Google - AFP, Beatriz
Lecumberri (AFP), 29 March 2013
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A child
stands in front of a graffitti at the Mountain Barracks (Cuartel de la
Montana) in Caracas, on March 28, 2013 (AFP/File, Juan Barreto)
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CARACAS —
As Venezuela prepares for its first election without Hugo Chavez in years, the
opposition hopes to find a level playing field at last. And the government
can't help but cling to his legacy.
Neither of
the candidates in the April 14 election can truly compare to the populist,
crowd-wooing people's tribune that was Chavez, who was first elected in 1998
and died of cancer March 5.
With his
booming voice and nearly constant tweets, speeches and diatribes against what
he saw as US imperialism, he dominated -- and some would say polarized --
Venezuela like few others could.
Ramon
Guillermo Aveledo, head of the opposition coordination group, said his
candidate Henrique Capriles, whom Chavez beat in a presidential election last
October, "will no longer have as his adversary a living political
legend."
Instead he
faces acting president Nicolas Maduro, the ruling Socialist Party candidate and
Chavez's handpicked heir, a former bus driver who worked his way up in
politics. He was vice president when Chavez died at age 58.
"It is
a battle between equals. In that sense it is a more conventional situation,
like in any democracy," Aveledo, who coordinates the MUD group of
opposition parties, said in an interview with AFP.
When Chavez
was president, he got involved in every election campaign, no matter how small,
even down to the municipal level.
Now he is
gone, but his memory is vividly fresh.
And it will
overshadow the election so thoroughly that both the government and the
opposition reckon that to one extent or another, voters will be casting ballots
for or against a man who is dead.
Aveledo
accused Maduro of deliberately trying to make this another election about
Chavez rather than about the issues that Venezuelans face in their day to day
life, which he said Maduro is shunning.
"But
Chavez cannot be the focus of this campaign because we are not talking about a
government that was, but rather the one that will be," he said.
Capriles, a
state governor, is focusing not on Chavez but on Maduro and therefore says
things like: "Don't hide, don't put on a disguise, Nicolas. This is not
about Chavez, but rather you."
Indeed, as
the country goes to the polls for the second time in just five months, these
are uncharted waters for both sides.
Since
December, when Chavez left for cancer surgery in Cuba and named Maduro as his
heir in case he never came back or became incapacitated, the opposition says it
has been closely studying the heir apparent.
"Can
Nicolas Maduro get as many people out to vote as Chavez did? No one knows. Will
we be able to get as many people to turn out without the incentive of defeating
Chavez? No one knows that either," Aveledo said.
Polls give
Maduro an advantage of more than 10 points.
But Aveledo
urges caution about the numbers because this is a new game for Venezuela and
events are unfolding fast -- from the time of Chavez's death until election a
mere 40 days will have gone by.
"Right
now there is no way to take a clear and accurate snap shot of voter
intentions," he said.
The big
question, he said, is this: "How long will it take Chavez supporters to
realize something which they know intuitively and which the government already
knows, which is that Maduro is not Chavez?"
Aveledo
said the government has an unfair big advantage in the campaign, which
officially begins April 2. He said the National Election Council has banning
some opposition activities and the tone of the race is nasty.
Maduro is
trying project authority and assert himself because he was personally anointed
by Chavez, and feels he needs to take an aggressive attitude to be seen as a
strong leader, Aveledo said.
In the
October elections, Capriles gave Chavez a decent run for his money, winning 44
percent of the votes, compared to 55 percent for Chavez.
Still, that
loss hurt the opposition badly. In state elections held shortly afterwards
pro-Chavez people won in 20 of the 23 states where voting was held.
MUD is a
hodgepodge of political parties united by one thing -- opposition to Chavez --
and otherwise riven by internal differences.
After the
state election fiasco it did a lot of soul searching and managed to unite to
nominate Capriles as candidate again, despite his earlier loss.
"MUD
is like an earthquake-proof building. They sway but don't fall," Aveledo
argued. He said the coalition's goals are a large turnout among its people and
a high level of abstention among those who backed Chavez.
"That
is what we want and that is what we are striving for," he said.

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