The Freeman

Maduro claims landslide win in Venezuela state elections

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CARACAS — President Nicolas Maduro's government won a landslide victory in closely watched regional elections in Venezuela yesterday, according to official results that the opposition said were "suspicious."

Maduro's socialist party won governorsh­ips of 17 of the 23 states with the opposition Democratic Union Roundtable (MUD) coalition taking only five, according to the results announced by the National Elections Council.

The official turnout was 61.14 percent.

Maduro said his government had scored an "emphatic victory" over its rivals.

"The opposition has five," Maduro underscore­d in a speech to supporters, adding that his party could win one further state where the results were still in dispute.

Public opinion surveys had predicted that the opposition would win a majority of state governorsh­ips despite alleged government dirty tricks to suppress a high turnout.

Sunday's vote came against the backdrop of an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund report in which it sees Venezuela's economic downturn, and the suffering of its population, continuing.

Venezuela "remains in a full-blown economic, humanitari­an, and political crisis with no end in sight," the Fund said in a report on Latin American economies.

Internatio­nal powers accuse Maduro of dismantlin­g democracy by taking over state institutio­ns in the wake of an economic collapse caused by a fall in the price of oil, its main source of revenue.

Sunday's polls were the first contested by the opposition since legislativ­e elections in 2015 that gave it a majority in the National Assembly.

The MUD has seen Maduro's hand strengthen­ed after he faced down four months of protests that killed 125 people, forming a Constituen­t Assembly packed with his own allies and wresting legislativ­e power from the opposition­dominated National Assembly.

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