1952 Venezuelan Constituent Assembly election

Constituent Assembly elections were held in Venezuela on 30 November 1952.[1] After the elections, it was planned that the Assembly would nominate a provisional president and then draft a new constitution.[2] Although taking place under military dictatorship, with the main opposition party (Democratic Action) banned, the election was fair enough to permit early results showing an unexpected defeat for the ruling military junta as the Democratic Republican Union won 62.8% of the vote.[3] The junta then blocked the final results from being published and installed General Marcos Pérez Jiménez as provisional President, an outcome confirmed by the Constituent Assembly, which the opposition parties boycotted.

Background

Venezuela had been run by a three-person junta from the 1948 Venezuelan coup d'état, under the leadership of Carlos Delgado Chalbaud. His assassination in November 1950 caused delays in the promulgation of the junta's promised electoral law,[4] and afterwards Pérez Jiménez, its most powerful member, opposed the draft law's enfranchisement of all persons over 18, describing it as enfranchising illiterates and minors.[4] Perceived pressure of domestic and international opinion saw the electoral law published in April 1951.[4]

Campaign

The main party of the Venezuelan opposition and of the previous democratic government, Democratic Action, was banned and was specifically prohibited from participating.[5] The Communist Party of Venezuela was also banned.[6] In the absence of Democratic Action, the Democratic Republican Union (URD) was the most powerful opposition party.[4] It seriously considered abstaining but ultimately decided to participate.[4]

The opposition URD, led by Jóvito Villalba, and COPEI, led by Rafael Caldera, "had to furnish detailed information to the government regarding party-sponsored public meetings, membership rolls, and finances".[6] In addition, press coverage of both parties was censored so strictly that it hardly communicated any more than movements of its leaders, with party policies simply omitted.[4]

In the last weeks of the campaign, a parallel organization outside the political parties was organized to support Pérez Jiménez's push for the presidency; it was announced on 5 November that the "National Movement" had collected 1.6 million signatures in support.[4] The movement became so prominent that the President of the Electoral Council reminded the country that it was electing a Constituent assembly, not a President.[4]

Results

Early returns, with around a third of the votes in,[4] showed the URD on 147,065 votes, with the pro-junta FEI trailing with around 50,000 and COPEI finishing third.[5] Pérez Jiménez ordered news coverage halted,[6] and no further figures were announced until he declared final results on 2 December of 788,086 votes for FEI, 638,336 for URD and 300,309 for COPEI.[5] Democratic Action in exile said that URD and COPEI had together won 1.6 million of 1.8 million votes cast, and 87 of the 103 assembly seats,[5] and unofficial results published by Armando Veloz Mancera showed 1,198,000 votes for the URD, 403,000 for FEI and 306,000 for COPEI.[3] Some details in state-level results support the charge of fraud. In some states the URD was entitled to one of two seats, based on its share of the official vote, but received none.[4]

Aftermath

After the results were announced the ruling junta resigned and handed power to the military, who named Pérez Jiménez Provisional President.[6] When the Constituent assembly met on 9 January 1953, although URD and COPEI boycotted it,[5] the election results were ratified, with Pérez Jiménez being formally installed as President of Venezuela.[6] Ultimately, the Assembly drafted a new constitution, which was promulgated in April 1953 and vested the president with sweeping powers to act to protect national security, peace, and order.[6] For all intents and purposes, the document transformed Pérez Jiménez's presidency into a legal dictatorship.

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References

  1. Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume II, p555 ISBN 978-0-19-928358-3
  2. Samuel Finer, Jay Stanley (2002), The man on horseback: the role of the military in politics, Transaction Publishers. pp182-3
  3. Nohlen, p568
  4. Leo B. Lott (1957), "The 1952 Venezuelan Elections: A Lesson for 1957", The Western Political Quarterly, Vol. 10, No. 3 (Sep., 1957), pp. 541-558
  5. Robert Jackson Alexander (1982), Rómulo Betancourt and the transformation of Venezuela, Transaction Publishers. p356
  6. Hollis Micheal Tarver Denova, Julia C. Frederick (2005), The history of Venezuela, Greenwood Publishing Group. p357
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