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i don't think i need to come up with examples as they are more than prevalent, and it's certainly possible to have illiberal democracy.
it's hard to deny the authoritarian tendencies he's exhibited, pretty much textbook (perhaps why he seems to come in a lot of my classes, ha). but yeah, we're talking about restrictions on the press, mobilization of the population, etc. then there's the alteration of government: chavez certainly views his regime in a delegative democratic light, so the legislature took a passive role, he instituted limits on the transfer of power from himself, changed the constitution to keep his base happy and himself in power, etc. and along the lines of what i said earlier about imperialism, these days you can't just blatantly rig elections, so instead you put in obstacles for the opposition such as purposefully making it more difficult/too time consuming to vote (think ohio 2004), unrealistic or burdensome requirements to run for office, you use the trappings of state power and money to balloon your own party's campaign effort, etc.
now, this very sober account will certainly fall on deaf ears of many around here who admire chavez and will go to many unreasonable lengths to defend him. if anything, i feel bad for them and especially evo because he looks up to tio hugo so much, he thinks he's sooooo anti-american yet the truth remains that one of the united states' biggest suppliers of oil is, you guessed it, venezuela. keep in mind that the us for the most part has a realist foreign policy approach, such that we tolerate chavez's obviously meaningless rhetoric because he'll gladly keep taking american money that he needs to fund his own programs domestically and abroad that he uses to maintain his sphere of influence.
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