Friday, January 19, 2024

Do we see a backlash on the horizon? The movement from LEFT to RIGHT is moving in the right direction. SOCIALISM will set the country “on a spiral of decay that will bring us to darkness .

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Venezuelan immigrants boost right-wing candidates across the Americas, U.S.
Venezuelans in Argentina have been vocal supporters of new President Javier Milei, using social media to support far-right candidates across the region and the U.S.

Venezuelan immigrants, seen here at a 2019 march supporting former center-right Argentinian President Mauricio Macri, have more recently rallied around far-right populist and current president of Argentina, Javier Milei. Ricardo Ceppi / Getty Images file


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Jan. 19, 2024, 12:43 PM CST
By Lautaro Grinspan

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — When far-right economist Javier Milei was inaugurated as Argentina’s new president last month, his supporters thronged the streets of the capital, Buenos Aires, bearing the national flag and donning Messi soccer jerseys.

Scattered among the sea of light blue and white were a handful of Venezuelan flags — a recurring sight in Milei campaign gatherings.

Holding one of them was Laura Ruiz. When Milei emerged from the presidential palace to give a speech, Ruiz waved her flag with gusto. Her hope, she said, was for Milei to see the flag — and to know that Venezuelans like her support him.

The 36-year-old immigrant couldn’t register to vote yet in the October election, but she says she became “indirectly” involved in the political process, advocating for Milei and against the left within her circle.

It’s an increasingly common story in Argentina and throughout the Americas. Scarred by economic collapse, widespread corruption and a crackdown on civil liberties associated with socialist leadership back home, many of the millions of recently relocated Venezuelans have lent their support to right-wing movements across the continent. The diaspora’s activism has taken place against a backdrop of warnings from right-wing forces that Venezuela-style socialism risks spreading.

“Venezuela represents something like the specter of communism … The right wing in the region has found in Venezuela a clear image that symbolizes the failures of that system,” said Ariel Goldstein, a political scientist at the University of Buenos Aires.


Throughout his campaign, Milei brandished chainsaws at rallies to underline his support for slashing public spending. In his first speech as president, he said that failure to follow up on those belt-tightening plans would set the country “on a spiral of decay that will bring us the darkness of Chávez and Maduro’s Venezuela,” referring to Hugo Chávez, president from 1998 to 2013, and his handpicked successor, Nicolás Maduro. The two other right-wing figures Milei is often compared to — Donald Trump and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro — have tried mobilizing voters with similar rhetoric.

Experts say that there’s been a receptive audience for that kind of discourse among growing Venezuelan diasporas across the region. In recent years, over 7.5 million people have left Venezuela, setting off the most severe migration crisis in modern Latin American history.

Many are starting new lives with a stark opposition to left-wing movements or candidates, which they associate with the dysfunction they had to leave behind.

In the U.S., that dynamic has helped bolster Latino support for Republicans in Florida, contributing to a right-wing shift in recent elections in the longtime swing state. Similar shifts could be in the works in places continent-wide that have a high concentration of recent Venezuelan migrants.

Weeks before Milei won in Argentina, the regional right clinched another victory with Daniel Noboa in Ecuador. He was also buoyed by the Venezuelan diaspora’s support.

“The conditions that forced you to leave Venezuela make you see everything in black and white,” said Eugenio Martínez, a Florida-based Venezuelan political analyst. “But the politics of receiving countries aren’t black and white.”
Active on social media — even if they can't vote

Originally from the Venezuelan port town of Maracaibo, Elisabet Hernández now lives in Córdoba, Argentina. She said she was anguished by Argentina’s sky-high inflation and supply shortages under the last, left-wing administration, which brought back memories of daily life in Venezuela.

“I became very depressed,” Hernández said.

During Argentina's presidential campaign last year, Hernández racked up tens of thousands of views on a TikTok account titled "atrapada en socialismo," or "trapped in socialism." In her videos, she said she “came from the future” to warn Argentinians of the end results of socialism and she pleaded viewers to back Milei. She also distributed pro-Milei flyers in city parks.

“Lots of people have written to me to let me know that hearing about my experience opened their eyes,” she said.

