Venezuela’s Chavez seeks decree powers amid floods

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Hugo  Chavez said yesterday he would seek fast-track decree powers  from the National Assembly for the fourth time in his  controversial 11-year rule due to a crisis caused by flooding.

Chavez said the move was a response to rains that have made  more than 120,000 people homeless in the South American nation  — but it also appeared to be an attempt to outwit Venezuela’s  opposition before a new parliament convenes on Jan. 5.

An opposition coalition made big advances in a September  legislative election and hopes to put a brake on Chavez’s  self-styled “21st century socialism” when it takes up 40  percent of seats in the new National Assembly on Jan. 5.

The current legislature is dominated by the ruling party,  and opponents of Chavez, who they say is imposing Cuban-style  communism on the OPEC member nation — had feared he would rush  through laws in the outgoing parliament’s final days.

“I am going to request a facilitating law from the National  Assembly. We are going to need billions of dollars extra,”  Chavez said on state TV.

“There’s no time to lose, not a second.”

Chavez said his Cabinet would send the request on Monday  and hoped the first decrees could be issued by the end of the  week.

To obtain the fast-track powers, he needs approval by  three-fifths, or 99, of lawmakers in the 165-seat assembly  which has been a rubber-stamp for Chavez in recent years.

In the past, Chavez has used decree powers for  controversial measures such as nationalizing parts of the oil  sector or to increase the number of Supreme Court judges.
In his comments yesterday, Chavez did not specify what  decrees he was considering  but said they would cover rural and  urban land, plus the constitution.

“There are a series of laws that I want to decree on the  22nd, 23rd, 24th and 25th of December right in the middle of  Christmas … and the New Year,” he said.

Visiting flood zones in recent days, the president has said  frequently he will not hesitate to confiscate land needed to  build housing for the poor — and challenged the “bourgeoisie”  to “open their golf courses.”