Elections Venezuela: Machado takes big early lead in presidential primary vote

LeonardoBjj

Professional Wrestler
@Brown
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
4,522
Reaction score
5,485
Challenger to crisis-ridden presidency of Nicolás Maduro claims victory after Venezuelans queue for hours in rainstorm to vote

6720.jpg

Early returns in the Venezuelan opposition’s presidential primary have given a big lead to former legislator María Corina Machado, who quickly claimed victory as the candidate to end the decade-long, crisis-ridden presidency of Nicolás Maduro.

The independent National Primary Commission, which organised the vote, said about 93% of the first 601,110 ballots counted went to Machado, who entered the contest as a strong frontrunner. The rest of the votes were scattered among the other nine candidates. There was no indication of how many people had voted, and organisers were expected to release additional results throughout Monday.

“Today, very powerful forces have been unleashed,” Machado told supporters gathered outside her campaign headquarters in the capital, Caracas. “Today, we have shown ourselves what we are capable of doing in the face of all the obstacles, in the face of all the abuses.”

Holding Venezuela’s first presidential primary since 2012 required the deeply fractured opposition to work together. Venezuelans, in turn, showed up at voting centres in and outside of their homeland, enthusiastically lining up for hours despite scorching sun and torrential rain.

images

What they saw as a monumental exercise in democracy could still prove futile, however. While the administration agreed in principle to let the opposition choose its candidate for the 2024 presidential election, it has already barred Machado from running for office.

1397607325551.jpg

Hundreds of people gathered at voting centres in neighbourhoods across Caracas even before polls opened. They stayed in line despite a rainstorm that left them soaking. They carried umbrellas, folding stools and coffee to ease the expected waits, and leaned against buildings or stood under marquees to seek shelter.

Caracas resident Stephanie Aguilar, 34, cried while she waited to vote. She described the primary as the only “salvation” for her country, her daughter and son, and the millions of Venezuelans who have emigrated due to the nation’s economic and political turmoil.

“We want a better country, a free country, for my children ... who have grown up in this government,” Aguilar, a housewife, said as she wiped tears from her face. “They ask, ‘Mom, can we go out to eat?’ No, there is no money. ‘Mom, can we do this thing?’ No, there is no money. It is unfortunate that a society grows up under those conditions.”

Jesús María Casal, the head of the National Primary Commission, blamed the hours-long delay in issuing election results on internet restrictions.

“Once we began the process of counting the results ... we detected that our server that functioned as a transmission channel was blocked, which prevents us from completing this process as scheduled,” he said.

The London-based internet monitoring firm NetBlocks tweeted metrics showing “a disruption to internet connectivity in #Venezuela with high impact to Caracas”. It added that a state-owned internet service provider had claimed “an issue with its energy backup system”.

David Smilde, an expert on Venezuelan politics at Tulane University, said the primary was a significant achievement for several reasons, including forcing political leaders and parties within the opposition “to reach out and speak to the people”.

“And it has generated considerable enthusiasm and mobilisation in a population that has been skeptical of the opposition leadership of late,” he said.

The presidential election is expected to be scheduled for the second half of 2024. Maduro is looking to extend his presidency until 2030, which would surpass the time that Hugo Chávez, his mentor, governed and established his self-described socialist policies.

_82086750_legolanddiscoverycentremanchester-electiondebate2-2.jpg

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-huge-early-lead-in-presidential-primary-vote

- This is the end of Lula boyfriend?

 
Venezuela: Machado claims victory in presidential primary vote
The opposition leader and free market advocate says she has a mandate to take on Maduro.

Former lawmaker Maria Corina Machado has declared victory in the Venezuelan opposition’s presidential primary after taking a decisive lead, potentially putting her in prime position to challenge longtime socialist leader Nicolas Maduro at elections next year.

With more than 26 percent of ballots counted, Machado received a commanding 93 percent share of the vote, the primary’s organising commission said late on Sunday.

“Today, very powerful forces have been unleashed,” Machado told supporters outside her campaign headquarters in the capital, Caracas. “Today I received a mandate and I accept with Venezuelans the commitment of making that mandate matter.”

The count was expected to continue on Monday, but it remains unclear how swiftly it could be completed amid delays that the National Primary Commission blamed on internet censorship.

“We detected that our server that functioned as a transmission channel was blocked, which prevents us from completing this process as scheduled,” said commission head Jesus Maria Casal.

Uncertain challenge

Despite Machado’s clear status as the opposition frontrunner, it is uncertain if the fierce critic of the ruling United Socialist Party will be free to challenge Maduro, who is widely expected to seek another term at elections expected to be held in the second half of 2024.

On June 30, Venezuela’s comptroller general announced Machado would be banned from seeking public office due to her support of international sanctions against Maduro’s government.

There have been indications that the ban might be lifted via negotiations between Venezuela’s opposition and government. The two parties recently signed an election deal, acknowledging each side’s right to nominate candidates based on internal rules. However, this agreement did not nullify pre-existing election prohibitions.

The United States, which broadly eased sanctions on Venezuelan oil and gas and bonds in response to the deal, has said Maduro has until the end of November to begin revoking the bans against the opposition and freeing political prisoners as well as “wrongfully detained” Americans.