According to Martínez, the Venezuelan diaspora is more politically engaged than other expatriate communities. After all, there is a widespread perception in the group that the roots of the country’s troubles lie chiefly in the ruling regime’s mismanagement. Many were also driven out by political persecution.

“The Venezuelan diaspora is extremely politically active, both around what’s happening in Venezuela, but also in the local politics of the places they find themselves in now,” Martínez said.

As relative newcomers to the countries they’ve settled in, most Venezuelan migrants are unlikely to have become naturalized citizens, meaning they can’t yet vote. But many have found powerful platforms on social media to share their views.


In Argentina, the right-wing social media ecosystem that proved so important in helping to lift Milei from the fringes — particularly among young voters — regularly surfaced posts from Venezuelans warning against voting for the left.

José Mago, a 33-year-old Venezuelan immigrant in Buenos Aires, had opened a TikTok account thinking he would use it as a travel blog. But after a couple of videos boosting Milei and criticizing the left took off, he says he decided to dedicate the account to politics.

Edilber Mendoza, 21, is a medical student who emigrated to Argentina from Venezuela four years ago. Days ahead of the election, he uploaded a video on TikTok from a Milei rally, where he urged Argentines to “vote the right way.”

“Cubans warned us, and [now] we are warning you,” he continued. The clip racked up millions of views, and was shared by Milei himself online.

“We have been very influential here,” Mendoza said in an interview.

The abundance of stories like Mendoza’s and Mago’s doesn’t mean the Venezuelan diaspora is monolithic. But more liberal-leaning Venezuelans have been treading more carefully when bringing up politics in Venezuelan enclaves.

Adelys Ferro is a member of the group Venezolanos con Biden and a resident of the Miami suburb of Weston — dubbed Westonzuela because of its sizable Venezuelan community. In the immediate lead-up to the 2020 election, it had become difficult for her to wear a Biden T-shirt to the supermarket without feeling uncomfortable, a brush with social stigma others also reported.

“I wouldn’t say there is much more respect now,” Ferro said of the dynamic inside South Florida’s Venezuelan community.

Still, Ferro is more hopeful about the Democratic message in 2024 because “Biden has been in power for three years, and there’s no socialism here.”
A stance on Maduro is the political litmus test

In response to the unprecedented levels of migration across the hemisphere, right-wing figures in some countries have made anti-immigrant sentiment and nationalism a key part of their outreach to voters.

At a campaign rally in December, former President Donald Trump echoed white supremacist rhetoric when he said that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country.” In Chile, concern over immigration and outright xenophobia against Venezuelans helped the far-right there rise in influence. Immigration could also play a role in Mexico’s presidential election scheduled for later this year.

But could nativist posturing or policies that restrict immigration prevent a group of migrants like the Venezuelan diaspora from backing right-wing politicians? Experts say it’s unlikely. That’s one of the lessons from the recent electoral shift in Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis won re-election in 2022 with 58% of the Latino vote, despite sending away two planes of mostly Venezuelan asylum-seekers to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts in what critics decried as a political stunt.

“It seems like the Venezuelan migrant cares more about politicians condemning the Venezuelan government and Maduro than the immigration policies they might have,” Martinez said.

Florida is also emblematic of the kind of political influence that long-established diasporas can wield, especially over foreign policy. For decades, Cuban American voters and legislators have successfully influenced Congress' and various presidential administrations’ hard-line stance on U.S.-Cuba relations. If it achieves similar levels of organization, the Venezuelan diaspora could help usher in a diplomatic isolation of the current Chavista regime.

In Argentina, the situation is still dire. The country finished 2023 with an inflation rate surpassing 200%, and Milei has warned that the economic outlook will deteriorate before it gets better. But the new president has already implemented parts of his agenda, shrinking the role of the state. He also ceased diplomatic relations with Caracas.

Venezuelan immigrants are encouraged. Some are even shelving plans to leave the country to try their luck in the U.S. Hernandez’s TikTok account is no longer called "trapped in socialism."
Lautaro Grinspan


Lautaro Grinspan is a journalist currently based in Buenos Aires, Argentina. 

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