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Xergio's avatar

Well, I suppose we can concede that doesn’t meet all the elements of the definition given. Therefore, sure, not a coup.

I am not here to encourage the use of the term coup in our rhetoric. But I have lived through two violent military coups. I have seen bombs being dropped over my city near my house by the insurrectionists inside the military. I was in Caracas, my hometown, and Hugo Chavez was the failed leader of those two. He went to jail, then pardoned by the next legitimate president, and finally ran a very successful political campaign and was elected president democratically in clean elections by a true landslide (we don’t have electoral college, it’s a direct democracy, popular vote rules).

Why does that matter? Because I feel like I am seeing a remake of that movie but now in English and with a few details changed. So this might not be called a coup. Neither was what took Chavez to the presidency, but this is what happened:

Hugo Chávez and Donald Trump, despite their ideological differences, shared key actions that undermined democratic institutions and concentrated power:

• Purging Government Institutions: Both fired public employees en masse, replacing them with loyalists.

• Politicizing the Judiciary: They appointed judges who favored their political agendas.

• Weakening Legislative Oversight: They pressured lawmakers to comply and dismissed institutional checks on power.

• Targeting Political Opponents: Both used legal and administrative measures to silence critics.

• Attacking the Press: They labeled independent media as enemies to discredit opposing voices.

• Undermining Law Enforcement: They cast intelligence and law enforcement agencies as threats to their rule.

• Challenging Elections: Both questioned unfavorable election results and pushed fraud claims.

• Promoting Nationalist Agendas: They embraced protectionism and blamed foreign actors for domestic issues.

• Encouraging a Cult of Personality: Both positioned themselves as the sole solution to their nation’s problems.

So, call it what you will. But I’ve seen this movie before and it doesn’t have a happy ending. Of course, Venezuela was institutionally weaker. But what I remember well is what many, including me, used to say al the time as things happened. First, “Venezuela is not Cuba. That can’t happen here”. Second, “I don’t believe so, I am pretty sure it won’t happen that way.” Boy was I wrong.

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Lou Rovegno's avatar

Just because a plurality (not a majority) voted for him, it doesn’t mean that whatever he does has democratic legitimacy. It’s still a coup and a constitutional crisis when he exceeds his power so egregiously, openly and brazenly.

I keep repeating this, but having an insurrectionist in office despite explicit language in the constitution forbidding this means we were already in a crisis. We have been since he took emoluments and got away with it. The crisis began when flagrant violations of the constitution occurred and everyone acted like the solution was normal electioneering. The signal was clear: the constitution is actually meaningless if a critical mass of the public decides they don’t like it and people in power find enforcement too uncomfortable.

As the weeks and months drag on, we’ll find out which other parts of our constitution and body of law are meaningless. The crisis is ongoing.

I see nothing wrong with calling this a crisis or a coup, because that’s what it is. But I take your point: that can’t be ALL that we do. And maybe one day, as we rebuild from the ashes, we’ll even figure out a way to have a political system whose rules are actually enforceable even when people in power don’t want to face consequences for breaking them.

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