Tag Archives: Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan president shuffles Cabinet

Newly elected Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro has shuffled his Cabinet, putting allies of late president Hugo Chavez in positions to tackle pressing problems including widespread power outages and double-digit inflation.

Maduro tapped Jesse Chacon to take charge of government initiatives aimed at upgrading Venezuela‘s power grid, which has been plagued with problems stemming from lack of investment and maintenance.

Many Venezuelans are fed up with blackouts that have been occurring for years around the South American country.

Maduro also announced late Sunday that Nelson Merentes, who had served as president of the central bank, would take the helm at the finance ministry.

Merentes will face the daunting task of reducing inflation, which reached topped 20 percent last year.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/aRaUgF-oFUQ/

Mixed signal from Venezuela election body

A top official from Venezuela‘s electoral council says the audit of the vote from last Sunday’s presidential election isn’t about “revising” the outcome and warned against “false expectations.”

Council Vice President Sandra Oblitas also said, however, that only the Supreme Court can change the outcome.

Her confusing appearance Saturday suggested difficulties ahead for opposition candidate Henrique Capriles. He claims the election was stolen by Hugo Chavez‘s chosen successor, Nicolas Maduro.

An audit of the 46 percent of the vote not scrutinized on election night is to begin next week. Official results gave Maduro a 260,000-vote victory of 14.9 million votes cast.

Inaugurated Friday, Maduro spent much of Saturday with the presidents of Nicaragua and Cuba. He tweeted that he discussed plans for the nation’s future with them.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/A_qoF3jLUdo/

Haiti renames airport for Hugo Chavez

A spokesman for Haiti‘s prime minister says an airport in the country’s north has been renamed for the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Gary Bodeau says the Cap-Haitien International Airport will now be called the Hugo Chavez International Airport. Bodeau is a spokesman for Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe.

The airport’s 17,500-foot runway was repaved in October with Venezuelan money.

Venezuela has been one of Haiti‘s biggest supporters. Venezuela pledged $1.2 billion for Haiti, more than any other country, following the 2010 earthquake but has released just $222 million.

President Michel Martelly left Haiti Thursday to attend the inauguration for Venezuelan President-elect Nicolas Maduro.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/RLH7AZQ4PcY/

Venezuela to audit remaining vote, not do recount

Venezuela‘s electoral council says it will audit the voting machines that were not audited election night in an apparent rejection of the opposition’s demand for a full vote-by-vote recount.

Council President Tibisay Lucen said Thursday night that it would audit the 46 percent of the machines that were not audited immediately after Sunday’s vote.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles has presented a series of allegations of vote fraud and other irregularities to back up his demand for a vote-by-vote recount for the presidential election.

Ruling party candidate Nicolas Maduro, the hand-picked successor of the late Hugo Chavez, was declared the winner by 262,000 votes out of 14.9 million cast.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/goss3dEOfKI/

Rights activist: Venezuelan troops beat protesters

A Venezuelan human rights activist is accusing National Guard troops of beating opposition protesters who refused to recognize the election of Hugo Chavez‘s heir as president.

Alfredo Romero says the beatings happened in the western city of Barquisimeto after at least 300 protesters were arrested across Venezuela for backing the opposition’s demand for a recount of the votes cast in Sunday’s election.

Romero represents a network of more than 200 lawyers and calls the crackdown Venezuela‘s worst political persecution in seven years.

He says National Guard interrogators in Barquisimeto put a hat with a government insignia on detainees’ heads and demanded they recognize Nicolas Maduro‘s election victory. He says detainees who didn’t were struck.

Romero says more than 120 detainees were released Thursday, but many face criminal charges.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/0Ia_yaslcQ4/

Options slim for Venezuelan opposition after court blocks presidential election recount

Venezuela‘s opposition watched its options dwindle Wednesday after the head of the Supreme Court said there could be no recount of the razor-thin presidential election victory by Hugo Chavez‘s heir, leaving many government foes feeling the only chance at power is to wait for the ruling socialists to stumble.

Opposition activists and independent observers called the judge’s declaration blatant and legally unfounded favoritism from a purportedly independent body that is packed with confederates of President-elect Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s hand-picked successor.

The recount issue isn’t before the court, but its president, Luisa Morales, appeared on television at midday to declare that the opposition call for an examination of each and every paper vote receipt had “angered many Venezuelans.”

It was an unsubtle reminder that virtually every lever of power in Venezuela sits in the hands of a ruling party unafraid to use almost all means at its disposal to marginalize its opponents.

