Venezuelan official party to call referendum extending Chavez in office

by rahul | November 30, 2008 at 11:44 am
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Venezuelan official party to call referendum extending Chavez in office

Venezuelan official party to call referendum extending Chavez in office

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Caracas, Venezuela, 30 November, 2008. Today, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez asked the governing party, PSUV, to initiate the constitutional procedures to call for a referendum extending his term in office after 2012.

According to the Venezuelan constitution, the President, the parliament and the people have the right to call for a referendum. After defeat over the constitutional reform submitted last December, President Chavez could not personally initiate the referendum procedure on the same issue again. However, the local election results obtained last Sunday, has allowed Chavez to ask the PSUV to start collecting signatures for the Referendum. This announcement will dismay opposition cadres that despite winning places in Caracas, Zulia. Carabobo and Tachira states confronted a drop in popularity nationwide.

President Chavez told thousands of supporters that he would be seeking the constitutional changes necessary to allow the president to stand for indefinite re-election. The president narrowly lost a referendum on exactly that issue last December and under the present rules, he must stand down in 2012. But now the debate must start around the country, he said. "I am ready, and if I am healthy, God willing, I will be with you until 2019, until 2021," he said. The opposition say that the same issue cannot be voted on twice. But President Chavez may well be able to get around that. ... This would be a proposal for a single amendment to the constitution, and as such could send Venezuelans back to the polls some time next year. It is far from clear whether President Chavez would win another vote on the matter. Although the president's personal support is still over 50%, the opposition has been buoyed by its recent performances at the ballot box. Any vote on this question is likely to be as close as the last, in which a few thousand votes separated the two sides.

Sources: VTV, YVKE, El Mundo.es, El Universal, Globovision, Unionradio, Telesur,

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AlvarezGalloso

I am opposed to any third term regardless of the political affiliation.

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First Flagged at 12:07 PM, Nov 30, 2008 by Cypresso
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