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Chavez loses
vote for lifetime office
CARACAS (Venezuela)—Humbled by his first electoral defeat ever,
President Hugo Chavez said Monday he may have been too ambitious in
asking voters to let him stand indefinitely for re-election and endorse
a huge leap to a socialist state.
“I understand and accept that the proposal I made was quite profound and
intense,” he said after voters narrowly rejected the sweeping
constitutional reforms by 51 percent to 49 percent. Opposition activists
were ecstatic as the results were announced shortly after midnight —
with 88 percent of the vote counted, the trend was declared irreversible
by elections council chief Tibisay Lucena.
Some shed tears. Others began chanting: “And now he’s going away!” Foes
of the reform effort — including Roman Catholic leaders, media freedom
groups, human rights groups and prominent business leaders — said it
would have granted Chavez unchecked power and imperiled basic rights.
Chavez told reporters at the presidential palace that the outcome of
Sunday’s balloting had taught him that “Venezuelan democracy is
maturing.” His respect for the verdict, he asserted, proves he is a true
democratic leader. “From this moment on, let’s be calm,” he proposed,
asking for no more street violence like the clashes that marred pre-vote
protests. “There is no dictatorship here.” A senior U.S. official hailed
Chavez’s referendum defeat Monday as a victory for the country’s
citizens who want to preserve democracy and prevent Chavez from having
unchecked power. “We felt that this referendum would make Chavez
president for life, and that’s not ever a welcome development,” U.S.
Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told reporters in Singapore. “In
a country that wants to be a democracy, the people spoke, and the people
spoke for democracy and against unlimited power.”
Chavez, who was briefly ousted in a failed 2002 coup, blamed the loss on
low turnout among the very supporters who re-elected him a year ago with
63 percent of the vote. Seven in 10 eligible voters cast ballots then.
This time it was just 56 percent. The defeated reform package would have
created new types of communal property, let Chavez handpick local
leaders under a redrawn political map and suspended civil liberties
during extended states of emergency. Without the overhaul, Chavez will
be barred from running again in 2012.
Other changes would have shortened the workday from eight hours to six,
created a social security fund for millions of informal laborers and
promoted communal councils where residents decide how to spend
government funds. Nelly Hernandez, a 37-year-old street vendor, cried as
she wandered outside the presidential palace early Monday amid broken
beer bottles as government workers took apart a stage mounted earlier
for a victory fete. “It’s difficult to accept this, but Chavez has not
abandoned us, he’ll still be there for us,” she said between sobs.
A close ally of Cuba’s Fidel Castro, Chavez has redistributed more oil
wealth than past Venezuelan leaders, and also has aided Latin American
allies — including Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua — that have followed
Venezuela’s turn to the left.—Agencies
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