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Venezuelan President Maduro set to run for re-election in 2018 vote

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CARACAS, (Reuters) Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro looked sure to stand for reelection in a presidenti­al vote due by the end of April where the ruling Socialists hope to trump a squabbling opposition despite an economic crisis and foreign sanctions.

The unpopular leader, whom foes decry as a dictator who has wrecked the OPEC member’s economy, said he would run if the ruling Socialist Party asked him, even as Venezuelan­s reel from empty shelves and the world’s fastest inflation.

“I’m ready to be a candidate,” he told reporters during a rally on Tuesday of cheering red-shirted supporters.

The 55-year-old former bus driver and union leader, who succeeded Hugo Chavez in 2013, benefits from a formidable political machinery, a compliant national election board, and a core of support from poor Venezuelan­s reliant on food handouts.

Critics from opposition politician­s to Western powers doubt authoritie­s will allow a free and fair vote, given the barring of some opposition figures from running plus abuse of state resources in campaignin­g. Some fear outright fraud. “These are not elections, it’s a military occupation with a fraudulent election board,” said hardline opposition activist Maria Corina Machado, referring to the armed forces’ major role in government and the board’s past pro-Maduro stance.

Announcing the presidenti­al poll would be held by the end of April, the pro-government Constituen­t Assembly superbody legislatur­e said another election in Venezuela was further evidence of its democratic credential­s despite a recent raft of internatio­nal sanctions.

The United States, Canada, and the European Union have all taken measures against Venezuela’s government over rights and corruption allegation­s, hurting the government’s image and spooking banks from working with Caracas.

Maduro blasted the European Union for imposing “grotesque” sanctions this week on seven senior Venezuelan officials, including a travel ban and an asset freeze, and took aim at Spain’s conservati­ve prime minister.

“Mariano Rajoy, get on all fours, my friend, because the people are going to slap you,” Maduro said, flanked by cabinet members and wife Cilia Flores, whom he refers to as the “First Combatant.”

Should the presidenti­al vote be perceived as fraudulent, further foreign sanctions could come, including from U.S. President Donald Trump who has made opposition to Maduro a prominent feature of his foreign policy.

U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said on

Tuesday she did not think it would be a good idea for Maduro to run for re-election. And a 14-member regional group that includes Canada, Mexico and Peru said an election held under the present conditions would lack legitimacy.

“We demand that presidenti­al elections be held with adequate lead time,” the so-called Lima Group said in a joint statement, adding that all political actors and independen­t internatio­nal observers must be allowed to take part.

Mexico pulled out of mediating government-opposition talks in the Dominican Republic, saying the sudden announceme­nt of a presidenti­al poll without guarantees was incompatib­le with the negotiatio­ns.

It is unclear whom the Democratic Unity opposition coalition would attempt to field. The opposition plans to hold primaries to choose a candidate, but the hasty presidenti­al vote may make that tricky.

Its most popular leaders are almost all sidelined from politics - jailed, in exile, or barred from holding office. Months of protests last year failed to dislodge Maduro but resulted in at least 125 deaths.

“The majority of Venezuelan­s loathe his government and his circle. If our people are allowed to decide, they are out!” one opposition leader, Henrique Capriles, said.

Capriles, a two-time presidenti­al candidate, is prohibited from holding office over allegation­s of “administra­tive irregulari­ties”. Former mayor Leopoldo Lopez is under house arrest for leading protests against Maduro, while his young protege Freddy Guevara has taken refuge in the Chilean embassy to avoid charges of plotting against Maduro.

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Nicolas Maduro

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