Venezuela: Maduro wins total control of legislature
December 7, 2020
The opposition boycotted the election and said the vote represents a "fraud." The poll, which was slammed by international observers, was marked by a low voter turnout of just 31%.
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President Nicolas Maduro won total control over the country's legislature, the National Assembly (AN),andfully consolidated his regime's grip on power in the country following Sunday's parliamentary election.
Maduro's party claimed almost 68% of the vote, in an election which was mostly boycotted by the opposition. The National Assembly was the last institution in the country not yet headed by Maduro. The opposition, parts of which participated in the election despite the opposition's call for a boycott, received 18% of the vote.
Maduro's United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and allied parties captured 67 seats in the National Assembly, said Indira Alfonzo, president of Venezuela's National Electoral Council.
International observers like the EU and the Organization of American States (OAS)refused to sendobservers to Sunday's election and said the conditions for ademocratic process in Venezuela do not currently exist.
The EU on Monday said the election had "failed to comply with minimal international standards."
"This lack of respect for political pluralism and the disqualification and prosecution of opposition leaders do not allow the EU to recognize this electoral process as credible, inclusive or transparent, and its results as representative of the will of the Venezuelan people," EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said.
The country's opposition, led by the current ANpresident and Maduro foe Juan Guaido, said the vote represents "a fraud."
Venezuela: A country bled dry
Venezuela will hold parliamentary elections on Sunday — in the middle of one of its biggest economic crises in decades. Daily life in the country is marked by chronic hunger and poverty.
Image: Cristian Hernandez/AFP/Getty Images
Empty fridges
Venezuela had its highest inflation rates ever in 2018: 65,374%. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) marked it even higher, at 1,370,000%. A lack of hard currency meant precious few items could be imported. Soaring prices have made it impossible for most Venezuelans to shop at the supermarket.
Image: Alvaro Fuente/ZUMA Press/imago images
Feeding the poor
Only those who can provide their own plate or bowl get something to eat here because even aid organizations cannot afford disposable tableware. The once wealthy country has been suffering a massive supply crisis for years and is now short on everything from food and medicine to everyday items like soap and diapers.
Image: Juan Carlos Hernandez/ZUMA Wire/imago images
Hungry children
Children in Caracas hold out their hands as aid organizations and church groups distribute food. Many haven't eaten for days. Statistics compiled for a study at the Catholic Andres Bello National University (UNAB) in Chile say 96% of Venezuelan households live in poverty, and 64% in extreme poverty. Few families in the country can afford meat, fish, eggs, fruits or vegetables.
Image: Roman Camacho/ZUMA Press/imago images
Health care system on the verge of collapse
People needing hospitalization, such as here at San Juan de Dios Hospital in Caracas, have to pay for their own medicine and medical instruments like catheters and syringes. More than one-third of Venezuela's 66,000 registered doctors have left the country. Overall, the ranks of medical personnel have been in decline, too, pushing the country's health care system to the verge of collapse.
Image: Dora Maier/Le Pictorium/imago images
Building with mud and wood
A child plays in a Bahareque house made of sticks and mud, a building technique dating back to pre-Columbian times and now popular once again due to extreme poverty in the country's rural regions. Such houses have no plumbing or electricity.
Image: Jimmy Villalta/UIG/imago images
No electricity
Blackouts regularly paralyze the country — opposition politicians say lack of investment as well as corruption and poor maintenance of power plants are to blame for the dire situation. The crisis has also prompted the government to take drastic measures in hopes of saving energy. Experiments with a two-day work week for government employees have done little to help so far.
Image: Humberto Matheus/ZUMA Press/imago images
Life on the street
When the electricity goes out, the climate can become unbearable — air conditioners are useless. Life moves out onto the streets, like here in Maracaibo. Regional and even national blackouts have become common across Venezuela over the past several years. President Nicolas Maduro has repeatedly blamed the outages on acts of infrastructure sabotage committed by the country's enemies.
Image: Humberto Matheus/ZUMA Press/imago images
Acute lack of water
The water supply in Valencia's Santa Rosa district has collapsed. Now, people there bathe and wash themselves in puddles on the side of the road. There is no drinking water in the district.
Image: Elena Fernandez/ZUMA Wire/imago images
A river full of sewage
These days the only things flowing into the Guaire River are sewage and toxic chemicals. Electricity and water in Venezuela are precariously interconnected: Lack of electricity and maintenance has led to cracks in dams, thus leading to water loss. That has meant less power for the country's hydroelectricity plants, leading to yet more blackouts in what has become a vicious circle.
