Venezuelans Vote for Successor to Chávez

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 April 2013 | 12.07

Ariana Cubillos/Associated Press

Nicolás Maduro greeted supporters as he left a polling station after voting in Caracas.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Hugo Chávez's revolution will go on, buoyed for now by a cult of personality that outlived him. Venezuelans elected his handpicked political heir, Nicolás Maduro, to serve the remainder of Mr. Chávez's six-year term as president, officials said late Sunday, and he is expected to continue most of Mr. Chávez's policies.

Luis Acosta/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

President-elect Nicolás Maduro celebrated with his wife, Cilia Flores, after election results were announced in Caracas.

But the narrow margin of victory could complicate the task of governing for Mr. Maduro, emboldening the political opposition to seek concessions and possibly undermining Mr. Maduro's stature within Mr. Chávez's movement.

Amid a tense night of vote counting there were also signs that the strident, Chávez-style anti-American message that Mr. Maduro used during the campaign would now be set aside to improve Venezuela's strained relations with the United States.

Mr. Maduro, the acting president, narrowly defeated Henrique Capriles Radonski, a state governor who ran strongly against Mr. Chávez in October. Election authorities said that with more than 99 percent of the vote counted, Mr. Maduro had 50.6 percent to Mr. Capriles's 49.1 percent. The turnout on Sunday, while strong, appeared to be somewhat below the record level in October, a sign that Mr. Maduro might not enjoy the same depth of passionate popular support that Mr. Chávez did.

"These are the irreversible results that the Venezuelan people have decided with this electoral process," Tibisay Lucena, the head of the electoral council, said as she read the result on national television shortly before midnight on Sunday.

Tensions had mounted during the evening as the counting proceeded. Both sides held news conferences hinting at a favorable result for their side, setting the stage for a possible fight over the outcome, which was much closer than expected.

Venezuela is a major oil supplier to the United States with immense reserves, and under Mr. Chávez it has also been a major thorn in Washington's side, wielding its oil and its diplomatic muscle to oppose American policy everywhere from Cuba to Syria. Mr. Chávez, who succumbed to cancer on March 5, built his political career on flaying the United States and its traditional allies in the Venezuelan establishment, and Mr. Maduro followed his mentor's script throughout the campaign with an acolyte's zeal.

He accused former American diplomats of plotting to kill him, suggested that the United States had caused Mr. Chávez's illness, and had his foreign minister shut the door on informal talks with the United States that began late last year. A senior State Department official in Washington said the harsh rhetoric had made the possibility of improved relations more difficult.

But over the weekend, with his election victory looking likely, Mr. Maduro sent a private signal to Washington that he was ready to turn the page. Bill Richardson, the former governor of New Mexico, who was in Caracas as a representative of the Organization of American States, said in an interview that Mr. Maduro called him aside after a meeting of election observers on Saturday and asked him to carry a message.

"He said, 'We want to improve the relationship with the U.S., regularize the relationship,' " Mr. Richardson said.

The foreign minister, Elías Jaua, met with Mr. Richardson on Sunday, and said Venezuela was ready to resume the talks that it had cut off, Mr. Richardson said.

Though Mr. Chávez's death raised the possibility of a realignment in the hemisphere, Mr. Maduro's victory would seem to extend the life of the leftist coalition of countries that coalesced around Mr. Chávez. Mr. Maduro seems certain to continue the lifeline of oil sales on preferential terms that Venezuela provides to Cuba, whose leaders were close allies of Mr. Chávez.

Yet even his supporters say that Mr. Maduro lacks his predecesor's sharp political instincts and magnestism, and many questions remain about how effectively he will lead at home and abroad.

María Eugenia Díaz and Paula Ramón contributed reporting.


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