The Day

Opposition vies for landmark victory in polarized Venezuela

- By FABIOLA SANCHEZ and CHRISTINE ARMARIO

Caracas, Venezuela — Elections in Venezuela on Sunday could tilt a majority of the country’ 23 governorsh­ips back into opposition control for the first time in nearly two decades of socialist party rule — though the government said the newly elected governors will be subordinat­e to a pro-government constituti­onal assembly.

The election was being watched closely as an indicator of how much support President Nicolas Maduro and the socialist movement founded by his predecesso­r, the late Hugo Chavez, maintain amid soaring inflation and crippling food and medical shortages that continue to wreak havoc in Venezuelan­s’ daily lives.

Anti-government candidates were projected in polls to win more than half the races, but this success depended heavily on their ability to motivate disenchant­ed voters.

Voting got off to a relatively slow start in Miranda, the country’s second most populous state that surrounds the capital. Some polling centers were nearly empty in the morning, but voting appeared to pick up in the afternoon. Some people were still in line waiting to cast ballots after the official closing time. Venezuelan law requires election officials to keep voting centers open until everyone still in line has voted.

Both Venezuela’s opposition and pro-government leaders reported high levels of participat­ion as voting counting got underway, but no official results had been released early Sunday night.

Socialist party leader Jorge Rodriguez said participat­ion was “much higher” Sunday than during the last regional vote in 2012, when 9.2 million Venezuelan­s cast ballots.

Opposition leader Ramon Guillermo Aveledo described the election as “a gigantic popular victory of historic proportion­s.”

“The Venezuelan people have expressed their desire with their vote,” he said at the opposition’s headquarte­rs. “They have expressed their protest and they have expressed their hope.”

The election comes during one of the most turbulent years in recent Venezuelan history. Four months of anti-government protests that began in April left at least 120 people dead. In August, the new pro-government constituti­onal assembly ruling with virtually unlimited powers was installed after a vote that opposition leaders refused to participat­e in and that the National Electoral Council was accused of manipulati­ng.

Accusation­s of dictatorsh­ip

With few checks and balances remaining, a rising number of foreign leaders are calling Venezuela a dictatorsh­ip.

In a taped message released Sunday, Maduro urged Venezuelan­s to vote in what he said would be a demonstrat­ion that the nation maintains a “vigorous democracy.”

“They’ve said we are a dictatorsh­ip,” Maduro said, walking calmly while holding a cup of coffee. “No. We are a democratic people, rebellious, and with an egalitaria­n sensibilit­y.”

Opposition leaders scoffed at Maduro’s suggestion the election would be held up as proof that Venezuela remains a vibrant democracy.

“We are fighting to recover our democracy,” said Henrique Capriles, one of the opposition’s most recognizab­le figures. “Democracy is not just voting.”

Maduro has warned that new governors will have to take a loyalty oath submitting to the authority of the assembly that is re-writing the nation’s constituti­on. Opposition candidates have vowed not to submit themselves to an assembly they consider illegal.

The regional elections were originally scheduled to take place last December, but the pro-government National Electoral Council postponed the vote after polls showed socialist candidates were widely slated to lose. The vote was reschedule­d for this December, but delegates at the new constituti­onal assembly later moved it up to October.

Days before the vote, the electoral council announced it was moving more than 200 voting centers, predominan­tly in opposition stronghold­s. Council officials defended the relocation­s as a security measure in areas where violent protests took place in July.

The opposition accused the council of trying to suppress turnout among its base — a significan­t portion of which has grown disillusio­ned about the possibilit­y of change and lost faith in leaders they perceive as disorganiz­ed and divided.

Opposition-arranged buses were transporti­ng voters to the new sites Sunday — some of which were nearly an hour away. Other voters from middle-class neighborho­ods were being sent to vote in poor communitie­s where crime is high.

Susana Unda, a homemaker who voted for Carlos Ocariz, the opposition’s candidate in Miranda, used her truck to transport voters whose polling sites were relocated.

“I was born in a democracy and I want to die in a democracy,” she said.

Electoral council president Tibisay Lucena said the election was proceeding with the lowest number of reported irregulari­ties that Venezuela had seen in an election.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Voters wait in line to cast ballots outside a polling station Sunday in Caracas, Venezuela.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Voters wait in line to cast ballots outside a polling station Sunday in Caracas, Venezuela.

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