“In Venezuela the system is absolutely automatic, in such a way that manual recounts don’t exist,” Morales said.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles later told a TV interviewer that Morales should be disqualified from legal decision on petition that his campaign filed Wednesday for a recount.

A day earlier, Capriles canceled a march in the capital planned for Wednesday, saying the government planned to react with violence. That decision came after Maduro urged his own supporters to take to the streets Wednesday.

Maduro hectored the opposition during a 45-minute live appearance on state television Wednesday, calling his opponents “fascists” plotting to overthrow the government.

“Superman could not win an election here,” Diego Arria, a former U.N. ambassador and conservative member of the opposition coalition, said resignedly.

“We’re left with the option of calling the United Nations, the Organization of American States and the Inter-American Human Rights Commission, but that won’t have any impact here,” Arria told The Associated Press. “If the population stands down, we lose.”

The National Electoral Council on Monday ratified Maduro as the winner of the previous day’s vote with 50.8 percent to Capriles’ 49 percent.

The United States, meanwhile, appeared to soften its insistence on a recount as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry left open the possibility of recognizing Maduro as president even the votes aren’t reviewed.

The Obama administration has stood almost alone, along with Paraguay and Panama, in insisting on a recount as other governments congratulated Maduro, who is scheduled to be formally sworn in Friday.

Maduro’s government said 15 countries had confirmed they were sending high-level delegations, among them Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Iran, China, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Haiti, Uruguay and Argentina.

Kerry said there was no plan to send a U.S. diplomat but when asked about whether the U.S. would recognize Maduro as legitimate, he said, “I can’t give you a yes-or-no answer on that.”

“If there are huge irregularities, we’re going to have serious questions about the viability of that government. But that evaluation has to be made, and I haven’t made it yet,” Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Maduro boomed angrily in a later TV appearance.

“Take your eyes off Venezuela, John Kerry! Get out

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/VnzJtRktZUA/

Each side blames the other for Venezuela violence

All day, the political heirs of Hugo Chavez filled Venezuela‘s airways with a steady drumbeat of attacks on the man who says they stole the presidency from him. They called opposition leader Henrique Capriles a coup-plotter and said he was inciting post-election violence that had claimed seven lives and injured 61.

President-elect Nicolas Maduro further charged Tuesday that the violence was being bankrolled and directed by the United States, which said it wouldn’t recognize his victory without a vote-by-vote recount demanded by Capriles.

It was not clear, however, whether the violence was as serious as Chavez’s anointed successor claimed. Venezuela has an average of more than 40 homicides daily, one of the highest rates in the world, and the government offered almost no information on the deaths that Maduro blamed on “neo-Nazi gangs.”

Capriles called the government assault a smoke screen to divert attention from his demand for a recount of every ballot from Sunday’s election, which the National Electoral Council said Maduro won by 262,000 votes out of 14.9 million cast.

A number of opposition protests across Venezuela have turned violent, but apparently only after National Guard riot troops and police used tear gas and plastic pellets to turn back marchers converging on provincial offices of the electoral council.

While government officials complained of violence by Capriles’ supporters, incidents of intimidation by gangs of pro-government forces, some armed, also occurred.

An Associated Press journalist witnessed a pro-government gang of motorcycle toughs rampage through Teques, seat of the state that Capriles governs. They tossed a firebomb into an opposition party office and smashed display cases and looted goods from a bakery they said was owned by a Capriles supporter.

In the western town of San Francisco in Zulia state, three journalists with the local newspaper La Verdad said they were arrested by motorcycle-borne National Guard troops and jailed overnight Monday because they had interviewed a family that the troops had harassed. Reporter Juan Jose Faria wrote that the troop’s commander told the reporters the country was in the midst of a coup and that they were putschists.

Maduro accused opposition protesters of attacking government health clinics, a socialist party office and the house of electoral council President Tibisay Lucena on Monday, but the government provided no details. Like Chavez, Maduro has a history of making allegations he does not substantiate.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/XxN17Xs2C24/

Venezuela: Maduro Blames US for Deadly Election Violence

By Rob Quinn Meet the new boss: Nicolas Maduro sounded more than a little bit like Hugo Chavez yesterday as he slammed the US and his political foes in Venezuela yesterday. Maduro— declared the winner of the presidential election by a narrow margin—accused the US of being behind post-election violence that government

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166361/venezuela-maduro-blames-us-for-deadly-election-violence.html

Pots vs firecrackers in Venezuelan vote protests

It’s pot-banging protests vs. pro-government fireworks in postelection Venezuela. The acoustic clash is allowing both sides to vent steam while avoiding, at least for now, street battles that in the past have turned bloody.