While the Maduro government released five prisoners, including prominent opposition members, it reiterated that those with disqualifications will not be able to run in the 2024 race.

The opposition, which maintains that the restrictions are illegal, has not yet outlined what action it will take should Machado remain banned from participation.

Machado has said she could pressure the electoral authorities to let her register, while others have argued a substitute will be necessary if Maduro doubles down.

Third term

Maduro, the protege of former President Hugo Chavez, has been in power since 2013. While he has not formally announced his re-election bid, he is widely expected to seek a third six-year term. A victory would put him on track to stay in office until 2030, far exceeding the 11 years that Chavez held power.

A UN-backed panel said last month that Maduro’s government has intensified efforts to curtail democratic freedoms ahead of the 2024 vote, charges echoed by rights groups. That includes subjecting some politicians and other opponents to detention, surveillance, threats, defamatory campaigns and arbitrary criminal proceedings.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/23/venezeulas-machado-wins-landslide-victory-in-primary-vote
 
She's anti-communist, which is a great thing for Columbia.
 
Venezuela primary results suspended in latest blow directed at opposition
María Corina Machado was overwhelmingly elected to take on Nicolás Maduro in presidential election expected next year

Venezuela’s supreme court has suspended the results of the political opposition’s primaries after María Corina Machado was overwhelmingly elected last Sunday to take on President Nicolás Maduro in a presidential contest expected for 2024.

The court – which is stacked with Maduro’s allies – also ratified bans on running for office which had been slapped on Machado and two others.

Monday’s ruling was the latest effort to cast doubt on Machado’s eligibility and will probably provoke a reaction from the US, which lifted sanctions on Venezuela earlier this month in exchange for the government pledging to hold fair elections overseen by European observers.

“We urge Nicolas Maduro and his representatives to uphold the commitments they made at the signing of the political roadmap agreement,” a state department spokesperson said. “The US government will take action if Maduro and his representatives do not meet their commitments.”

The court ruling came after Venezuela’s attorney general announced last week that the primaries, which were held independently without the involvement of the government, were under investigation for financial crimes and conspiracy.

Machado won more than 90% of the vote with a higher than expected voter turnout and analysts predict she would probably beat Maduro in a fair contest.

By deeming the selection of Machado fraudulent the Chavista government can cast further doubt on the former lawmaker’s eligibility to run while arguing that the issue of her ban is irrelevant, says Phil Gunson, senior analyst for the Andes region at Crisis Group.

“There’s really no law or legal basis for this at all,” Gunson said.

Opposition leaders have rejected the allegations against the primary process and say they will stand by the selection of Machado as the opposition candidate.

“I reiterate my support for [the primaries] and the technical teams that accompanied it,” tweeted Delsa Solorzano, a member of Venezuela’s national assembly. “Venezuela expressed itself and nothing can change the will of a nation that wants change.”

Corruption and economic mismanagement compounded by oil sanctions have forced more than 7 million people to flee Venezuela’s rampant food shortages, hyperinflation and rolling blackouts in the past decade.


Maduro has retained control of the country despite its collapse by rigging elections, bribing military cadres and intimidating the political opposition with human rights violations.

The supreme court ruling could further divide the opposition between those who want to participate in 2024’s electoral contest and those who want to boycott it, Gunson said.

“It’s also a way to make the electorate feel that the contest is hopeless and that voting is a waste of time,” he added.

The supreme court has ordered that the opposition turn in every piece of documentation related to the elections including candidate registration and all voter records within three days, so that an electoral commission can investigate the allegations.

The opposition has raised concerns that the documents could be used to persecute the opposition and jeopardise next year’s elections.

“This is a clear violation of the agreement the government signed with the opposition in Barbados and an outright escalation of the political crisis,” said Geoff Ramsey, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. “Maduro’s acting like he doesn’t care about the prospect that the US could snap back the sanctions.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ary-election-results-suspended-machado-maduro

- Machado can kick Maduro's ass in a ellection and in a fist fight!
 
Is anyone surprised? you can vote socialism in, but you need to shoot your way out.

Sadly the big issue is that Maduro enjoys massive diplomatic support from the Latin American left.

- Lula has a crush on Maduro. Not that normal man-crush, that we have on someone awesome like The Rock or Randy Orton. But that weird one that guys have for gangsters.
 
Last edited:
Will she be more effective than the other guy Gaido? Let's hope so.
 
Will she be more effective than the other guy Gaido? Let's hope so.

Effective at what? there is no peacefully reasoning with socialist dictators, they don't give a shit and would starve half the country while shooting the other half and hoping to rule over the ashes.

Reagan was right, the only thing socialists respect is force, that's why Nicaragua enjoyed 15 years of democracy until the stupid idiots voted Ortega in, the guy they spent a decade fighting through force of arms.
 
- Lula has a crush on Madura. Not that normal man-crush, that we have on someone awesome like The Rock on Randy Orton. But that weird one that guys have for gangsters.

Maduro is living the dream for them, he has the balls to become an international pariah, persecute opposition and establish themselves absolute rulers.
 
lol at Maduro losing an election. Not happening.
 
Back
Top