Chavez to launch Venezuela candidacy in person

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez will personally go to register his candidacy for the Oct. 7 election on Monday, officials said, dampening rumors he might be too unwell from cancer or considering a successor.

Chavez, 57, wants re-election in the South American OPEC member despite a year-long battle against an unspecified cancer.

“A sea of people will join our candidate, the candidate of the fatherland,” his campaign chief Jorge Rodriguez told reporters on Monday, announcing plans for rallies in Caracas.

Chavez’s rival, young state governor Henrique Capriles, is the opposition’s best hope for defeating him at the ballot box in the last 13 years, but is trailing him in polls.

Capriles, 39, plans to march 14 kilometers with supporters on Sunday to register his candidacy with the national election board in downtown Caracas.

RIVAL RALLIES

Since his recurrence of cancer in February, Chavez has seldom been seen in public, preferring to communicate in phone calls to state media or via Twitter.
After three operations to remove two cancerous tumors, the socialist president says he is recovering but there are constant rumors that he has a life-threatening condition.

That fueled speculation over how Chavez would register his candidacy – traditionally a tumultuous public show – while not exposing himself to impressions of physical weakness.

“How many kilometers is Chavez going to walk? Let’s leave that to the candidate. Remember he’s a parachutist, maybe he’ll jump from a parachute!” joked Rodriguez.

Capriles held a rally yesterday to hand over the running of Miranda state while he focuses on his presidential tilt.

“A woman from the other (ruling) party told me the other day ‘hey, skinny, I’m going to tell you something – you have the look of a president’,” he said to roars from supporters.

Trying to breach a double-digit gap with Chavez in most surveys by Venezuela’s best-known pollsters, Capriles is promising to replace Chavez’s radical left-wing populism with a Brazilian-style “modern left” government.

He says he will end the controversial nationalizations that have characterized Chavez’s rule – and cowed the private sector – while maintaining his wildly popular social welfare policies.

Upping the rhetoric, Capriles turned one of Chavez’s main accusations against the opposition – that they are flagbearers of the “bourgeoisie” – back on him.
“They criticize and talk of the oligarchy, and the bourgeoisie and all that. It’s they who are stuck in their bourgeois ways inside a palace they don’t come out of,” said Capriles, who has contrasted his “house-by-house” campaign tour of Venezuela with Chavez’s avoidance of the streets.

Chavez’s condition has also brought a national guessing-game over who might replace him, in case he is incapacitated, with Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro, Vice President Elias Jaua and Congress leader Diosdado Cabello the favorites.