Bolivarian revolution

In viewĀ of the December 10 municipal elections, communards and revolutionary activists closely associated with some of the most important initiatives in communal organisation in the country have been put forward as candidates for mayor.

Although we cannot say this is a mass phenomenon, it is undoubtedly a deeply significant event for various reasons.

Venezuelaā€™s National Constituent Assembly (ANC) has denied permission to one of its grassroots delegates to stand as a mayoral candidate inĀ the upcoming December 10 municipal elections.

Angel Prado was elected to the ANC on July 30 as a territorial delegate for hisĀ municipality of Simon Planas. Prado is also a leading member of the El Maizal commune in Lara state.

It is no secret that in todayā€™s corporate-dominated media landscape, Venezuela appears almost ubiquitously as a synonym of ā€œdictatorshipā€.

This is why many may be surprised that Venezuela will hold its 23rd election in 18 years on December 10 when Venezuelans go to the polls to elect local mayors.

It is important to understand the context and the intended (as well as likely) effects of the US administration's actions. With encouragement from Florida Senator Marco Rubio and other Republicans, US President Donald Trump has been trying to help topple the elected government of Venezuela.

Venezuelaā€™s Revolutionary Sex and Gender Diversity Alliance (ASGDRe) was set up in 2009 as a collective to fight for gender diversity rights and against discrimination based on sexuality.

What separated ASGDRe from other similar groups was that they openly supported the revolutionary process taking place in Venezuela.

Speaking with members of ASGDRe, as part of the international solidarity delegation organised by Venezuela Analysis in August, they told us that the group began with about 10 members, mainly friends.

A high profile member of the ultra right-wing Popular Will (VP) party, Yon Goicoechea, was freed by Venezuelan authoritiesĀ on November 4 after more than a year behind bars.

Goicoechea was arrested last August by national security forces for the alleged possession of explosive devices, just two days before an opposition march.Ā 

Since being granted conditional release, Goicoechea has confirmed his candidacy for the mayoralty of the wealthy municipality of El Hatillo, despite his party calling for a boycott of upcoming elections.Ā 

Speaking to a huge march on November 7, Venezuelan President NicolĆ”s Maduro said that, during the Russian Revolution,Ā the workers took political power into their hands for the first time. "In Revolution, all times are a battle and they are a struggle!", Maduro told the popular celebrationĀ of the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik-led revolution on the outskirts of the Miraflores Palace Caracas.

The president recalled that the RevolutionĀ showed for the first timeĀ that workers could takeĀ political power in their hands to build a state.

The second vice-president of Venezuelaā€™s National Constituent Assembly (ANC) has been removed after he publicly criticisedĀ the bodyā€™s inaction in the face of the countryā€™s deepening economic crisis.

Former Attorney- General Isaias Rodriguez penned an op-ed in Venezuelaā€™s centre-left newspaper Ultimas Noticias on October 23 in which he warned Chavismo could lose next yearā€™s presidential elections, ā€œif the government and the National Constituent Assembly do not offer timely responses to this problem [of inflation]ā€.

The Canaima Industries factory in Caracas is the assembly point for computers that are given to students for free across Venezuela. Its name comes from the huge Canaima National Park in the south of Venezuela, home to extraordinary landscapes and the highest waterfall in the world, Angel Falls.

We visited the small computer factory, located in the middle of a military base in the east of the capital, as part of the international solidarity delegation organised by Venezuela Analysis in August.

One of the most important aspects of Venezuelaā€™s pro-poor Bolivarian Revolution has been its promotion of women's empowerment through community organisation.

To get a sense of how this grassroots process of community organising is developing and the role women are playing in the process, we visited the Ataroa and Lomas de Leon communes as part of the Venezuela Analysis international solidarity delegation in late August.

President NicolĆ”s Maduroā€™s United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) won 17 of 23 states in Sundayā€™s gubernatorial elections, the National Electoral Council (CNE) has confirmed, on October 15.

According to CNE President Tibisay Lucena, 61.14% of Venezuelaā€™s 18-million-strong electorate came out to vote, marking a record participation in the countryā€™s regional elections, second only to the 65.45% turnout in 2008.

The approval ratings of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro rose to 23.2% at the end of September, according to a new poll conducted by private centre-right think tankĀ Datanalisis.Ā 

The increase in the head of stateā€™s popularity comes just weeks ahead of regional elections scheduled for October 15, when Venezuelans will choose their state governors for the next four years.Ā