Venezuela’s Maduro wins reelection – electoral council 

Supporters of Venezuelan President and presidential candidate Nicolas Maduro wait for the first results of the presidential election, outside the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on July 28, 2024. With bated breath, Venezuela awaited the results Sunday of a fraught presidential election in which socialist incumbent Nicolas Maduro faced the biggest challenge yet to his party's 25-year hold on power. (Photo by YURI CORTEZ / AFP)

Supporters of Venezuelan President and presidential candidate Nicolas Maduro wait for the first results of the presidential election, outside the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on July 28, 2024. (Photo by YURI CORTEZ / Agence France-Presse)

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro won reelection with 51.2 percent of votes cast Sunday, the electoral council announced, after a campaign tainted by claims of opposition intimidation and fears of fraud.

Elvis Amoroso, president of the CNE electoral body loyal to the government, told reporters 44.2 percent of votes had gone to opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia who had been leading in polls.

Maduro, 61, won a third six-year term at the helm of the once wealthy petro-state where GDP dropped by 80 percent in a decade, pushing more than seven million of its 30 million citizens to emigrate.

In office since 2013, he is accused of locking up critics and harassing the opposition in a climate of rising authoritarianism.

Independent polls had suggested Sunday’s vote could bring an end to 25 years of “Chavismo,” the populist movement founded by Maduro’s socialist predecessor and mentor, the late Hugo Chavez.

READ: Venezuelans anxiously await results of presidential poll

Gonzalez Urrutia replaced popular opposition leader Maria Corina Machado on the ticket after authorities loyal to Maduro excluded her from the race.

Machado, who campaigned far and wide for her proxy, urged voters late Sunday to keep “vigil” at their polling stations in the “decisive hours” of counting amid widespread fears of fraud.

READ: Millions vote in fraught Venezuelan presidential election

Maduro counts on a loyal electoral apparatus, military leadership and state institutions in a system of well-established political patronage.

Sunday’s election was the product of a mediated deal reached last year between the government and opposition.

The agreement led the United States to temporarily ease sanctions imposed after Maduro’s 2018 reelection, which was rejected as a sham by dozens of Western and Latin American countries.

But the sanctions were snapped back after Maduro reneged on agreed conditions.

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