Advertise On EU-Digest

Annual Advertising Rates
Showing posts with label Henrique Capriles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henrique Capriles. Show all posts

4/15/13

Venezuela: Nicolas Maduro - Chavez's choice - wins in a razor-close election to succeed late president

Nicolas Maduro
Venezuelan electoral officials say voters elected Hugo Chavez's hand-picked successor as president in a razor-close special election Sunday.

Winner Nicolas Maduro campaigned on a promise to carry on Chavez's self-styled socialist revolution and defeated a two-time challenger who claimed the late president's regime has put Venezuela on the road to ruin.

Officials say Maduro defeated Henrique Capriles by only about 300,000 votes. The margin was 50.8 percent to 49.1 percent.

Maduro backers celebrated with fireworks over Caracas on Sunday while opposition backers banged pots and pans in protest after a nail-biting vote win for Hugo Chavez's protege.

The contrasting reactions underlined the deep polarization in the South American nation of 29 million people.

Read more: Venezuelans elect Nicolas Maduro, Chavez's choice, to succeed late president - World News

4/14/13

Venezuela: "Maduro is no Chávez" - Venezuela votes in hi-tech poll to choose Chávez successor - by Virginia Lopez and Jonathan Watts

Venezuelans went to hi-tech polling booths on Sunday for the first presidential election of the post-Hugo Chávez era, with surveys indicating that his chosen successor will win a clear mandate to continue his policies of "21st Century Socialism."

If he wins, Nicolás Maduro, the ruling party candidate, has promised to extend social welfare "missions" and disarm the slums to reduce alarmingly high levels of crime in the South American nation.

Although most recent polls have put the former trade union negotiator more than 10 points ahead of his business-orientated rival Henrique Capriles, there are indications that the turnout may not be as high as in the past.

The short, 10-day campaign was prompted by Chávez's death from cancer on 5 March. It has been marked by allegations of impropriety and constant references to the politician who dominated Venezuela's political life for the past 14 years.

Maduro's campaign slogan has been "We are all Chávez", describing himself as a son of the "Christ of the Poor". He visited his mentor's tomb on Saturday to commemorate the 10th anniversary of a failed coup against the former leader.

Capriles, a 40-year-old state governor who promised to manage the economy more effectively, wrote on his Twitter feed that this event – widely covered by the government-controlled media – was a "flagrant violation" of electoral rules that forbid campaigning in the two days prior to the vote.

It was one of many claims of unfairness leveled by the challenger, who is disadvantaged by Maduro's extra airtime on state news channels, his use of the presidential jet to fly to rallies, and resources and personnel from massive state-owned companies.

In contrast, the vote itself has been lauded by outside observers as among the most advanced in the world.
Voters lodge their choices electronically on touchscreens, then place printed hardcopies in a ballot box before signing their names to confirm they have done their electoral duty.

On the streets of Caracas, it was easy to spot those who had already voted by their purple little fingers, marked with indellible ink to ensure that nobody could cast a ballot twice.

Former US president Jimmy Carter has described this system as the best of the 92 national elections that his Carter Centre has monitored worldwide, though his organisation has emphasised there are concerns about campaign fairness.

Supporters of Maduro rallied voters early on Sunday morning with soundtrucks playing bugle calls and recordings of the national anthem being sung by Chávez.

However, at the Miguel Otero Silva voting centre in Antimano, a poor district in eastern Caracas, voters said the turnout seemed lower than six months ago when Venezuelans chose between Chávez and Capriles; the reasons many cited was that Maduro was no Chávez.

Read more: Venezuela votes in hi-tech poll to choose Chávez successor | World news | guardian.co.uk

10/8/12

Venezuela Chavez wins 3rd re-election in tightest race yet - by Frank Bajak

President Hugo Chavez
President Hugo Chavez put to rest any doubts about his masterful political touch in winning a third consecutive six-year term after a bitterly fought race against a youthful rival who has galvanized Venezuela’s opposition.

The state governor who lost Sunday’s presidential vote, Henrique Capriles, had accused the flamboyant incumbent of unfairly leveraging to his advantage Venezuela’s oil wealth to finance his campaign as well as flaunting his near total control of state institutions.

Capriles also narrowed Chavez’s margin of victory to his smallest yet in a presidential contest. This time, the former army paratroop commander who led a failed 1992 coup won 55 percent of the vote against 45 percent for Capriles, with 98 percent of the vote counted.
In 2006, Chavez’s margin of victory was 27 points.

Nevertheless, the populace endorsed once again Chavez’s stated aim of converting Venezuela into a socialist state.

Read more: Chavez wins 3rd re-election in tightest race yet - News - Boston.com