Presidency of Raúl Leoni


Raúl Leoni served as President of Venezuela from March 13, 1964 to March 11, 1969.

Background

In the elections of 1963 the Democratic Action candidate Raúl Leoni, a long-time ally of Rómulo Betancourt from the times of dictator Juan Vicente Gómez, won handily. Rafael Caldera of COPEI came second. The Wolfgang Larrazábal political phenomenon was eclipsed and Jóvito Villalba on his own came just behind Caldera. AD was still the pardo party by excellence, but Caracas was definitely lost.

Presidency

Judicial policy

The Law on Commutation of Sentences by Pardon or Banishment from National Territory was enacted in Venezuela, decreed on 15 December 1964 by President Raúl Leoni and published in the Official Gazette No. 27,619.
On 7 August 1968, the government ordered the release of 67 political prisoners and the exile of Simón Sáez Mérida.

Economy

The administration implemented significant fiscal reforms, including a reduction in public spending coupled with an increase in the nation's international reserves. In 1967, his government enacted a comprehensive reform through a new Income Tax Law.

Energy

During this period, Venezuela broke its annual oil export record, reaching an average of 3.6 million barrels per day by 1968.

Education

During Raúl Leoni's presidency, two police raids were conducted at the Central University of Venezuela : the first on 15 May 1964 and the second on 14 December 1966.

Agriculture

During Leoni’s presidency, rice production increased by 107%, while corn production rose by 39.5%. By the end of his term, nearly 85% of the nation's food consumption was domestically sourced.

Infrastructure

Raúl Leoni's presidency saw the construction of the Guri Dam, a power station with a combined installed capacity of 1750 megawatts that created a reservoir which is the largest fresh water body of water in Venezuela and one of the largest man-made blackwater lakes ever created.

Environment

In 1967, the Caño Mánamo was closed as part of an infrastructure project by the Venezuelan Corporation of Guayana. According to Monsonyi and Jackson, this led to the "complete ecological destruction of the western Delta: water stagnation and salinization, the decline of local flora and fauna, the disintegration of numerous agricultural communities ", and the "death by hunger, thirst, and disease of thousands Warao Indigenous people".

Human Rights

During the counterinsurgency campaign against guerrilla movements, numerous arrests were made of insurgents, civilians, and politicians accused of collaboration. Reports emerged of procedural delays and modifications to the Penal Code to increase penalties for sedition-related crimes. Several media outlets faced censorship, including the newspapers El Clarín and La Extra, the magazine Venezuela Gráfica, and outlets linked to the Cadena Capriles.

Enforced disappearances

According to Revista SIC, Venezuela experienced "the highest number of enforced disappearances by police or military forces in the continent during the 1960s."
Under Raúl Leoni's presidency, the parliamentary group Vanguardia Popular Nacionalista, including deputies José Vicente Rangel, Luis Miquilena and José Herrera Oropeza, denounced extrajudicial executions and clandestine detention centers where detainees were allegedly tortured, killed, and their remains concealed.
A prominent case was that of, general secretary of the Communist Party, who was abducted in public in 1965 and his weighted body dumped at sea, though it later washed ashore near Lechería. Following these revelations, Congress formed an investigative commission, and the Attorney General launched an inquiry. The congressional investigations also examined the disappearances of sociologist Víctor Soto Rojas and Humberto Barrios.
On 29 August 1965, the General Amnesty Council, comprising trade unions and professional associations, met at Caracas' Casa del Periodista and published a report condemning state-sponsored human rights violations, including documented disappearances.

Foreign policy

Leoni maintained the foreign policy framework established by Rómulo Betancourt, known as the Betancourt Doctrine. In 1966, Venezuela joined the Latin American Free Trade Association and later that year, Leoni signed the Cartagena Agreement in Bogotá, a trade bloc comprising Venezuela, Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador.

Opposition

Guerrillas

Leoni's government was unexceptional, but it was Leoni who had to liquidate the remnants of the communist insurrection, for which he put the army in charge of the country with carte blanche to be as ruthless as it had to. But in fact it was the communist guerrilleros themselves who brought about their own liquidation. They had no rural support whatsoever. Unlike guerrillas all over the world, they did not control villages and lived from hand to mouth. They knew they were no match for the army and avoided confrontations. Castro had been hoping that Venezuela would be the second act of the Latin American revolution, and he tried to supply the Venezuelan guerrillas. This was in keeping with the theory of what could be called the "permanent agrarian revolution", which the French intellectual Régis Debray had expressed in the widely circulated book Revolution Inside the Revolution and Ernesto "Che" Guevara had been trying to carry out first in Africa and later, fatally for him, in Bolivia. Castro sent a trusted officer, Manuel Ochoa, to assess the Venezuelan guerrillas, and the report that he brought was negative, which effectively ended Cuba's intervention in Venezuelan affairs. By then the Venezuelan leftists had given up on violence and were seeking legalization, but Leoni did not offer it. Ochoa was later tried and executed by Castro on an unlikely charge of drug-smuggling.