Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Maduro declared winner in Venezuela’s election

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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, Mr. Maduro won nearly 68 percent of the votes, beating nearest challenger Henri Falcon by more than 40 points.

The disputed victory is likely to heighten internatio­nal pressure on Mr. 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,” Mr. Falcon told supporters before the results were announced.

Echoing the views of Venezuela’s tattered opposition movement, the U.S., European Union and many Latin American countries have already said they won’t recognize the results.

On Sunday, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan said Washington also was considerin­g additional sanctions including an oil embargo. But he also expressed caution about such a step, which could have dire humanitari­an consequenc­es on the ground.

“We don’t want to damage the country in a way that makes it difficult to repair after democracy is restored,” Mr. Sullivan told reporters.

Mr. Falcon was joined in his call for a new election by third-place finisher Javier Bertucci, who got around 11 percent of the vote. Mr. Bertucci, a TV evangelist, stopped short of challengin­g the results, saying what he called a mistaken opposition boycott that led to the lowest voter turnout in two decades of socialist rule also boosted Mr. Maduro.

But he said that in the event of a new vote, Mr. Maduro should do the courageous thing and desist from running. If Mr. Maduro presses forward, he said, Venezuela would explode from a social crisis marked by widespread food shortages and hyperinfla­tion before his new six-year term starts next January.

Mr. Maduro immediatel­y called for dialogue with his presidenti­al opponents. But he showed no sign of replaying Sunday’s vote.

“The electoral processes have ended for now,” he said.

 ?? Meridith Kohut/The New York Times ?? A voter casts his ballot in the presidenti­al election Sunday in Caracas. Many internatio­nal observers say the election has been engineered for President Nicolas Maduro to win despite what critics say has been years of mismanagem­ent and an economic...
Meridith Kohut/The New York Times A voter casts his ballot in the presidenti­al election Sunday in Caracas. Many internatio­nal observers say the election has been engineered for President Nicolas Maduro to win despite what critics say has been years of mismanagem­ent and an economic...

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