun with the collapse of the Soviet bloc and the final demise and exposure of what was left of the Stalinist project, whose implications and effects would resonate through the post-1989 decade. It was not, as Francis Fukuyama 2 alleged, the end of history but the uncertain and tentative beginning of a new and different history whose polarities were multiple and which could no longer be defined, however falsely, in cold war terms. The 1990s were a decade in which a newly confident and ruthless capitalism continued to extend its reach across the planet - leaving devastation it as it went. Neo-liberalism did set out to impose its model on Latin America, through its financial agencies - the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in particular - subverting national states and setting out to integrate the individual economies into a regional and ultimately global project.
This neo-liberal assault was variously concealed behind notions of austerity , structural adjustment and the anti-poverty programme . For the region, the net result of the 1990s, the decade of globalisation, was a dramatic rise in levels of poverty, the displacement of millions and the weakening of the national state, as public resources were privatised. The signposts along this new route included the Venezuelan urban rising known as the Caracazo , the bargain sale of Argentina s public assets by Peronist president Carlos Menem in 1990, the dollarisation of the Ecuadorean economy and the declaration of the North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA) in 1994, whose triumphalist inauguration was overshadowed by an insurrection in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas led by the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN).
It is important to emphasise that the 1990s were a decade in which the destructive progress of neo-liberalism across the region was met by resistance and protest. The left governments did not emerge out of the blue. They were not forged in the mind of some prominent individuals, nor by the corporate manipulators of global electoral campaigns. The first imposition of structural adjustment policies was marked by an urban uprising across Venezuela beginning on 23 February 1989; the Caracazo cost hundreds of lives at the hands of the state. It is widely regarded as the starting point for the process that brought Ch vez to power in 1998. A year later, in Ecuador, the indigenous organisations, having forged a new combined instrument of resistance, the Confederation of Indigenous Nations of Ecuador (CONAIE), launched a nationwide rising. The Zapatista insurrection and its occupation of San Crist bal de las Casas, state capital of Chiapas, in 1994 were a defiant and explicit answer to the formation of NAFTA. The journalists gathered for the press conference of the three NAFTA presidents - Bill Clinton, Carlos Salinas de Gortari of Mexico and Brian Mulroney of Canada - were caught unawares by the events in Chiapas, and apparently ignorant of the long history of conflict between the indigenous communities of the Lacandon Forest and the powerful cattle-raising interests that had systematically encroached on their land during the previous decade. The balaclava-masked barefoot troops waving what were mostly wooden rifles seemed to emerge from the mists of a very different world. But however different they may have seemed, however remote from the modern metropolis of Mexico City, they were the direct and immediate victims of neo-liberal global expansion, just as the occupants of Caracas slums had been. They represented the extremes of a global reality.
The peasant communities of Chiapas grew maize, their principal food staple, on their small plots. The rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO), the regulator and overseer of the global market, made it a condition of external investment that state subsidies should be eliminated, characterising them as restraints

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