Toeing The Party Line: On the subject of Venezuela, at least, right-wing commentators seem content to pack as much “fake news” around their ideological prejudices as possible, confident that their position on the crisis, by conforming to the official position of the USA and its allies, is most unlikely to blow back upon them in any kind of “career-limiting” way.
POLITICAL COMMENTATORS tell us a great deal about themselves
when they turn their gaze away from home, and towards events unfolding
overseas. Domestic politics inevitably presents a rather muddied picture. There
is so much happening: so many players – all with competing agendas – that
achieving clarity is extremely difficult. With events overseas, however, there
is much less in the way of clutter. The issues seem so clear, and the players
so compelling, that the temptation to apply only the brightest primary colours
to one’s analytical canvas is very hard to resist. Muted palettes are best
reserved for the politics of one’s own homeland.
The commentary currently being offered up to New Zealand
readers on the crisis playing-out in Venezuela strongly confirms these
observations. And nowhere is the tendency to apply the brightest colours with
the broadest brushstrokes more in evidence than in the commentaries of Liam
Hehir.
Hehir is a conservative writer: vehemently and unrelentingly
hostile to all things socialist. Hardly surprising, then, that Venezuela and
its United Socialist Party government extract from him the most unequivocal political
judgements.
As far as Hehir is concerned, the President of Venezuela,
Nicolas Maduro, is a “dictator”, and the election which returned him to power was
corruptly “rigged”. What a contrast with the self-proclaimed “Interim
President” of Venezuela, Juan Guaido. Described by Hehir as “social-democratic”,
this telegenic young man is said to have acted heroically and in complete
accordance with his country’s constitution. Hehir is equally certain that the
United States has played no dishonourable part in these events. Its only sin: placing
itself at the side of the heroic Señor Guaido and the oppressed Venezuelan masses.
Unfortunately for Hehir, none of the above is true.
President Maduro was re-elected in an election certified by
international observers as both free and fair. This is hardly surprising, since
Venezuela has one of the most tamper-proof electoral systems in the world. That
Maduro’s right-wing opponents, young Mr Guaido among them, opted to boycott the
last presidential election in no way invalidates the process. Rather, it
confirms the opposition parties’ profound political demoralisation, after
seeing their candidates soundly defeated in every presidential election since
1999.
Nor is it even remotely true to say that Guaido acted in
accordance with the Venezuelan constitution. Article 233, the constitutional
provision cited by Hehir and the American government (from which Hehir appears
to source all his information) was written to cover the situation in which the
President Elect either resigns, is incapacitated, or dies prior to being sworn
into office, and there is no formally acknowledged Vice-President available to
take his/her place. These are the only circumstances in which the National
Assembly is empowered to appoint an Interim President.
Given that Venezuela’s president was officially declared
elected and formally sworn into office – along with his vice-president – on 10
January 2019, there is absolutely no legal justification for Guaido’s actions.
This is confirmed by Alfred de Zayas, an American lawyer, writer,
historian, expert in the field of human rights and international law and
retired high-ranking United Nations official, who tweeted on 6 February:
“Article 233 of the Venezuelan constitution is inapplicable and cannot be
twisted into legitimizing Guaido’s self-proclamation as interim President. A
coup is a coup.”
Nor is it even remotely true that Guaido is some sort of
benign social-democrat poised to resurrect his country’s mixed, if currently
broken, economy. The real Juan Guaido is a far-right activist who has engaged
in violent protests against the Venezuelan Government for the past five years.
The party he belongs to, Popular Will, scorns the democratic process –
preferring direct and highly aggressive action in the streets. Notwithstanding (or,
perhaps, because of) its insurrectionary praxis, Popular Will enjoys the fulsome support of the US
national security apparatus. (That Popular Will was permitted to affiliate itself to the “Socialist
International”, of whose youth wing our very own Jacinda Ardern was once the
president, speaks volumes about the authenticity of the SI’s allegiance to
social-democracy – let alone socialism!)
All of this information (and much, much more) is readily
available on the Internet. That Hehir has consistently declined to adequately
test his bald right-wing assertions about Venezuela; that he relies, instead,
on the propaganda pouring out of the United States government and its news media
“assets”; tells us a great deal about his approach to political journalism.
On the subject of Venezuela, at least, he seems content to
pack as much “fake news” around his ideological prejudices as possible,
confident that his position on the crisis, by conforming to the official position of the USA and its allies, is most unlikely to blow back upon him in
any kind of “career-limiting” way.
It is, of course, much more difficult to get away with this
sort of “journalism” domestically. New Zealand is just too small for Hehir’s lurid
misrepresentations of Venezuelan politics to be replicated in his commentaries
on Kiwi current affairs.
A truly sobering question remains, however: If political conditions
in this country ever deteriorated to the point where journalists were not only
permitted, but encouraged, to pack fake news around their own and their
publishers’ prejudices, would Liam Hehir’s commitment to telling the truth
about what is happening in New Zealand be as strong as his commitment to
telling the truth about what is happening in Venezuela?
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Tuesday, 12 February 2019.
2 comments:
"President Maduro was re-elected in an election certified by international observers as both free and fair."
Could you provide links to these international observers and their declarations?
The role of the fourth estate is to serve interests of the colonial regime taken as a whole. In that regard Liam Hehir could be seen as just doing his job. As with all the other journalists, bloggers and commentators who either willfully or negligently misinform the public in ways that promote the political strategies of Anglo-American imperialism. A classic case being the "Brady affair" which pro-regime commentators are still attempting to portray as a "Chinese government plot", when the Prime Minister, cabinet and the New Zealand Police all know that it was just another hapless fabrication by the New Zealand Intelligence Community.
Such people however are not really deserving of our attention.
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