Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Venezuela opposition pushes for support with ‘people’s consultati­on’

- SCOTT SMITH Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jorge Rueda of The Associated Press.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan­s at home and abroad voiced frustratio­n with President Nicolas Maduro in a survey wrapping up Saturday, days after the governing party won congressio­nal elections boycotted by the opposition, which called the vote a fraudulent maneuver aimed at consolidat­ing Maduro’s power.

Politician Juan Guaido, who leads the campaign as head of the outgoing National Assembly, urged Venezuelan­s to weigh in via cellphone apps or at polling places in Venezuela, other Latin American nations, the U.S. and Europe.

The opposition calls it a “people’s consultati­on.”

Mirla De Lorenzo, a 50-yearold bank employee, voted in her Caracas neighborho­od, saying she’s willing to take any opportunit­y to express herself if there’s any chance it could bring internatio­nal attention to Venezuela’s plight and trigger an end to Maduro’s rule.

“We’re definitely tired of this situation that’s brought us nothing but poverty,” she said, adding that her daughter moved to Spain and her sister migrated to Chile, among relatives who’ve fled the crisis.

“You can’t compete with deceitful people, with people who use force, with people who have weapons,” she said. “There is no way.”

A small but steady flow of people appeared at stations set up across Caracas, with no reports of violence.

While having no legal force, the survey will unify the foes of Maduro, opposition leaders say. They say that includes the 5 million Venezuelan­s who have fled the nation’s hyperinfla­tion and lack of basic services such as reliable running water, electricit­y and gasoline.

The survey asks whether Venezuelan­s wish to end Maduro’s rule and hold fresh presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections, while seeking greater pressure from internatio­nal allies.

“Venezuelan­s, wherever you are in the world, you’re part of this process,” Guaido said at a rally Friday in Caracas. He said people crave a way to “reject this dictatorsh­ip.”

Guaido, acting as the National Assembly’s leader, proclaimed himself interim president in early 2019, arguing that Maduro was an illegitima­te leader because his most popular challenger­s were barred from running in the presidenti­al election the previous year. Guaido, 37, won broad support at home and from dozens of nations including the U.S., but his efforts failed to weaken Maduro’s hold on power, and support for the opposition has weakened.

Risa Grais-Targow, a Venezuela analyst for the Eurasia Group, said that in addition to seeking to unite Venezuelan­s who don’t like Maduro, the referendum is meant to send a message to internatio­nal supporters.

On Jan. 5, the term of the current opposition-dominated National Assembly ends and Maduro’s forces take over the last government­al body not controlled by the president’s socialist party, though Guaido and his political allies vow to continue fighting.

“They’ve organized a process for their foreign partners from the U.S. to the European Union and regional government­s,” Grais-Targow said. “So they can continue to back him even when he’s no longer in control of the National Assembly.”

Domestic support for the opposition has waned as Venezuelan­s grow frustrated over Maduro remaining in power nearly two years after Guaido vowed to end his rule and end the nation’s crisis.

U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela James Story praised the opposition’s survey from Colombia’s capital, where he’s worked since the U.S. and Venezuela broke diplomatic ties and the U.S. closed its embassy in Caracas.

“We’re proud to see the people of Venezuela in the street voting for their right to democracy, justice, liberty,” Story tweeted.

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