• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Confident Chavez says foes to cry fraud in vote

CARACAS
Tue Nov 27, 2007 1:21pm EST
Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez speaks to supporters during an event in Caracas November 26, 2007. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he expects to win Sunday's constitutional reform referendum on scrapping term limits by 10 percentage points, but said his opponents will cry fraud and promote violence if they lose.

World

The Venezuelan leader faces the toughest vote of his career, with recent polls showing at best a technical tie on December 2 for the leftist former soldier who has cruised to ballot box victories about once a year since his first 1998 election.

"Next Sunday I expect we will win ... with a minimum lead of 10 points and a ceiling of 20 points," Chavez said during a meeting with businessmen late on Monday.

"But we are all sure even if we beat them by 10 points, or 20 or 50 they will say we stole the election and will try to destabilize (the government)," Chavez said. "They are already trying."

Violence has marred the brief referendum campaign, with one man shot dead on Monday as he tried to pass through a line of opposition demonstrators. The shooting followed weeks of protests and clashes in which some were wounded by gunfire.

The constitutional reform would end presidential term limits, boost executive powers during emergencies, give the president direct control over currency reserves and expand social security benefits as part of Chavez's campaign to create a socialist state.

Opposition political parties, university students, Roman Catholic Church leaders and rights groups call the reform a power grab by an increasingly authoritarian leader.

Interior Minister Pedro Carreno late on Monday said authorities raided homes and in various locations impounded weapons he said were linked to opposition efforts to destabilize the weekend vote.

Carreno accused opposition leaders of planning to release an exit poll showing the "No" vote winning as a way of later crying fraud if voters approve the referendum changes.

Opposition leaders accused the government of vote-rigging in a 2004 referendum that Chavez won by a landslide, but never provided evidence of foul play. International observers also called the vote clean.

Chavez still has broad support of the country's majority poor who back his social projects financed by the OPEC nation's abundant oil revenues. He has promoted his self-styled revolution as a counterweight to U.S. free market policies.

(Reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez and Enrique Andres Pretel, Writing by Brian Ellsworth, Editing by Patrick Markey and Vicki Allen)



More from Reuters

Photo

Personal spending and income rise in November

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Consumer spending rose for a second straight month in November as incomes recorded their biggest gain in six months, data showed on Wednesday, boosting hopes of a self-sustaining economic recovery.

Malaysians participate in computer attack and defence hacking competition during The 3rd Annual Hack-In-The-Box Security Conference 2004 in Kuala Lumpur on October 6, 2004. REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad
Commentary:

Year of the breach

Data security breaches are nasty business and should be avoided at all costs, writes Kevin Prince, a chief technology officer at Perimeter e-Security. Here's a look at the biggest breaches and blunders of 2009.  Commentary 

 man walks past a stock quotation board displaying the Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo June 1, 2009. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

Running out of options

Bad news for safety-oriented investors: the AAA debt market is shrinking, and what's left will leave many with less diversification and lower returns than they're used to, writes columnist Agnes Crane.  Commentary