US embassy cable - 04CARACAS1539

Disclaimer: This site has been first put up 15 years ago. Since then I would probably do a couple things differently, but because I've noticed this site had been linked from news outlets, PhD theses and peer rewieved papers and because I really hate the concept of "digital dark age" I've decided to put it back up. There's no chance it can produce any harm now.

VENEZUELA: TWO POLLS CONFIRM POLARIZATION

Identifier: 04CARACAS1539
Wikileaks: View 04CARACAS1539 at Wikileaks.org
Origin: Embassy Caracas
Created: 2004-05-11 13:55:00
Classification: CONFIDENTIAL
Tags: PGOV KDEM VE
Redacted: This cable was not redacted by Wikileaks.
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

C O N F I D E N T I A L  CARACAS 001539 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
NSC FOR CBARTON 
USCINCSO ALSO FOR POLAD 
USAID DCHA/OTI FOR RPORTER 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/20/2014 
TAGS: PGOV, KDEM, VE 
SUBJECT: VENEZUELA: TWO POLLS CONFIRM POLARIZATION 
 
 
Classified By: POLITICAL COUNSELOR ABELARDO A. ARIAS FOR REASONS 1.4 (d 
) 
 
------- 
SUMMARY 
------- 
 
1.  (U) President Chavez would lose a recall referendum, 
though his support remains strong amidst increasing 
polarization, according to two polls conducted in March.  One 
poll suggests Chavez would be revoked 59-41 percent, while 
the other suggests he would be revoked 53-40 percent. Both 
polls show Chavez' overall support is steady at 41 percent, 
and thus suggest Chavez would be a very strong contender in a 
post-referendum presidential election.   End Summary 
 
-------------------------------- 
Datanalisis - Situation Stable 
-------------------------------- 
 
2.  (U) Datanalisis conducted its poll, published in the 
Caracas daily El Universal on May 6, from March 17 to 21 with 
a sample of 1,290.  President Chavez has a personal approval 
rating of 41.5 percent, which has been steady in Datanalisis 
polls since November 2003.  The number of people describing 
themselves as Ni-Ni (in favor of neither the opposition nor 
Chavez) declined from 38.2 percent in December 2003, to 30.2 
percent, while self proclaimed Chavistas rose from 24.5 to 28 
percent, and opposition from 32.8 to 37.4 percent. 
 
3.  (U) The poll shows 76.9 percent of those asked were 
somewhat or very disposed to vote in a recall referendum.  Of 
these, 59 percent would vote to recall President Chavez, and 
41 percent would vote to retain him.  Datanalisis shows a 
steady decline in disapproval for Chavez from 57.2 to 54.8 
percent between November 2003 and March 2004. 
 
4.  (U) According to Datanalisis support for the CNE has 
fallen from 67 to 44 percent from December 2003 to March 
2004. Support for the armed forces has fallen from 61 to 44 
percent.  Chavez and the judicial system have held steady at 
41 and 43 percent respectively.  The Catholic church was the 
most respected institution, at 73 percent. 
 
-------------- 
Consultores 21 
-------------- 
 
5.  (U) Consultores 21 poll, which was obtained by the 
Embassy, was taken from March 19 to 30 with a sample of 
1,500. It shows that Chavez would be recalled 53-40 percent, 
compared with 52-43 in December 2003. Chavez would also be 
the first choice in a hypothetical presidential election for 
37.5 percent of the voters, followed by Enrique Mendoza, at 
17 percent. The Movimiento Quinta Republica (MVR) was the 
first choice of 31 percent of those polled, while opposition 
parties were chosen by 40 percent and 29 chose neither or 
none. 
 
6.  (U) 15 percent of those polled said they agreed with 
Chavez, whatever he said, while 26 percent agreed with him, 
but admitted that he could be mistaken. nine percent agreed 
with the opposition, whatever they said, while 30 percent 
supported them, but admitted they could be mistaken. This 
poll gives a 41 to 39 percent majority for Chavez, while 17 
percent declared themselves Ni-Ni. 
 
7.  (U) 35 percent of those polled indicated that someone in 
their household had benefited from one of the GOV's social 
plans. The acquisition of goods of primary necessity was 
cited by 42 of those who had received help, while 55 percent 
cited one of the educational programs. Those polled were 
evenly divided on whether these plans are meant to help 
people, or control and indoctrinate them, 48 to 48 percent. 
 
8.  (U) 41 percent of those polled said that the opposition 
should keep fighting if the recall referendum did not take 
place, while 53 percent said they should wait until the 2006 
presidential elections. Of those who wanted to keep 
struggling, 39 percent indicated taking the streets and 
protesting as the best tactic. Only four percent favored 
 
armed rebellion. Overall, 85 percent of respondents thought 
there was political violence in Venezuela, and 82 percent 
said defending ones beliefs did not justify violence, against 
14 percent who thought it did. 
 
------- 
COMMENT 
------- 
 
9.  (C) President Chavez's popularity rating in these two 
polls constrasts with earlier polls that suggested Chavez' 
support was slipping to around 30 percent. In both polls 
Chavez is at 40 percent, while the opposition is still 
divided. The polls indicate that Chavez would lose a recall 
referendum if one were held, but would be formidable if 
Presidential elections were held instead (and if Chavez were 
a candidate in a post-referendum election.) The MVR has the 
most support of any one party by far, though in theory an 
alliance of all the opposition parties could defeat it. 
 
10.  (C) We suspect these and other polls may underestimate 
to some extent Chavez' support among the poor and very poor. 
In addition, in a dynamic, media-driven electoral situation, 
Chavez's charisma and tactical smarts -- and control of 
government -- would help him. 
SHAPIRO 
 
 
NNNN 
 
      2004CARACA01539 - CONFIDENTIAL 

Latest source of this page is cablebrowser-2, released 2011-10-04