Lecuna, Antonio2015-03-162015-03-162014-12Published in Dissent, 60(3), 2013, pages 26-28 [DOI: 10.1353/dss.2013.0067]DISSENT, 2013, vol. 60, n° 3, p.27-29http://hdl.handle.net/11447/59Venezuela’s political institutions have mutated from a subsidised coalition that almost privatised the oil industry to a populist nationalism that is polarising society to the brink of civil war. In this paper, I examine chavismo in Venezuela as a new and unusual revelatory phenomenon and the most extreme case of leftwing populism in Latin America. The within-case analysis addresses the extreme polarisation of the political landscape and the consolidation of the Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (United Socialist Political Party of Venezuela, or PSUV) as a united leftwing redistributive party. The conclusions suggest that the PSUV would need to evolve into an institutionalised phenomenon –beyond the nominal leader– with a clear division of power and strong internal debate, and the diverse opposition would need to unite under one political organisation with a defined ideology that is more relevant than the single bonding effect of removing Chávez15en-USInstitutionsEconomic developmentTerritorial developmentVenezuelaPublic policyFrom Chavismo to a democratic left in VenezuelaDocumento de trabajo