After Chavez's death, media vilification alive and kicking

March 13, 2013
Issue 
Video: Inside the Revolution: A Journey into Heart of Venezuela (Documentary). @alboradafilms7092/YouTube.

On Tuesday 5 March, at the age of 58, Venezuelan president Hugo Ch谩vez lost his almost two-year battle with cancer and passed away. Within seconds of the news being announced, the wheels of the global media bandwagon went into overdrive, with largely unsurprising results, in both the US and British media. At the most distasteful end of the spectrum was the headline in the New York Post, the paper with the 7th highest circulation in the US, that read 鈥極ff Hugo! Venezuela bully Chavez is dead鈥.

Other US media followed closely behind. 鈥楧eath of a Demagogue鈥 ran a headline on the website of Time, the world's biggest selling weekly news magazine. These and other US media reaction were included in that also examined the distorted, often hysterical, US media coverage of Ch谩vez during his presidency.

It鈥檚 worth recalling that following the 2002 US-supported coup that briefly removed Chavez from the presidency the New York Times declared that Chavez's "resignation" meant that "Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator."

Following Chavez鈥檚 death, the antipathy towards a president that had so vehemently challenged the actions and interests of the United States was also evident in the British media. Rightwing outlets displayed the usual cynical disdain that had characterised their reporting of Ch谩vez鈥檚 presidency, although Nicolas Maduro, Ch谩vez鈥檚 former vice-president, the current interim president and the government鈥檚 candidate for the April 14th presidential election, was also now in the firing line.

In the UK鈥檚 biggest selling broadsheet, the rightwing Daily Telegraph, its chief foreign correspondent David Blair described Maduro鈥檚 role as foreign minister under Chavez in the following terms: 鈥淢r Maduro was the obedient enforcer of his master鈥檚 highly personal foreign policy鈥. For Blair, Maduro, rather than responsibly representing his government鈥檚 foreign policy, was 鈥渁 loyal purveyor of 'Chavismo' around the world鈥.

Britain's 'liberal' left

Britain鈥檚 liberal-left media also offered a timely reminder of where their loyalties lay in relation to Chavez, whose democratic mandate included presiding over 15 national elections since he took office in February 1999, a greater number of elections than were held during the previous 40 years in Venezuela. In a remarkable editorial, The Independent newspaper opined:

鈥淢r Chavez was no run-of-the-mill dictator. His offences were far from the excesses of a Colonel Gaddafi, say. What he was, more than anything, was an illusionist 鈥 a showman who used his prodigious powers of persuasion to present a corrupt autocracy fuelled by petrodollars as a socialist utopia in the making. The show now over, he leaves a hollowed-out country crippled by poverty, violence and crime. So much for the revolution.鈥

This from a newspaper that in June 2009, following a military coup that overthrew the democratically elected government of President Manuel Zelaya in Honduras, ran an editorial that included the following:

"The ousting of the Honduran President Manuel Zelaya by the country's military at the weekend has been condemned by many members of the international community as an affront to democracy. But despite a natural distaste for any military coup, it is possible that the army might have actually done Honduran democracy a service."

The Independent鈥檚 competitor in the UK鈥檚 liberal-left newspaper market, The Guardian, showed a similarly hostile stance towards Chavez during his presidency. In a piece on the New Left Project website examining the critical UK media coverage of Chavez following his death, Josh Watts noted how the anti-Chavez bias of Rory Carroll, a Guardian journalist and its former Latin America correspondent, 鈥渉as been extensively documented鈥.

As Samuel Grove noted in a damming 2011 article, Carroll鈥檚 Latin America coverage 鈥渉as attracted widespread criticism for its selectivity and double standards, brazen anti-left bias, and above all slavish loyalty to Western interests鈥. There is now surely a book鈥檚 worth of material exposing Carroll鈥檚 distorted Venezuela coverage.

Carroll has managed to take his agenda beyond the confines of The Guardian. For example, in an Al Jazeera English debate on the continued demonisation of Chavez by the Western media that took place three days after Chavez鈥檚 death, Carroll repeatedly tried to present Venezuela under Chavez as an economic failure.

He repeated this line of attack in a BBC 3 radio interview in late February, where he accused the Chavez government of being responsible for "decay, ruin, waste" in relation to the economy. Contrast this with the rigorous reports on the socio-economic changes under the Chavez presidency by the Washington-based think tank, the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), which completely undermine Carroll鈥檚 narrative of economic failure.

This fact-based approach to appraising elements of the Chavez legacy has not been lost on The Guardian鈥檚 associate editor Seumas Milne, who referenced CEPR鈥檚 latest report when he tweeted: 鈥淢edia claims #Chavez ruined #Venezuela's economy absurd: here are the facts on growth, unemployment, poverty http://bit.ly/13Nnwno @ceprdc鈥

It was precisely these socio-economic gains, especially for those in the low-income neighbourhoods known as barrios that encircle Caracas and other Venezuelan cities and who formed Ch谩vez鈥檚 support base, that lay behind his popularity and his repeated electoral victories.

Denigrating the individual

Rather than try to explain Ch谩vez鈥檚 appeal to large sectors of the Venezuelan population or understand the process of radical change underway in the country, the West鈥檚 media class preferred to focus almost entirely on the figure of Ch谩vez.

It was precisely this narrative that was so effective in discrediting the Venezuelan process through concealing the role of collective agency, silencing the people from below, and rendering them insignificant. While the mainstream media routinely ignores the voices of the government's grassroots supporters, they have been instrumental in driving the Venezuelan process forward and should be at the centre of the story.

Thus, when we contrast Ch谩vez鈥檚 popularity at home with the open hostility with which Western political elites viewed him, we鈥檙e left questioning the motivation behind the anti-Ch谩vez mass media campaign that has systematically misrepresented events in Venezuela.

John Pilger is right when he writes: 鈥淣ever has a country, its people, its politics, its leader, its myths and truths been so misreported and lied about as Venezuela.鈥

Even though Ch谩vez is dead, his vilification by the US and UK media is alive and kicking.

[Reprinted from (with full links to articles). Pablo Navarrete is a Latin America Bureau correspondent and a PHD student at Bradford University in the UK, researching the political economy of the Chavez presidency. He is also the director of the documentary Inside the Revolution: A Journey into the Heart of Venezuela (Alborada Films, 2009).]

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