AndrewJB wrote:Chavez came to (and remained in) power in elections that were considered by outsiders to be fair and open. He may have had an outlandish style, but it wouldn't be correct to call him a dictator. What he did that was good, as you say, building hospitals and schools, looking after the poor, enabling local democracy, and using the country's natural resources to pay for this. He took on big economic interests, but not in such a way that their power was crushed. A lot is always made of his use of state media, but during his time in office the majority of media in the country remained privately owned. Certainly the problems currently facing Venezuela have nothing to do with the good things Chavez did, but probably corruption; and I doubt Corbyn was praising the corruption when he lauded Chavez.
A lot of what you say is true but, still, Chavez was simply a populist, albeit of the left.
Sometimes populism can bring short term benefits and it is absolutely "a good thing" to try to help the lot of the poor especially in places where poverty really is extreme. It seems as well that his initial government had an overwhelming mandate from the population. No problem there.
The problem is with someone like Chavez though is that with his outlandish style and sloganeering made him more of media star rather than a politician (the guy had his own show on state television for example that lasted for several hours at a time where he would give away flats to poor people etc in some kind of flamboyant modern day Robin Hood style). Without even getting into the debate about the rights and wrongs of "socialism" here, Chavez should have spent more time encouraging a state founded on the rule of law rather than encouraging a cult of his own personality and the arbitrary use of power. In my opinion, the seeds of the collapse of Venezuela were already sown whilst he was in power and you can not separate the "corruption", as you call it, from his legacy.