Rough honeymoon for Chavez’s successor in Venezuela

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Wearing sports gear in the national colors and sitting on a sofa in a modest family home, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro holds a microphone, chats with locals and expounds on the benefits of socialism.

Variations of the scene – on a factory floor, playing soccer in the presidential palace or walking the plains with farmers – play daily on national TV as Hugo Chavez’s successor makes “Gobierno en la Calle,” or “Street Government,” the chosen slogan of his rule.

Almost constantly on the road since being elected in April, Maduro has launched a plethora of new schemes, from raising the minimum wage to sending soldiers into city slums to fight crime.

Trumpeting his modest background as a bus driver and union activist, he continually reminds Venezuelans he is the South American nation’s first “worker president,” guaranteed to empathize with the poor and thus continue Chavez’s legacy.

The avuncular images that Maduro, 50, has been promoting, however, cannot hide the tough realities he has inherited: an economy verging on recession, a ruling Socialist Party (PSUV) under some strains from within, and an impatient populace.

Such pressures make him vulnerable going forward, both to a newly confident opposition and potential rivals inside the PSUV, though there is no formal mechanism to challenge Maduro before a recall referendum allowed three years into his presidency.

“We’re behind him, but he has to be behind us too, like Chavez was,” said Eglis Rodriguez, a 39-year-old housewife and mother of three waiting to see Maduro at a “Street Government” event in the poor Macarao neighborhood on the edge of Caracas.

“He must not forget that he got in thanks to the votes of the poor. We put him there and we can remove him.”

Far from enjoying a newly elected president’s customary honeymoon, Maduro’s ratings have stayed stuck around the level of his April 14 victory – by 50.6 percent to 49.1 against the opposition – or have even dropped, according to some pollsters.

He has struggled, sometimes awkwardly, to replicate Chavez’s famous charisma and connection with the masses.

Maduro argues that his mentor’s old foes in the private media and Venezuela’s “fascist” right wing are doing their best to sabotage his government, from plotting to assassinate him to ignoring his flagship policies such as the drive against crime.

The opposition, delighted at winning nearly half the votes in April yet bitter at being deprived of the prize by what they claim was electoral fraud, says Maduro’s incompetence and illegitimacy are ever more evident to Venezuelans.

Yet opposition leader Henrique Capriles’ formal challenge to Maduro’s election win is running out of steam: The election board ratified his loss after an audit and the Supreme Court is also likely to give short shrift to his allegations.

Though the United States has been lukewarm, Latin American neighbors have embraced Maduro as president.

So Capriles, 40, appears to be biding his time and is casting local elections in December as a referendum on Maduro. Right now, though, most Venezue-lans are more concerned with day-to-day economic realities than big-picture politics.

Shortages of basic goods ranging from toilet paper to flour have been an embarrassment to the government, while monthly price increases hit a 17-year high in May at more than 6 percent.
Growth in the OPEC nation slowed to a paltry 0.7 percent in the first quarter, despite high oil prices. And the local bolivar currency fetches five times more on the black market than at the official, controlled rate.

“When you shop now you have to queue for four hours. I never experienced that before. We were better with Chavez … Maduro needs to get his skates on,” said Carmen Natera, 60, another government supporter and mother of four, at the Macarao event.