First presidency of Rómulo Betancourt voting in the 1946 elections A junta formed, headed by Betancourt, as , and with
Carlos Delgado Chalbaud as Minister of Defence. The
1946 Venezuelan Constituent Assembly election showed that AD under Betancourt had indeed become the party of the vast majority of Venezuelans. Two other parties were founded:
COPEI (Independent Electoral Committee), by the pro-clerical
Rafael Caldera, whose party later was later re-baptized Social Christian COPEI; and URD (
Democratic Republican Union), which was joined by
Jóvito Villalba, considered one of the greatest orators in Venezuelan history, and made over practically into his personal party. Since the death of Gomez, the following governments had been gradually increasing oil taxes. In the Junta, development minister
Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonso decreed a 50-50 sharing agreement with the oil companies. The junta also took other daring measures. Catholic schools, which were the best in the country, were forced to close temporarily while a new national curriculum was elaborated.
Agrarian reform was approved. Bureucracy was expanded due to the extent of the reforms, but also because AD had to
reward its more prominent backers. The divide between 'blanco' ('white') and 'pardo' was nominally abolished although in practice not many pardos could fulfill even the lowest requirements for civil service, into which nevertheless many entered. A national educational campaign was inaugurated, however low literacy rates and literacy requirements for teachers meant that the system was under great strain.
Presidency of Rómulo Gallegos There was
a national election for the presidency in 1947, which the '
adeco' candidate, the talented novelist
Rómulo Gallegos, won, again by a huge margin. But at the time there was much discontent in the middle class, which was Caldera's base of support—he got 262,000 votes—not to speak of the upper crust; and of course the officers who had ushered AD into power were on the lookout for the main chance. ==1948 coup d'etat==