Venezuela socialists win regional vote, opposition sees fraud

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro (C) speaks during a meeting with government members at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela October 15, 2017. Miraflores Palace/Handout via REUTERS

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – President Nicolas Maduro’s government won a majority of governorships in yesterday’s regional election, according to official results, drawing fraud suspicions from the opposition whom polls had shown was poised for a big win.

Electoral board president Tibisay Lucena said the ruling Socialist Party took 17 governorships, versus five for the opposition Democratic Unity coalition, with results irreversible in all but one of the 23 states.

“‘Chavismo’ is alive, in the street, and triumphant,” a beaming Maduro said in a speech to the nation, referring to the ruling movement’s name for former president Hugo Chavez.

Opposition supporters react while listening to the results of the nationwide election for new governors, at the campaign headquarters of the Venezuelan coalition of opposition parties (MUD) in Caracas, Venezuela October 15, 2017. REUTERS/ Carlos Garcia Rawlins

Minutes earlier, opposition leaders had said the pro-government election board was about to announce dubious results.

“We have serious suspicions and doubts,” election campaign chief Gerardo Blyde, told reporters, after opposition leaders had said earlier they were sure of a “gigantic” victory based on their observers at vote centers.

Instead of that, the opposition took just five governorships, including the restive Andean states of Merida and Tachira, plus the oil-producing western region of Zulia.

The government won back populous Miranda state, which includes part of Caracas, for an up-and-coming star of the Socialist Party, Hector Rodriguez, the election board said.

And Chavez’s younger brother, Argenis Chavez, held the rural state of Barinas, where the family comes from.

The ruling Socialist Party had previously controlled 20 of 23 state governorships. But opinion polls had shown the opposition coalition set to upend that, given voter anger at hunger and shortages stemming from an economic meltdown.

Sunday’s surprise results raised the prospect of more unrest in Venezuela, where four months of opposition-led protests earlier this year led to 125 deaths, thousands of arrests, and widespread destruction of property.

During the gubernatorial campaign, the government made liberal use of state resources in its candidates’ campaigns, evoked popular former leader Chavez at every rally, and appealed to Venezuelans’ exhaustion with political turmoil to vote against “candidates of violence.”

“I vote because I want peace, not terrorism,” customs official Franquelsi Anciana said in western Maracaibo city.

Maduro has said all governors, including the five new opposition ones, must swear allegiance to a controversial new legislative superbody elected in July.

But the opposition does not recognize the entirely pro-government Constituent Assembly, which supersedes all other institutions, including the opposition-controlled congress.

The pro-government election board put up hurdles for the opposition. Those included the relocation of 273 voting centers on security grounds – mostly away from pro-opposition areas – and a refusal to update the ballot to remove names of opposition politicians who lost in primaries, likely confusing voters.

There were also technical glitches such as electrical failures – which have become commonplace in the crisis-hit economy – although the government said these were minimal.

Additionally, numerous opposition leaders and activists, including former presidential hopefuls Henrique Capriles and Leopoldo Lopez, have been barred from office or detained on accusations of coup-plotting, corruption and other charges.

“I used to have enough food in my house to feed my children tomorrow, but now no longer. Hunger motivates us to vote,” said Zulay Acosta, voting early in southern Puerto Ordaz city.

The government cast Sunday’s votes, from remote Amazon and Andean communities to heavily populated Caribbean coastal areas, as evidence Venezuela is no dictatorship, contrary to increased global criticism this year.

Officials also presented the election as a vote against U.S. President Donald Trump, who has imposed some sanctions on Venezuela, particularly targeting Maduro’s top officials for alleged rights abuses and corruption.

Some opposition supporters, particularly youths in a self-styled “Resistance” movement on the front line of street battles earlier this year, had accused their leaders of selling out and legitimizing a dictator by even taking part in Sunday’s vote.