Chavez to assume powers to remake Venezuelan society
President Hugo Chavez is set to assume unbridled powers to remake
Venezuelan society as the National Assembly prepares to grant him
authority to enact sweeping measures by presidential decree.

Sisters Kasandra, 4, left, and Britsaydi, 7, play on their fence as
an oil pump moves in the background in Maracaibo, Venezuela. The
state owned oil company "Petroleos de Venezuela S.A.", or "PDVSA",
coined the slogan "El Petroleo es de todos," or "It's everyone's
oil," during Hugo Chavez's government. -AP |
The assembly, which is completely controlled by Chavez supporters,
was meeting in a Caracas plaza to approve a so-called "enabling law"
Wednesday that will to give Chavez special powers for 18 months to
transform 11 broadly defined areas, including the economy, energy and
defense.
Chavez, who is beginning a fresh six-year term, says the legislation
will be the start of a new era of "maximum revolution" during which he
will consolidate Venezuela's transformation into a socialist society.
His critics, however, are calling it a radical lurch toward
authoritarianism by a leader with unchecked power.
The former paratroop commander has already said he will use the law
to decree nationalizations of Venezuela's largest telecommunications
company and the electricity sector, slap new taxes on the rich and
impose greater state control over the oil and natural gas industries.
A final draft of the law shows Chavez will also be allowed to dictate
unspecified measures to transform state institutions; reform banking,
tax, insurance and financial regulations; decide on security and defense
matters such as gun regulations and military organization; and "adapt"
legislation to ensure "the equal distribution of wealth" as part of a
new "social and economic model."
Chavez also plans to reorganize regional territories and carry out
reforms aimed at bringing "power to the people" through thousands of
newly formed Communal Councils, in which Venezuelans will have a say on
spending an increasing flow of state money on neighborhood projects from
public housing to road repaving.
Lawmakers were scheduled to formally approve the law Wednesday in an
outdoor session in Caracas' Plaza Bolivar, next to the National
Assembly.
Chavez's supporters deny the law constitutes an abuse of power and
argue radical steps are necessary to accelerate the creation of a more
egalitarian society.
Historian Ines Quintero said that with the new powers, Chavez will
achieve a level of "hegemony" that is unprecedented in Venezuela's
nearly five decades of democratic history.
She said the effects will be "exponential" because Chavez will wield
"extraordinary powers" in a context where state institutions are
weakening and the division of powers is not being respected.
Chavez has requested special powers twice before.
In 1999, shortly after he was first elected, he was only able to push
through two new taxes and a revision of the income tax law after facing
fierce opposition in congress. In 2001, by invoking an "enabling law"
for the second time, he decreed 49 laws including controversial agrarian
reform measures and a law that sharply raised taxes on foreign oil
companies operating in Venezuela.
This time, the law will give Chavez a free hand to bring under state
control some oil and natural gas projects that are still run by private
companies ? the latest in a series of nationalist energy policies in
Venezuela, a top oil supplier to the United States and home to South
America's largest gas reserves.
AP |