Image: Adrien Vautier/Le Pictorium/imago images
Search for potable water
A resident of the state of Carabobo pushes a canister through the streets of Guacara in hopes of finding drinking water. Some places in Venezuela only have running water for a couple of hours a week. Most families fill up anything they can to have drinking water the next time supplies are shut down.
Image: Juan Carlos Hernandez/ZUMA Wire/imago images
Contaminated waters
Venezuelans are swimming in oil, but not in a good way. Fishers floating in inner tubes from tires cast their nets into Lake Maracaibo, even though it's contaminated with oil. The coast has also been affected. Recently, an oil pipeline leak and an accident at a refinery near Puerto Cabello in the northwest caused some 20,000 barrels of crude oil to be pumped into the ocean.
Image: Miguel Gutierrez/Agencia EFE/imago images
'The people need gas'
Cars have been lined up waiting for fuel at a Guacara gas station for more than two weeks. Venezuela has been forced to import its gasoline from Iran because its own system is so decrepit that it can barely even pump oil. Ten years ago, Venezuela was pumping some 2.3 million barrels a day. Now it is pumping less than half of that.
Image: Juan Carlos Hernandez/ZUMA Wire/imago images
Collapsed energy supply
In Caracas, people wait in the streets with empty propane tanks in hopes of being able to fill them one day. Since electricity and gasoline have become scarce in Venezuela, many residents have turned to natural gas. Demand has in turn made it scarce too.
Image: Miguel Gutierrez/Agencia EFE/imago images
Fading heroes
Portraits of Hugo Chavez, Fidel Castro, Evo Morales and Rafael Correra adorn the side of a building in Caracas, looking over an overflowing dumpster. Many here worshipped the socialist leaders of Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and Ecuador like saints. But in Venezuela, the socialism of the 21st century has been unable to deliver on its promise of prosperity for all.
Image: Miguel Gutierrez/Agencia EFE/imago images
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"The truth cannot be hidden," Guaido said in a videotaped message, noting the low voter turnout of just 31%. "The majority of Venezuela turned its back on the fraud that began months ago."
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo slammed the legislative elections, calling the process a "sham" designed by Maduro.
"What's happening today is a fraud and a sham, not an election," Pompeo said on Twitter.
The White House National Security Council also calledSunday's vote fraudulent. "This election only serves to keep Maduro in power and doesnothing to build a better future for the people of Venezuela,"thecouncil tweeted.
Despite US President Donald Trump's campaign of strict sanctionsand high diplomatic pressure, Maduro has remained in power, backed bythecountry's military and supported by Russia, Cuba, China and Iran.
Deep and lingering economic woes
More than 20 million Venezuelans were eligible to vote in the country, which has been beset bydeep political and economic crises.
The International Monetary Fund has projected a 25% decline this year in Venezuela's GDP, while hyperinflation has consumed its currency, the bolivar.
A five-year struggle for the legislature
Sunday's vote brought a power struggle between the opposition and Venezuela's ruling PSUV to an end. The AN was the last source of power for the opposition, in a country where all institutions are controlled or influenced by Maduro.
The opposition gained control over the AN in 2015, when it wonby a landslide. But the triumph was short-lived, as pro-government courts stripped the legislature of power and allowed for the creation of a parallel and all-powerful legislative body known as the National Constituent Assembly (ANC).
An election that was seen as compromised filled the ANC with PSUV and Maduro loyalists. This setthe stage for the ongoing power struggle between Guaido and Maduro, afterGuaido declared himself acting president of Venezuela in 2019, a decision he based on constitutional powers granted to him as chief of the AN.
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Opposition in crisis
Despite having obtained the backing of the United States and more than 50 other nations around the world, Guaido's interim presidency and parallel government have not been successful at dislodging Maduro from power or persuading the army to switch sides.
After several high-profile pushes for mass mobilization and a failed coup attempt, cracks began to show and Guaido's government found itself entrenched in acorruption scandal.
The opposition further fractured over Sunday's election, as a small faction has pledged to participate in the vote.
Guaidohas planneda week-long plebiscite, starting Monday, to rebuke the new congress andseeking public support to prolong the mandate of the current AN under his leadership until "free, verifiable and transparent" elections can be held.