From Dialogue to Action: Paying the Democratic Deficit in Venezuela. Participatory Democracy at the Local Level

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From Dialogue to Action: Paying the Democratic Deficit in Venezuela Participatory Democracy at the Local Level Presented to National Conference on Dialogue and Deliberation by Laura Wells and Jay Hartling San Francisco, August 6, 2006

The only way to end poverty is to give power to the poor Hugo Chávez Frías President Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

Overview Overview What democracy/whose democracy? Context: Venezuela (1998-2006) Institutional mechanisms/tools of participation: Venezuelan constitution (1999) Participation Laws Participatory cases: Communal Councils Barinas Barrio Adentro (Inside the Neighbourhood) Caracas Enablers/Problems Dialogue

What democracy? Whose democracy? Interpretations of democratic theory Dominant model: representative democracy, elitist democracy Growing alternatives: deliberative democracy, deep democracy, radical democracy, real democracy, strong democracy, participatory democracy The democratic deficit

Venezuela

Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Pop. approx. 25 million (85% urban) Cultural mix (African, Indigenous, European) Govt. structure: federalist republic Unicameral 3 designated seats for indigenous reps. Wealth distribution: households in poverty: reduced from 55% (1997) to 38% (2006) Middle to wealthy class: approx. 20% Social investment: 41% of GDP currently spent on social programs (funded primarily by previously uncollected taxes). Land distribution: 5% of pop. controls 75% Economy: Highest growth in the world 17% in 2004 Highest growth in South America 9.4% in 2005 petroleum, construction, transportation, communication, mining Trade alternatives: ALBA, Mercosur, multi-polar

Venezuelan Context: 40 yrs of representative democracy and two-party rule (Punto Fijo Pact) 1976 oil industry nationalized Caracazo of 1989 Failed military insurrection in 1992 (led by Hugo Chavez) Major shift in 1998 (broad left coalition led by Chavez Polo Patriotico) Brief coup d etat in 2002 (led by a coalition rep. the opposition: former ruling elite, Chamber of Commerce, media, union and Catholic church hierarchy supported by US govt.) Oil industry (management) lockout 2002-03 Referendum in 2004 (spearheaded by US-funded opposition) Opposition withdraws participation in Dec./05 congressional elections Opposition not expected to participate in Dec./06 presidential elections Chavez current popularity between 60-70%

Representative Democracy 1998: Election of Hugo Chavez (62%) 1999: Referendum on constituent assembly (92% vote yes) 1999: Elected constituent assembly re-drafts constitution 1999: National referendum on the constitution (72% in favour) 2000: President ratifies term in election (required by constitution) (60%) 2001: Enactment of 49 decrees 2003: Opposition organizes recall referendum 2004: Chavez wins presidential referendum (60%) 2005: Bolivarian coalition wins 70% of municipalities/parishes and 20/22 state governments 2005: Bolivarian coalition wins 100% of National Assembly* Dec./06: Presidential election * Opposition does not participate (only 10%).

Participatory Democracy Constitution (1999) provides: Legal and institutional context Electoral recall and referenda ALBA Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas Co-managed and worker-run factories/businesses, cooperatives Communal Councils and Social Accountability Participatory Budgeting Alternative Media 100 s of participatory, community radio and television stations Big alternative media: VTV, Vive, Telesur, Radiosur, Diario VEA Rich history of grassroots activism and participation accelerated since 1998 Culture of democracy: citizenship and self-government

Institutional Tools of Participatory Democracy: Constitution Participatory Democracy Laws Citizen s Assembly

Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (1999) Fundamental Principles Article 5 Sovereignty resides in the people Direct and indirect participation The state emanates from, and is subject to the sovereignty of the people.

Chapter III: Article 62 The participation of the people in forming, carrying out and controlling the management of public affairs ensures involvement in their complete development, both individual and collective. It is the obligation of the State and the duty of society to facilitate the generation of optimum conditions for putting this into practice.

