Venezuela Presidential Election: Nicolas Maduro Wins
On July 28, the 70th anniversary of the birth of Hugo Chavez, Venezuela held presidential elections. Despite all sorts of tricks of the opposition, the incumbent president, the candidate of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela and the Great Patriotic Pole, Nicolas Maduro Moro, won the majority of votes.
The opposition was initially fragmented, and the most pro-Western candidate, Maria Corina Machado, representing bourgeois circles, was barred from the election by a court ruling. She was replaced by retired diplomat Edmundo Gonzalez, who is known in Venezuela as Grandpa, referring to the dementia-stricken Biden.
Nevertheless, the opposition has managed to mobilize in the last week. On the last day of campaigning, a large opposition rally was held in Caracas, attended by about 250,000 people, although the opposition itself spoke of a million. At the same time, it was announced that the authorities would falsify the election results, and a number of Western countries, primarily the United States, said they would not recognize the elections.
Relations with some Latin American countries—Colombia, Argentina and even Brazil—have also been strained, as the day before Nicolas Maduro said that the voting system in Venezuela is better (technically it is electronic verification and physical participation, which actually eliminates the possibility of vote fraud).
The voting process itself was calm, with security at polling stations, with the majority of the country’s citizens traditionally voting in the morning. According to preliminary results, Maduro won more than 50 percent of the popular vote.
Voting time in Venezuela was from six in the morning to six in the evening. However, by 9 p.m. the results were not yet known, and another wave of disinformation by the opposition and Western media began. Maria Corina urged her supporters to go to the polling stations, and groups of provocateurs began to appear at some of them, including Caracas.
In response, Maduro supporters as well as foreign visitors marched to the Miraflores Palace to show their strong support for Maduro. Tension hung over the electoral commission as it waited for the election results to be announced.
Finally, a few minutes after midnight, the head of the commission announced that the delay was due to attacks on the data transmission system from the polling stations, which complicated the vote count.
Nicolás Maduro received 51.2 percent of the vote, while Edmundo González received 44.2 percent. The other candidates garnered about 10 percent in total. The information was released after 80 percent of all ballots had been counted. The announcement was met with wild jubilation by thousands of Maduro supporters outside the presidential palace, many of whom started dancing. After the celebration, at about 2 a.m., people began to disperse. The situation in Caracas was generally calm.
If we assess the geopolitical implications of the elections, they have implications not only for Venezuela and Latin America, but also for the world. The course towards multipolarity, started by Hugo Chavez 25 years ago, will continue. Venezuela will remain a bulwark of resistance to imperialism right on the underbelly of the United States. Cooperation with other states of the Axis of the Good, as Hugo Chavez called Iran, DPRK and Russia, will continue. And against the background of political polarization in the U.S. and the decline of transatlanticism, Caracas will become more involved in alternative geopolitical projects.
For their part, Washington and Brussels will surely impose new sanctions, but this is unlikely to stop the Bolivarian authorities from further decisive political actions.