After the dust settles, he will emerge as the clear winner, even if the recount does not reverse the announced results. What a showing!
**** The main result: Hugo Chavez
is really dead
**** Even if results are not reversed after 100 percent r-couning of the votes, this is the last hurrah for the "revolution"
The government controlled
National Electoral Council, supported by the Armed Force, announced today, in
the very early morning, that after 99,1 % of the votes have been counted, the
government candidate, Nicolás Maduro, has won for some 270,000 votes, against
Henrique Capriles. Maduro obtained 7.53 million votes against 7.27 million
votes for the opposition. This result is so close that the opposition candidate
has not recognized it and is demanding a complete recount of the votes.
This extremely close result can
clearly be read as a major victory for the Venezuelan democratic opposition.
Why? Because the built-in bias in favor
of the regime in the Venezuelan electoral process is so great that, for all
practical purposes, the regime starts any presidential election in the country
with 2 to 3 automatic points in their favor. The reasons are several: (a),
there are about 2.3 million public employees in the country, which, together
with their families, represent a population of some 6-7 million people, about
25 percent of the population. Oil income has been used to a large degree to
keep these votes firmly in the pockets of the regime, subject to a
patron-client relationship that provides them with a job in exchange for
political loyalty; (b), a National Electoral Council and structure clearly controlled
by the government, that allows the government all kinds of violations of the electoral
law without sanctions of any kind; (c), a lopsided advantage in the time allotted
for political propaganda in the regime-controlled media. (d), a financing of
the official campaign with national money, which includes handouts such as cars
for the military and Chinese-made household equipment, from TV sets to
ice-boxes and washing machines, for the voters; (e), the organized support of
the Armed Force and of government companies such as Petroleos de Venezuela to
supply transport for government followers to vote and, even, to twist the arm
of those who are reluctant to do so. The
weight of the regime is so great in these electoral events that a in for the opposition
has been converted in an impossible task.
This is why the close results of
yesterday have to be considered as a major victory for the opposition. The
results will be much closer once all votes are counted, something which has
never done before, including the
estimated 150,000 votes of Venezuelans abroad, which in previous elections have
not been taken into consideration due to
the larger margins involved. Results abroad are consistently 8 to 2 in favor of
the opposition.
What is the meaning of these
results? The main one, that Hugo Chavez is really dead. The Chavez sentimental
factor did not play such a decisive role as previously thought. Only a couple
of months after his death his political punch has decreased to almost nil, as
over one million “chavistas” changed sides and voted for the opposition. Two, that
electoral abstention, at over 21 percent, keeps hurting the opposition, which
relies entirely on voluntary voters, while the regime relies on an organized system
of mass transport and arm-twisting to guarantee the participation of their
followers. And, Three, that the so-called “socialist revolution” has lost much
of its momentum and has started to limp along. Half of the nation is now firmly against it,
including a large portion of those who endorsed it during Chavez’s tenure. This
suggests that the ideological content of the regime is shallow, that its real
source of support had been the charisma of Hugo Chavez, now dead. Maduro
revealed himself as a very colorless and ignorant politician and this proved to
be too much to swallow, even for many supporters of the regime.
Now, what? Maduro, a very weak candidate
lacking the intellectual and political equipment to govern a country in ruins
will face an increasingly difficult situation. He has lost a considerable
portion of its domestic political support and will be, more than ever, a
hostage of the Cuban regime. Within chavismo, now without Chavez, other forces will now
start to exert pressures on him, namely the military and Maduro’s main competitor,
Diosdado Cabello. The opposition has now been given a mandate to conduct a vigorous and
permanent campaign against the government. Financial conditions in the country
have become extremely poor. All in all Maduro will be facing, almost
inevitably, a major political and economic crisis in the months ahead.
More like 10 automatic points in favor of the Government....
ResponderEliminar