Venezuela's Machado wins presidential primary, near-final count shows
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[October 25, 2023]
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina
Machado easily won Sunday's presidential primary contest with 93% of the
vote, the latest tally showed on Wednesday, though questions about her
eventual candidacy persist. |
Maria Corina Machado, the winner of Venezuela's opposition presidential
primary, addresses the media, in Caracas, Venezuela October 24, 2023.
REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria |
After tallying 91.3% of ballot boxes, the National Primary
Commission declared the results conclusive. Former lawmaker
Carlos Prosperi - Machado's nearest rival to challenge President
Nicolas Maduro - won just 4%, the count showed.
Machado had already asserted her victory after an initial count
of about a quarter of the ballots showed she was heading for a
landslide win in the ballot to pick a unified opposition
candidate to run against Maduro.
The Socialist president, in power for a decade, is expected to
run for re-election in a presidential election due next year.
Washington has threatened to roll back sanction relief if
Maduro's government fails to lift bans preventing some
opposition figures - including Machado - from holding office.
Machado was barred over her vocal support for the sanctions on
Maduro's government, meaning it is uncertain whether she will be
able to run for the presidency.
Opposition figures have said for years that the bans are used by
the ruling party to help it stay in power.
Maduro has presided over a prolonged economic crash and the
exodus of more than 7 million Venezuelan who have left the
oil-rich nation in search of better prospects elsewhere.
Machado, 56, has pledged to privatize state oil company PDVSA if
elected president.
(Reporting by Vivian Sequera; Writing by Natalia Siniawski;
Editing by Helen Popper)
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