The graveyards are full of indispensable men, said Georges Clemenceau, Prime Minister of France during World War I, and promptly died to prove his point. He was duly replaced, and France was fine without him. Same goes for Hugo Chavez and Venezuela.
"Comandante Presidente" Chavez's death on Tuesday came as no surprise. He was clearly coming home to die when he returned from his last bout of surgery in Cuba in December, and since then everybody in politics in Venezuela has been pondering their post-Chavez strategies. But none of them really knows what will happen in the election that will be held by the end of April, let alone what happens afterwards.
Venezuela never stopped being a democracy, despite 14 years of Chavez's rule. He didn't seize power. He didn't even rig elections, though he used the Government's money and privileged access to the media to good effect. He was elected president four times, the first three with increasing majorities - but the last time, in 2012, he fell back sharply, defeating his rival by only 54 per cent-44 per cent.
That is certainly not a wide enough margin to guarantee that his appointed successor, Nicolas Maduro, will win the next election. Maduro will doubtless benefit from a certain sympathy vote, but that effect may be outweighed by the fact that Chavez is no longer there in person to work his electoral magic.
If his United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) were to lose that election, it would not be a tragedy. Chavez was an unnecessarily combative and polarising politician and a truly awful administrator, but he has actually achieved what he went into politics for. Twenty years ago, Venezuelan politics was a corrupt game fought out between two factions of a narrow elite. Now the task of using the country's oil wealth to improve the lives of the poor majority is central to all political debate.