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles has demanded a recount of Sunday’s election that official results show him narrowly losing to the late Hugo Chavez‘s hand-picked successor, Nicolas Maduro.

As the National Electoral Council proclaimed Maduro the victor, Capriles’ supporters stood on their balconies in Caracas apartment buildings banging pots and pans in protest. Later, they resumed their pot-banging as Maduro held a news conference, some pouring out into the streets.

Maduro’s supporters tried to drown out the noise by setting off firecrackers.

With Maduro urging government supporters to march in the capital Wednesday, Capriles canceled an opposition protest and urged his followers instead to stay home and stage pot-banging protests Tuesday night and for the rest of the week.

Speaking in the central city of Maracay, Maduro called on his supporters to counter pot-banging with more firecrackers.

“If they call a cacerolazo (pot-banging protest) of hate, of intolerance, of aggression against the family, then we will call a great Bolivarian firecracker (demonstration), chavista, popular and of peace,” Maduro said in a speech transmitted on state radio and television.

___

Vivian Sequera on Twitter: https://twitter.com/VivianSequera

___

AP interactive: http://hosted.ap.org/interactives/2013/venezuela-es

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/c3a6mvAG01Q/

Chavez heir begins 6-year term with weak mandate

Nearly half Venezuela‘s voters don’t want Nicolas Maduro in the presidential chair. He’s inherited a dysfunctional economy, a deteriorating power grid and one of the world’s highest homicide rates. And a glimmer of discontent already has surfaced in the movement of Hugo Chavez, who picked him to carry on the socialist revolution.

Maduro was certified the winner of a disputed presidential election Monday amid questions about his ability to lead after he squandered a double-digit lead in the race despite an outpouring of sympathy following Chavez’s death.

Even before he deals with Venezuela‘s mounting problems, Maduro faces a challenge to his victory.

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles demanded a recount of Sunday’s election that he narrowly lost. As the National Electoral Council proclaimed Maduro the victor, people stood on their balconies in Caracas apartment buildings banging pots and pans in protest. Across town, thousands of students briefly clashed with National Guard troops who fired tear gas and plastic bullets.

The tensions persisted through the evening. Residents resumed their pot-banging as Maduro held a news conference, some pouring out into the streets.

In the city center, a divided district, government supporters tried to drown out the noise by setting off deafening firecrackers. Some drove trucks with megaphones, shouting pro-Chavista slogans through megaphones. Pedestrians shouted “Chavez lives! Maduro continues!”

Anti-Maduro protests also broke out in other regions, including Chavez’s home state of Barinas.

Late Tuesday, Maduro announced he had met with a newly created “anti-coup” command at the military museum that holds Chavez’s remains. He accused opposition protesters of attacking government clinics and the house of electoral council President Tibisay Lucena, without offering details. He said the government was investigating a possible death.

Maduro isn’t without strengths. The presidency was made immensely stronger by the charismatic Chavez during his 14 years in power, and the ruling socialists will dominate the National Assembly for at least two more years.

Government leaders and military leaders closed ranks around Maduro on Monday in a series of television appearances to defend the official vote count and accuse Capriles of trying to foment violence.

Still, hours before the show of unity, a key Chavista leader showed a flash of discontent.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/chy1H05FZ8M/

Protests Rage After Venezuela Recount Rejected

By Rob Quinn Police in Caracas fired tear gas to disperse furious opposition supporters after Venezuelan electoral authorities decided there would be no recount of the presidential election result, despite Nicolas Maduro‘s slender margin of victory . Opposition leader Henrique Capriles insists that he, not Hugo Chavez‘s anointed heir, is the real winner and…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166292/protests-rage-after-venezuela-recount-rejected.html

Scattered protests in Venezuela over election

Thousands of students protesting Venezuela‘s disputed election are facing off with National Troops on a highway in the capital.

The university students are chanting anti-government slogans and yelling for others to join their protest.

Soldiers in riot gear are preventing the students from continuing their march down the highway toward the west of Caracas, where most of the government is headquartered.

There is heightened security across the capital. The National Guard has parked armored vehicles in a central plaza and police in riot gear are standing guard at other points.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles has challenged his narrow loss to acting President Nicolas Maduro in Sunday’s election to replace the deceased Hugo Chavez.

The newspaper Ultimas Noticias, meanwhile, is reporting clashes in western Barinas state between police and protesters.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/cpzEFm7e8tY/

Cuba relieved as Chavez heir wins in Venezuela

Cubans are relieved that the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez‘s hand-picked successor has been elected president.

The island nation has benefitted from billions of dollars in subsidized oil under Chavez. New President Nicolas Maduro is seen as an ideological ally who will want to continue the countries’ special relationship.

