Venezuela postpones referendum endgame
CARACAS: The Venezuelan opposition’s push for a vote to remove President Nicolas Maduro ran into a roadblock Thursday when authorities announced a delay in setting the date for the final stage in the process. The leftist president’s opponents must collect four million signatures in three days to trigger a referendum - the last step in a bureaucratic obstacle course they are racing to complete by the end of the year. After months of political wrangling and mass street protests, the National Electoral Council (CNE) was supposed to announce yesterday when that three-day period will start. The Council had already postponed the announcement from Wednesday.
However, late Thursday the Council again postponed the decision. It argued in a statement that its workers were threatened by nationwide protests that the opposition has called for yesterday to keep up the pressure. Work would resume on Monday, the council said, without saying if it would then set a definite date. The Council “agreed on the measure after ... calls for protests” at the CNE offices across the country, many of which have been attacked since the recall process began in April, the statement read.
The CNE has already said it is looking at late October for the three-day petition drive. The opposition says that is too late and accuses the authorities of stalling. The center-right coalition behind the referendum drive, the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), is racing to force a vote by January 10, which is the deadline to trigger new elections.