Albuquerque Journal

Venezuela election looks pointless

Potential voters don’t trust process; many are focused on leaving nation

- LOS ANGELES TIMES

CARACAS, Venezuela — Mariana Leal won’t vote in today’s presidenti­al election because she believes the fix is in for President Nicolas Maduro to win re-election. Besides, the physical therapist from Caracas has something better to do: pack for her imminent departure from Venezuela.

“These elections don’t mean anything,” said Leal, 29, as she prepared to sell her last possession­s in her east Caracas apartment before leaving for Colombia. “There won’t be any real change. To the contrary, the deteriorat­ion of the country will accelerate.”

Leal’s intention to skip voting and determinat­ion to leave her native country are typical of the sentiments of many Venezuelan­s before Sunday’s election in which Maduro is expected to win his race against former Lara state Gov. Henri Falcon and evangelist preacher Javier Bertucci.

Disgust with Maduro among Venezuelan­s is high because of the lack of food and medical care, annual inflation of 14,000 percent and rising poverty. Reports of widespread hunger are common.

Originally scheduled for the end of this year, the election was moved up on orders of the Constituti­onal Assembly, a legislativ­e body set up by Maduro after the democratic­ally elected National Assembly was effectivel­y neutered by several rulings by Supreme Court judges loyal to the president that internatio­nal observers criticized as anti-democratic.

According to a recent opinion poll by the Meganalisi­s firm, Maduro’s approval rating is 15.3 percent.

Leal, who is married with an infant son, is one of the thousands of disaffecte­d Venezuelan­s in the process of “burning their boats” — selling all their possession­s and cutting all ties to start new lives in other countries. She plans to join her husband in Colombia this summer.

According to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, an estimated 900,000 Venezuelan­s migrated to other countries from 2015 to 2017 to escape the collapsed economy and repressive government. The flow of migrants through Colombia over the first three months of the year tripled over the comparable period last year, border authoritie­s said.

Abstention­s are likely to be high among the 20 million eligible voters given the low voter confidence in the Maduro-stacked National Electoral Council and the lack of internatio­nal monitors at the polls, according to a survey by Andres Bello Catholic University.

The Democratic Union bloc of opposition parties has urged its followers to boycott the election, considerin­g it fraudulent. The U.S., the European Union and neighborin­g countries, including Colombia, have said they will not recognize the election result.

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