Hardline party on front line of Venezuelan political war

By Andrew Cawthorne

CARACAS, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Visitors to the headquarters of Venezuela's Popular Will party are greeted by large photos of global political heroes from Nelson Mandela to Mahatma Gandhi.

Facing them is a life-size cardboard cutout of imprisoned party founder Leopoldo Lopez, fist raised in defiance.

The intended message is clear: like other revered opponents of repression, Popular Will is leading the fight against tyranny in socialist-ruled Venezuela, and suffering the most for that.

President Nicolas Maduro, however, has a different narrative: the party, launched in a provincial sports stadium in 2009, is a well-financed puppet of U.S. policy harboring violent coup-plotters intent on bringing him down.

Even some more moderate allies in the opposition coalition are skeptical of Popular Will, viewing its confrontational street tactics - from hunger-strikes to marches - as too hotheaded.

Maduro this month created a new unit, the "Anti-Coup Commando", which has the orange-branded party in its sights.

"There is one organization in particular that doesn't deserve the name political party, an organization forged in the shadow of terrorism and violent actions: Popular Will," said Vice-President Tareck El Aissami who heads it.

In its first few days, the unit arrested four party members.

A local substitute lawmaker and his girlfriend visiting from abroad were stopped at a roadblock and accused of carrying arms - which the party says were planted on them - while two other regional activists were also rounded up for alleged coup plans.

That took to 13 the number of party activists behind bars, the largest of any opposition group, in what critics say is a wave of repression intended to keep Maduro in power despite his unpopularity and a brutal economic crisis.

Despairing of last year's failure to bring about a referendum to recall Maduro and believing it is up against a dictatorship, Popular Will is now advocating civil disobedience while other opposition parties still push for a new vote.

"The dictatorship has made this country unlivable for the people, so the people have to make it unlivable for them," said Freddy Guevara, 30, an ex-student leader who leads Popular Will in the absence of Lopez.

"That means mobilizations, marches, concentrations, downing of tools, sit-downs, hunger-strikes, refusal to pay taxes," Guevara told Reuters at a cafe even as El Aissami denounced him as a "terrorist" on TV screens nearby.

"STUCK WITH MADURO"?

Appetite for Gandhi-like civil disobedience within the opposition coalition - where Popular Will is the third party by number of lawmakers - appears lukewarm however.