Chapter III: Article 70 Participation and involvement in political affairs can be manifested by: voting to fill public offices Referendum consultation of public opinion mandate revocation (recall) legislative, constitutional and constituent initiative open forums and meetings of citizens social and economic affairs: citizen service organs self-management, comanagement, cooperatives in all forms, including those of a financial nature, savings funds, community enterprises, and other forms of association guided by the values of mutual cooperation and solidarity.

Chapter III: Article 132 Everyone has a duty to fulfill his or her social responsibilities and participate together in the political, civic and community life of the country, promoting and protecting human rights as the foundation of democratic coexistence and social peace.

Participatory Democracy Laws Organic Planning Law Organic Law of Municipal Public Power Organic Law of the Government Federal Council Law of State Councils of Planning and Coordination of Public Policies Law of Communal Councils Law of Local Public Planning Councils (CLPP)

Law of Communal Councils Formulation, implementation, control and evaluation of public policy by the people

Law of Communal Councils: Article 182 [The communal councils] are manifestations of participation, expression and integration between diverse community organizations, social groups and citizens that allows organized society to directly manage public policy and projects that respond to the needs and aspirations of communities, and the construction of an equal and just society.

Communal Council Structure Citizens Assembly Communal Council: EXECUTIVE Working Committees: Health, education, communication, security, etc. Social Accounting Financial Management

Structure of Communal Council Promoter s Commission: Organizes community participation and first constituent assembly Community Constituent Assembly: Min. participation: 10% of community Min. age of participation: 15 yrs. Determines CC s geographic scope/# of families Establishes Communal Council structure Establishes working committees Establishes electoral commission: organizes election of CC spokespeople Approves community development plan / CC projects

Structure CC Working committees: Spokespeople: 2 yr. term, 1 time renewal, revocable mandates Make-up varies by community, based on priorities Types of committees: health, housing, water, energy, culture, endogenous development, etc. Finance Committee Communal Bank Social Comptroller

What does a Communal Council do? Carry out decisions of Citizen s Assembly Organize community / promote ongoing dialogue and deliberation Develop participatory community diagnosis, budget and community development plan Collaborate with other social orgs. and levels of govt. Administration: social comptrollership, finance and evaluation

Barinas At least 75 communal councils (14 parishes) Community priorities: infrastructure and/or service-related, such as roads, sewage, water, electricity, buildings (community centres, health clinics, schools), sidewalks, housing; and healthcare, recreation, security, programs aimed at youth, children, women, homeless Avg. project funded at 15K

Misión Barrio Adentro: Inside the Barrio Participatory Health

The Bolivarian Constitution: Articles 83 & 84 Health is a fundamental social right and the responsibility of the State, which shall guarantee it as part of the right to life. The organized community has the right and duty to participate in decision-making concerning policy planning, implementation and control at public health institutions.

Barrio Adentro Mission More than 2,500 (2004) clinics constructed (including remote areas) 20,000 Cuban doctors and sports trainers in Vzla # of patients/year: 18,366,628 254 diagnostic clinics constructed (Barrio Adentro II) Bolivarian University and Latin American School of Medical Sciences are training Vzln doctors

How are they formed/ What do they do? Health Committee formed as part of the communal council: i.e. the Bolivarian Health Committee The Health Committee manages the building, schedule, equipment, and doctor's residence, and introduces the doctor to the neighborhood.

Results Democratization of Democracy! Dignity Local decision-making by the people High rate of participation especially women Stronger citizenship / greater influence in public policy Redistribution of resources/wealth Transparency (equal access to info) Collective thinking Increased employment? Respect for existing structures/cultures Political AND administrative decentralization

Enablers Leadership: Political (all levels) Community Institutionalization of participation: Constitution Legislation/policies Empowerment/devolved or shared decision-making Strong participatory culture Focus on decentralization and redistribution Regional cooperation/collaboration

Problems: 40 yrs. of representative democracy: reluctance to cede power paternalism/clientalism old garde bureaucrats blocking change uneven level of grassroots organization challenges to existing associations and organizations external pressures to focus on institutional/representative democracy inherited apathy, skepticism, fragmentation uneven application of participatory laws lack of planning International interference / misinformation

Gracias! Thank You! jayh@uvic.ca info@laurawells.org