But Maduro’s razor-thin victory margin has his rival demanding a recount, and experts warn that Cuba‘s relief could be short-lived.

Cuban President Raul Castro was among the first to congratulate Maduro in a note that was published Monday in Communist Party newspaper Granma.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/uGKlA59AMCU/

Hugo Chavez's chosen heir Nicolas Maduro wins Venezuela presidency

Venezuelan electoral officials say voters have narrowly elected Hugo Chavez‘s hand-picked successor as president in a razor-close special election Sunday.

Winner Nicolas Maduro campaigned on a promise to carry on Chavez’s self-styled socialist revolution, and defeated a two-time challenger who claimed the late president’s regime has put Venezuela on the road to ruin.

Officials say Maduro defeated Henrique Capriles by only about 300,000 votes. The margin was 50.8 percent to 49.1 percent.

Hours earlier, Maduro’s campaign had strongly hinted at victory. Campaign chief Jorge Rodriguez smiled broadly during a news conference and summoned supporters to the presidential palace, where Chavez’s supporters gathered to celebrate the late president’s past victories. And he warned that Maduro’s camp would not allow the will of the people to be subverted.

Capriles and his campaign aides immediately lashed out at Rodriguez’s comments.

Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, a Capriles campaign coordinator, suggested the government was trying to steal the election.

“They know perfectly well what happened and so do we,” he said at a hastily called news conference. “They are misleading their people and are trying to mislead the people of this country.”

A war of words erupted on Twitter.

Capriles suggested fraud was in the works , tweeting: “We alert the country and the world of the intent to change the will of the people!”

In an earlier tweet, Capriles urged his supporters not to be “desperate and defeated.”

But former Information Minister Andres Izarra tweeted, “To Miraflores! Long Live Chavez!”

Independent security analyst Rocio San Miguel tweeted that Interior Minister Nestor Reverol was also meeting with senior military commanders.

Bill Richardson, the former New Mexico governor and longtime U.S. ambassador-at-large who came to witness the election, told The Associated Press that both candidates had assured him they would respect the outcome of the vote.

“I’m not here as an election observer, but I met with both candidates — Maduro, yesterday, and Capriles today. And I’m hopeful because both told me they would respect the rule of law and the will of the people,” Richardson said.

Maduro, the 50-year-old longtime foreign minister to Chavez, pinned his hopes on the immense loyalty for his boss among millions of poor beneficiaries of government largesse and the powerful state apparatus that Chavez skillfully consolidated.

Maduro’s campaign was mostly a near-religious homage to the man he called “the redeemer of the Americas,” who succumbed to cancer March 5. He blamed Venezuela‘s myriad woes on vague plots by alleged saboteurs that the government never identified.

Capriles’ main campaign weapon was to simply emphasize “the incompetence of the state,” as he put it to reporters Saturday night.

Maduro’s big lead in opinion polls was cut in half over the past two weeks in a country struggling with the legacy of Chavez’s management of the world’s largest oil reserves.

Millions of Venezuelans were lifted out of poverty under Chavez, but many also believe his government not only squandered, but plundered, much of the $1 trillion in oil revenues during his tenure.

Venezuelans are afflicted by chronic power outages, crumbling infrastructure, unfinished public works projects, double-digit inflation, food and medicine shortages, and rampant

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/1OnOr2i-dqw/

Nicolas Maduro Wins Venezuelan Presidential Election

By The Huffington Post News Editors

CARACAS, April 14 (Reuters) – Ruling party candidate Nicolas Maduro won Venezuela‘s presidential election on Sunday with 51 percent of votes, the electoral authority said, allowing him to carry forward the socialist policies of the late Hugo Chavez.

Maduro’s young challenger, Miranda state Governor Henrique Capriles, took 49 percent of the ballots, the authority said, in a tighter-than-expected vote. (Reporting by Caracas newsroom; Editing by Eric Beech)

Read More…
More on Nicolas Maduro

From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/14/nicolas-maduro-wins_n_3082457.html

Tensions up in Venezuela after polls close

Voters chose Sunday between the hand-picked successor who campaigned to carry on Hugo Chavez‘s self-styled socialist revolution and an emboldened second-time challenger who warned that the late president’s regime has Venezuela on the road to ruin. Tensions rose soon after polls closed as both sides hinted at victory and suggested the other was plotting fraud.

Jorge Rodriguez, the head of the campaign for acting President Nicolas Maduro, said he couldn’t reveal the results before electoral authorities did but strongly suggested Maduro had won by smiling and summoning supporters to the presidential palace, where Chavez’s supporters gathered to celebrate the late president’s past victories. And he warned that Maduro’s camp would not allow the will of the people to be subverted.

