The Oklahoman

Maduro declared winner in disputed Venezuela election

- BY SCOTT SMITH AND JOSHUA GOODMAN

CARACAS, VENEZUELA — Venezuelan officials declared socialist leader Nicolas Maduro the easy winner of Sunday’s presidenti­al election, while his leading challenger questioned the legitimacy of a vote marred by irregulari­ties and called for a new ballot to prevent a brewing social crisis from exploding.

The National Election Council announced that with almost 93 percent of polling stations reporting, Maduro won nearly 68 percent of the votes, beating nearest challenger Henri Falcon by almost 40 points.

The disputed victory is likely to heighten internatio­nal pressure on Maduro, as voter turnout was the lowest in a presidenti­al race since the start of Venezuela’s leftist revolution two decades ago. Even as voting was taking place Sunday, a senior State Department official warned that the U.S. might press ahead on threats of imposing crippling oil sanctions on the nation that sits atop the world’s largest crude reserves.

The election “without any doubt lacks legitimacy and we categorica­lly refuse to recognize this process,” Falcon told supporters before the results were announced.

Falcon was joined in his call for a new election by third-place finisher Javier Bertucci, who got around 11 percent of the vote. Bertucci, a TV evangelist, stopped short of challengin­g the results, saying what he called a mistaken opposition boycott also boosted Maduro.

But he said that in the event of a new vote, Maduro should do the dignified thing and refuse to run. If Maduro presses forward, he said, Venezuela would explode from a social crisis marked by widespread food shortages and hyperinfla­tion before his new term starts next January.

Both of Maduro’s opponents accused electoral authoritie­s of turning a blind eye to a slew of blatant violations, including the establishm­ent of red tents just steps away from voting centers where ruling party activists scanned on cellphones government-issued “Fatherland Cards.” Many voters said they hoped it would bring them a cash bonus or even a free apartment.

Under Venezuela’s electoral law, any political activity must take place at least 650 feet from voting centers. National Electoral Council President Tibisay Lucena acknowledg­ed a handful of complaints, but insisted they were minor compared to past elections.

Falcon, a one-time acolyte of the late President Hugo Chavez, said his campaign found “red points” at 86 percent of polling sites nationwide. He called them a “pressure mechanism, an element of political and social blackmail” directed at the poor.

Voting centers across Venezuela appeared largely empty for the election despite assurances from government officials that millions had turned out to vote by midmorning.

Turnout in the previous three presidenti­al elections averaged around 79 percent. Chavez, after taking office in 1999, eliminated mandatory voting in Venezuela.

Opposition leaders said the lifeless voting centers were evidence that Venezuelan­s heeded their call to abstain from voting in an election they contended was certain to be rigged in favor of Maduro’s socialist policies.

Opinion polls say the overwhelmi­ng majority of Venezuelan­s distrust the electoral council. Turnout figures in last year’s elections for a constituti­onal assembly, which the opposition also boycotted, were inflated by at least 1 million votes, according to the company that provided technology for Venezuela’s electronic voting machines for more than a decade.

Both Maduro and the two anti-government presidenti­al candidates who broke with the opposition’s push to boycott the election had urged voters to go to the polls.

Maduro, setting an example for government supporters who he called on to vote early, cast his ballot in Caracas shortly after fireworks and loud speakers blasting a military hymn roused Venezuelan­s from sleep about 5 a.m.

He said Venezuelan­s would provide an example of democracy to the world and brushed back suggestion­s he was taking the country down an authoritar­ian path.

“It’s offensive when they say the Venezuelan people are falling under dictatorsh­ip,” he said after voting.

Maduro also said that if he won the election, he would seek an understand­ing with his opponents on a way forward for the crisis-wracked country. “I’m going to stubbornly and obsessivel­y insist in dialogue for peace,” he said.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, wave to supporters in Caracas, Venezuela, after the National Electoral Council announced that with almost 93 percent of polling stations reporting, Maduro won nearly 68 percent of the...
[AP PHOTO] Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, wave to supporters in Caracas, Venezuela, after the National Electoral Council announced that with almost 93 percent of polling stations reporting, Maduro won nearly 68 percent of the...

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