Miami Herald

Maduro shuts down key opponents and sets up presidenti­al election against 11 easy-to-beat rivals

- BY ANTONIO MARIA DELGADO adelgado@elnuevoher­ald.com

The Venezuelan government closed down the registrati­on process for July’s presidenti­al election after midnight Monday without allowing top opposition leader María Corina Machado or her proxy to compete, creating conditions for a victory for current leader Nicolás Maduro even though polls show his popularity is in the single digits.

Maduro, who was accused by the United States and 50 other countries of stealing the last presidenti­al election, will now compete against 11 littleknow­n and in most cases highly distrusted candidates, who are expected to fracture the opposition vote among themselves.

The regime had previmanag­ed ously announced that it would not allow Machado to participat­e in the election. The opposition leader, who according to most polls would easily beat Maduro with as much as 70% of the vote, on Friday appointed a little-known university professor, Corina Yoris, to run as her substitute. But the regimecont­rolled National Electoral Council did not allow Yoris to register to run.

The 11 candidates slotted to compete against Maduro on July 28 have lower showing in the polls than Maduro, whose popularity fluctuates around 9%. The best-known figure is the governor of the state of Zulia, Manuel Rosales, who lost a presidenti­al election in 2006 against Hugo Chávez.

Rosales, who heads one of the four largest opposition parties in Venezuela, to register his candidacy on Monday although his party had been backing Machado, who received more than 92% of the vote in a primary election held by the opposition in October.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Machado questioned the legitimacy of an election where Maduro got to pick his own rivals but said the regime is underestim­ating the will of the Venezuelan people to enact political change.

“I think that what happened last night will in the end accelerate the transition. These actions are too dark and grotesque, and the country deeply rejects them. And what’s left for us to do now is to continue organizing our social movement,” Machado said.

Most analysts had predicted that Maduro would never allow Machado to enter the race, given that there was very little chance he would beat her, even while controllin­g an election council that runs elections without any type of independen­t supervisio­n.

Elections organized by the regime have a long history of fraud. In the most recent example, a referendum held late last year to define whether Venezuela should invade Guyana over a territoria­l dispute had a participat­ion of nearly 900,000, according to military insiders, but the regime was quick to declare that more than 10 million Venezuelan­s had participat­ed.

The regime is organizing the election amid growing social tension, which continues to accumulate although close to 8 million Venezuelan­s have left the country to escape the hardships there.

Political science professor Orlando Viera Blanco said that millions of people in Venezuela are hoping to see a political change this year and that they might also decide to leave if it does not happen.

“The situation in Venezuela continues to be very precarious and miserable, with poverty levels of more than 80%, and of 52% of extreme poverty, and this is fueling the decision to leave,” he said. “We again have a situation where 30% of the population is thinking about abandoning the country if we don’t get rid of Maduro at this point.”

Antonio Maria Delgado: 305-376-2180, @DelgadoAnt­onioM

 ?? Office of the President of Venezuela ?? Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro is virtually certain to win the election on July 28, with a far-more-popular opponent barred from running and her stand-in also excluded.
Office of the President of Venezuela Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro is virtually certain to win the election on July 28, with a far-more-popular opponent barred from running and her stand-in also excluded.

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