Stabroek News

Venezuela enables opposition coalition to participat­e in elections

- CARACAS, (Reuters)

- Venezuela will allow a coalition of major opposition political parties to field candidates in upcoming elections, the head of the electoral council said yesterday, as the opposition and government prepare to enter into a negotiatio­n process.

The South American country's supreme court in 2018 ruled that the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), which groups large opposition parties, could not participat­e in elections, arguing candidates could not be members of both the MUD and the individual political parties that form it. The lifting of that ban by National Electoral Council (CNE) President Pedro Calzadilla comes after several actions by President Nicolas Maduro seen by some diplomats and analysts as olive branches to the opposition of state and local elections in November in the midst of a years-long political crisis.

Opposition leader Juan Guaido has not said whether or not he believes opposition candidates should take part in the upcoming vote, after the mainstream opposition boycotted presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections in 2018 and 2020, respective­ly, arguing they were rigged in favor of Maduro's ruling socialist party.

The opposition, backed by the United States and most Western democracie­s, labels Maduro a dictator who has clung to power through rigged elections and persecutio­n of opponents. Maduro, supported by Russia and China, labels Guaido a puppet of Washington seeking to oust him in a coup.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana