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Venezuelan election could lead to a seismic shift in politics

Voters crowd around electoral lists taped to a wall, using their phone lights to help them read
Voters look at electoral lists before the opening of the polls for presidential elections in Caracas, Venezuela, on Sunday.
(Matias Delacroix / Associated Press)
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Venezuelans voted Sunday in a presidential election whose outcome will either lead to a seismic shift in politics or extend by six more years the policies that caused the world’s worst peacetime economic collapse.

Whether it is President Nicolás Maduro who is chosen, or his main opponent, retired diplomat Edmundo González, the election will have ripple effects throughout the Americas. Government opponents and supporters alike have signaled their interest in joining the exodus of 7.7 million Venezuelans who have already left their homes for opportunities abroad should Maduro win another term.

Polls opened at 6 a.m., but voters started lining up at some voting centers across the country much earlier, sharing water, coffee and snacks for several hours.

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Alejandro Sulbarán snagged the first spot at his voting center by getting in line at 5 p.m. Saturday. He said he stood outside an elementary school in a hillside suburb of the capital, Caracas, for “the future of the country.”

“We are all here for the change we want,” Sulbarán, 74, who runs a maintenance business, said as other voters nodded in agreement.

The number of eligible voters for this presidential election is estimated to be about 17 million. Polls close at 6 p.m., but it’s not clear when the electoral authorities will release the first results.

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Venezuela’s authoritarian president, Nicolás Maduro, trails in polling. Would the longtime U.S. adversary accept defeat in Sunday’s election?

Authorities set Sunday’s election to coincide with what would have been the 70th birthday of former President Hugo Chávez, the revered leftist firebrand who died of cancer in 2013, leaving his Bolivarian revolution in the hands of Maduro. But Maduro and his United Socialist Party of Venezuela are more unpopular than ever among many voters who blame his policies for crushing wages, spurring hunger, crippling the oil industry and separating families due to migration.

Maduro, 61, is facing an opposition that has managed to line up behind a single candidate after years of intraparty divisions and election boycotts that torpedoed their ambitions to topple the ruling party.

González is representing a coalition of opposition parties after being selected in April as a last-minute stand-in for opposition powerhouse Maria Corina Machado, who was blocked by the Maduro-controlled Supreme Tribunal of Justice from running for any office for 15 years.

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Machado, a former lawmaker, swept the opposition’s October primary with more than 90% of the vote. After she was blocked from joining the presidential race, she chose a college professor as her substitute on the ballot, but the National Electoral Council also barred her from registering. That’s when González, a political newcomer, was chosen.

Sunday’s ballot also features eight other candidates challenging Maduro, but only González threatens Maduro’s rule.

Venezuela faces its toughest election in decades: It could give Nicolás Maduro another six years in power or end the self-described socialist’s policies.

Venezuela sits atop the world’s largest proven oil reserves and once boasted Latin America’s most advanced economy. But it entered into a free-fall after Maduro took the helm. Plummeting oil prices, widespread shortages and hyperinflation that soared past 130,000% led first to social unrest and then mass emigration.

Sanctions from U.S. President Trump’s administration seeking to force Maduro from power after his 2018 reelection — which the U.S. and dozens of other countries condemned as illegitimate — only deepened the crisis.

In recent days, Maduro has crisscrossed Venezuela, inaugurating hospital wards and highways and visiting rural areas where he had not set foot in years. His pitch to voters is one of economic security, which he underscores with stories of entrepreneurship and references to a stable currency exchange and lower inflation rates.

Maduro said he would recognize the election result and urged all other candidates to publicly declare that they would do the same.

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“No one is going to create chaos in Venezuela,” Maduro said after voting. “I recognize and will recognize the electoral referee, the official announcements, and I will make sure they are recognized.”

Caracas saw an increase in commercial activity after the pandemic, bolstering an economy the International Monetary Fund forecasts will grow 4% this year — one of the fastest in Latin America — after having shrunk 71% from 2012-20.

Unlike previous elections in Venezuela, supporters of the typically fractured opposition have agreed to organize, mobilize and support voters.

“They tried to subjugate our people,” Maduro said of the United States during his closing rally Thursday in Caracas, “but today we are standing tall and ready for victory on the 28th of July.”

But most Venezuelans have not seen improvement in their quality of life. Many earn under $200 a month, which means families struggle to afford essential items. Some work second and third jobs. A basket of basic staples — sufficient to feed of family of four for a month — costs an estimated $385.

Change is what 52-year-old Judith Cantilla said she was voting for. Casting her ballot in the working-class Petare neighborhood on the east side of Caracas, Cantilla said people are fed up with the current system.

“For me, change in Venezuela [is] that there are jobs, that there’s security, there’s medicine in the hospitals; good pay for the teachers, for the doctors,” she said.

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Elsewhere, Liana Ibarra, a manicurist in greater Caracas, got in line at 3 a.m. Sunday with her water, coffee and cassava snack-laden backpack only to find at least 150 people ahead of her.

“There used to be a lot of indifference toward elections, but not anymore,” Ibarra said.

The prospect of President Nicolás Maduro winning reelection has prompted many Venezuelans to make plans to leave the country.

She said that if González loses, she will ask her relatives living in the U.S. to sponsor her and her son’s application to legally immigrate there.

“We can’t take it anymore,” she said.

The opposition has tried to seize on the huge inequities arising from the crisis, during which Venezuelans abandoned their country’s currency, the bolivar, for the U.S. dollar.

González and Machado focused much of their campaigning on Venezuela’s vast hinterland, where the economic activity seen in Caracas in recent years didn’t materialize. They promised a government that would create sufficient jobs to attract Venezuelans living abroad to return home and reunite with their families.

An April poll by Caracas-based Delphos said about a quarter of Venezuelans were thinking about emigrating if Maduro wins Sunday. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

Most Venezuelans who migrated over the past 11 years settled in Latin America and the Caribbean. In recent years, many began setting their sights on the U.S.

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Venezuelan opposition powerhouse María Corina Machado has named a substitute to her presidential bid while she fights a government ban on her running for office against Maduro.

Both campaigns have distinguished themselves not only for the political movements they represent but also on how they have addressed voters’ hopes and fears.

Maduro’s campaign rallies featured lively electronic merengue dancing as well as speeches attacking his opponents. But after he caught heat from leftist allies such as Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for a comment about a “bloodbath” should he lose, Maduro recoiled. His son told the Spanish newspaper El País that the ruling party would peacefully hand over the presidency if it loses — a rare admission of vulnerability out of step with Maduro campaign’s triumphalist tone.

In contrast, the rallies of González and Machado prompted people to cry and chant, “Freedom! Freedom! ” as the duo passed by. People handed the devout Catholics rosaries, walked along highways and went through military checkpoints to reach their events. Others video-called their relatives who have migrated to let them catch a glimpse of the candidates.

During a rally in mid-May, González, 74, asked supporters to imagine “a country in which our airports and borders would be filled with our children returning home.”

Garcia Cano writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Joshua Goodman contributed to this report.

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