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Opposition wins tense Venezuela vote in Chavez home region

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The opposition candidate for governor of the state of Barinas, Sergio Garrido holds a flag of the state of Barinas, during a press conference on the gubernatorial election in the city of Barinas, Venezuela, on January 09, 2022. 
Federico Parra / AFP
The opposition candidate for governor of the state of Barinas, Sergio Garrido holds a flag of the state of Barinas, during a press conference on the gubernatorial election in the city of Barinas, Venezuela, on January 09, 2022. Federico Parra / AFP
  • Opposition lawmaker Sergio Garrido defeated the ruling party's candidate Jorge Arreaz. 
  • A repeat vote was held after the initial election was cancelled by a court mid-count last year. 
  • EU observers said the vote countrywide was marred by irregularities.


Venezuela's opposition won a historic victory on Sunday in a tense gubernatorial election in a region ruled by the family of late president Hugo Chavez for more than two decades.

Barely known until a few weeks ago, opposition lawmaker Sergio Garrido, 54, defeated the ruling party's candidate Jorge Arreaza, 48, who served as the country's vice president and foreign minister and was Chavez's son-in-law.

According to results announced late on Sunday by the National Electoral Council (CNE), Garrido won 55.36 percent of the vote in Barinas state against Arreaza's 41.27 percent.

"The noble people of Barinas have scored a victory," Garrido wrote on Twitter. "With the unity and strength of each of you, we have succeeded ... succeeded in overcoming obstacles and adversity despite all that we have had to face."

Arreaza conceded defeat before the results were announced, tweeting "We did not achieve the goal" of winning.

Sunday's rerun gubernatorial election in Barinas state, where Chavez's father and brothers have held political power since 1998, was conducted amid widespread claims of ruling party interference.

The repeat vote was held after the initial election was cancelled by a court mid-count last year on the brink of an opposition victory that unnerved the establishment, and thousands of police and soldiers kept a watchful eye on Sunday's vote.

Earlier vote 

The initial vote on November 21 appeared to be going the way of opposition figure Freddy Superlano.

That ballot count was stopped by a court as Superlano claimed what would have been the first defeat in Barinas in 23 years for the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), now headed by Maduro.

A week later, Venezuela's Supreme Court – accused of pro-government bias by the opposition and observers – annulled the preliminary result, which showed Superlano leading.

It granted a request by the country's public finances watchdog to declare Superlano "ineligible" due to "administrative and criminal investigations" into accusations of corruption, and ordered new elections to be held without him.

'Concerted action' 

Superlano is an ally of opposition leader Juan Guaido.

Guaido is recognised by the United States and dozens of other governments as Venezuela's true president over Maduro, whose 2018 re-election was rejected as illegitimate by part of the international community.

With Superlano out of the running and other would-be challengers disbarred, the opposition Popular Will party put forward Garrido for the rerun.

The PSUV and Maduro's government were set on leaving little to chance this time.

Officials delivered social housing in Barinas and unveiled numerous public works projects during the campaign.

Roberto Picon, a member of Venezuela's National Electoral Council (CNE), which is dominated by PSUV backers, is among those to have denounced abuses by officialdom.

The CNE's powers, he said on Twitter, "are insufficient to control a concerted action of the State in the electoral campaign such as demonstrated in Barinas."

'Arbitrary disqualifications' 

Maduro's party won 19 gubernatorial races in the November 21 vote.

Barinas was alone among Venezuela's 23 states not to have the outcome confirmed by the CNE.

EU observers said the vote countrywide was marred by irregularities, including the widespread use of state resources by the PSUV, and "arbitrary disqualifications" of challengers.

"The opposition won and they (the ruling party) didn't like it, because they wish to continue with their hegemony and dynasty," said Nelson Leon, a 68-year-old music teacher who voted near Plaza Bolivar in the state capital of Barinas on Sunday.

Chavez's father, Hugo de los Reyes Chavez, was governor of Barinas from 1998 to 2008.

He was followed by Hugo Chavez's brother Adan – a former Venezuelan ambassador to Cuba – and then older brother Argenis from 2017.

Hugo Chavez remains popular in Barinas – beloved by many for redistributing the country's vast oil wealth to the poor but also blamed for the country's now miserable economy and sky-high crime rate.

Venezuela is battered by recession and hyperinflation, and three in four of its citizens live in extreme poverty, according to a recent study.

Millions have left the country in recent years to try their luck elsewhere.

Over 600 000 of Barinas' 870 000 inhabitants were eligible to cast ballots at 543 polling stations; they closed six hours after they opened.

Some 15 000 soldiers and 10 000 other security personnel were deployed to watch voting sites.


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