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Challenger in Venezuela sees chance to oust Maduro

- BY JULIE TURKEWITZ

The stakes in Venezuela could hardly be higher.

This July, for the first time in more than a decade, Venezuelan­s will vote in a presidenti­al election with an opposition candidate who has a fighting – if slim and improbable – chance at winning.

Amid an economic and democratic crisis that has led more than 7 million Venezuelan­s to abandon the country – considered among the world’s largest displaceme­nts – Nicolás Maduro, the country’s authoritar­ian president, has done something few thought he would: allowed an opposition candidate with widespread support to appear on the ballot.

Although largely unknown, the challenger is leading in several polls, underscori­ng how many Venezuelan­s are hungry for change.

Still, few have illusions that the vote will be democratic or fair. And even if a majority of voters cast their vote against Maduro, there is widespread doubt that he would allow the results to become public – or accept them if they do.

Venezuela prepares to vote at a moment when the country is facing consequent­ial issues that will resonate far beyond its borders.

They include overseeing the fate of the country’s vast oil reserves, the world’s largest; resetting – or not – battered relations with the United States; deciding whether Iran, China and Russia can continue depending on Venezuela as a key ally in the Western Hemisphere; and confrontin­g an internal humanitari­an crisis that has propelled a once prosperous nation into immense suffering.

A win for Maduro could drive Venezuela further into the hands of U.S. adversarie­s, intensify poverty and repression and spur an even larger exodus of people to head north toward the U.S., where an immigratio­n surge has become a central theme in the November presidenti­al election.

His opponent is Edmundo González, a former diplomat who became the surprise consensus candidate of the opposition after its popular leader, María Corina Machado, was barred by Maduro’s government from running.

His supporters hope he can help the country cast aside 25 years of Chavismo, the socialist movement that began with the democratic election of Hugo Chávez in 1998 and has since grown more authoritar­ian.

Before the July 28 vote, Maduro, 61, has in his grip the Legislatur­e, the military, the police, the justice system, the national election council, the country’s budget and much of the media, not to mention violent paramilita­ry gangs called colectivos.

González, 74, and Machado, 56, have made it clear that they are a package deal. Machado has been rallying voters at events across the country, where she is received like a rock star, filling city blocks with people making emotional pleas for her to save the country. González has stayed closer to Caracas, the capital, holding meetings and conducting television interviews.

In a joint interview, González said he was “taken by surprise” when Maduro allowed him to register as a candidate, and still had no clear explanatio­n why.

While Maduro has held elections in recent years, a key tactic has been to ban legitimate challenger­s.

The last competitiv­e presidenti­al election was held in 2013, when Maduro narrowly beat a longtime opposition figure, Henrique Capriles. In the next vote, in 2018, the government barred the country’s most popular opposition figures from running, and the U.S., the European Union and dozens of other nations refused to recognize the results.

But in recent months, Machado said, the country has witnessed a series of events few thought possible: Maduro’s government allowed an opposition primary vote to go forward, in which turnout was enormous and Machado emerged as the clear winner; the opposition – infamous for its infighting – managed to coalesce around Machado; and when she wasn’t able to run, opposition leaders united to back a replacemen­t, González.

“Never in 25 years have we entered an electoral process in a position of such strength,” Machado said.

(Both declined to say exactly what role Machado, if any, might take on in a González government.)

Three polls conducted inside the country showed that a majority of respondent­s planned to vote for González.

Perhaps the most important question, though, is not if González could attract enough votes to win – but whether Maduro is ready or willing to cede power.

The Maduro government has been choked by U.S. sanctions on the country’s vital oil industry, and some analysts say he allowed González to run only because it might help him sway Washington to ease up on the sanctions.

“I think the negotiatio­n with the United States is what is making an electoral process possible,” said Luz Mely Reyes, a prominent Venezuelan journalist.

If Maduro does give up power, it would almost surely be the result of an exit deal negotiated with the opposition.

Machado has argued repeatedly that her main challenge is to make Maduro see that staying in power is unsustaina­ble – that his government is running out of money, that too many Venezuelan­s want him out and that Chavismo is crumbling from the inside.

“The best option is a negotiated exit,” she said in the interview, “and the later it comes, the worse it will be.”

The country’s economic situation is dire, much of Maduro’s base has turned against him, and there are signs that Maduro is fearful of an internal rupture: He recently turned on a highrankin­g ally, oil minister Tareck El-Aissami, jailing him on accusation­s of corruption.

The move was seen as a warning to anyone who might challenge him from the inside.

But few people see Maduro as so weak that he would be forced to leave. And Maduro has a strong incentive to hold on: He and other officials in his government are being investigat­ed by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. He is also wanted by the U.S. government, which has offered $15 million for informatio­n leading to his arrest.

If Maduro did leave the presidency, he would almost surely want to be shielded from prosecutio­n, something that could be difficult to guarantee.

Still, Machado and González, in the joint interview, indicated a willingnes­s to negotiate a peaceful transition with the Maduro government before the election.

“We are absolutely willing to move forward in putting on the table all the necessary terms and guarantees,” said Machado, “so that all parties feel that it is a fair process.”

One senior U.S. official said there was no indication that talks about Maduro’s departure were happening now.

But, the official added, Maduro’s government was still talking to U.S. officials and to the opposition, a sign that Maduro continued to seek internatio­nal legitimacy and sanctions relief. That could make him change his posture, the official said, providing a sliver of optimism for the country’s future.

 ?? ADRIANA LOUREIRO FERNANDEZ NYT ?? Edmundo González, the candidate challengin­g incumbent President Nicolás Maduro in the presidenti­al election on July 28, hopes he can help Venezuela cast aside 25 years of Chavismo, the socialist movement that began with Hugo Chávez in 1998.
ADRIANA LOUREIRO FERNANDEZ NYT Edmundo González, the candidate challengin­g incumbent President Nicolás Maduro in the presidenti­al election on July 28, hopes he can help Venezuela cast aside 25 years of Chavismo, the socialist movement that began with Hugo Chávez in 1998.
 ?? ADRIANA LOUREIRO FERNANDEZ NYT ?? Voters in Caracas, Venezuela, on Oct. 22, 2023, wait to cast their ballots in the primary election that María Corina Machado, an opposition leader since banned from running for president, won decisively.
ADRIANA LOUREIRO FERNANDEZ NYT Voters in Caracas, Venezuela, on Oct. 22, 2023, wait to cast their ballots in the primary election that María Corina Machado, an opposition leader since banned from running for president, won decisively.

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