Opposition challenger Henrique Capriles and his campaign aides immediately lashed out at Rodriguez’s comments.

Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, a Capriles campaign coordinator, suggested the government was trying to steal the election.

“They know perfectly well what happened and so do we,” he said at a hastily called news conference. “They are misleading their people and are trying to mislead the people of this country.”

Capriles also suggested fraud was in the works in a Twitter message: “We alert the country and the world of the intent to change the will of the people!”

In an earlier tweet, Capriles urged his supporters not to be “desperate and defeated.”

Bill Richardson, the former New Mexico governor and longtime U.S. ambassador-at-large who came to witness the election, told The Associated Press that both candidates had assured him they would respect the outcome of the vote.

“I’m not here as an election observer, but I met with both candidates — Maduro, yesterday, and Capriles today. And I’m hopeful because both told me they would respect the rule of law and the will of the people,” Richardson said.

Maduro, the 50-year-old longtime foreign minister to Chavez, pinned his hopes on the immense loyalty for his boss among millions of poor beneficiaries of government largesse and the powerful state apparatus that Chavez skillfully consolidated.

Maduro’s campaign was mostly a near-religious homage to the man he called “the redeemer of the Americas,” who succumbed to cancer March 5. He blamed Venezuela‘s myriad woes on vague plots by

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/dG2iEFsTrqQ/

Chavez Heir Squeaks to Victory in Venezuela

By Rob Quinn Nicolas Maduro, the former bus driver Hugo Chavez chose as his political heir, has triumphed in Venezuela‘s presidential election by a margin much narrower than expected. Electoral official say Maduro took 50.7% of the votes to 49.1% for opposition challenger Henrique Capriles, the AP reports. Maduro, who had…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166234/chavez-heir-squeaks-to-victory-in-venezuela.html

Chavez get-out-the-vote machine knocks on doors

It’s nearly midday Sunday and pro-government community leader Richard Escobar is marshaling get-out-the vote forces just outside a polling station in his piece of Petare, one of Latin America‘s biggest slums.,

“Noon at the red rendezvous point,” he repeats several times for emphasis to a man who will dispatch volunteers into steep hills jammed with brick homes to rouse laggards that they know will vote for Nicholas Maduro, the anointed political heir of Hugo Chavez, who died of cancer last month.

“We’re planning at midday to comb all the stairways in the sector and knock on doors to make sure they vote,” says Escobar. “Each person will go up a separate stairway.”

During Chavez‘s 14 years in power his supporters consolidated grass-roots power in Petare, where a half million of Venezuela‘s 29 million people reside, by divvying out cash for soup kitchens, senior centers, nurseries and other services.

They also built up a powerful machine staffed by several hundreds of thousands that compiles lists of government workers and recipients of government largesse and makes sure they get to the polls, even if they have to be driven there.

“If we don’t go up into the hills and persuade the poor to vote, we’re going lose,” says Escobar, who says he recognizes Maduro is just an imitation of Chavez but calls the alternative, opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, a murderer and a fascist.

Get-out-the-vote efforts are also strong in wealthy neighborhoods where Capriles is favored.

In Los Palos Grandes, an eastern Caracas district of shaded streets and pricey boutiques, groups of young people with megaphones paraded down sidewalks chanting, “You’ve got to vote. You’ve got to vote.”

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/Cs624PrN4Vg/

Venezuela Votes in a Referendum on Chavez

By Polly Davis Doig Election day in Venezuela began today before dawn, with lines forming in the dark as bugle calls and a recording of the late Hugo Chavez singing the national anthem rang out. Chavez haunts the proceedings in more than one way, with handpicked successor and longtime deputy Nicolas Maduro facing a…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166206/venezuela-votes-in-a-referendum-on-chavez.html

Venezuela's choice: Chavez heir or fresh start

Voters who kept Hugo Chavez in office for 14 years decide Sunday whether to elect the devoted lieutenant he chose to carry on the revolution that endeared him to the poor but that many Venezuelans believe is ruining the nation.

Nicolas Maduro sought to ride Chavez’s endorsement to victory with a campaign nearly bereft of promises but freighted with personal attacks that was otherwise little more than an unflagging tribute to the polarizing leader who died of cancer March 5.

The 50-year-old longtime Chavez foreign minister pinned his hopes on the immense loyalty for his boss among millions of poor beneficiaries of a socialist government‘s largesse and the heft of a state apparatus that Chavez skillfully consolidated.

The governing United Socialist Party of Venezuela deployed a well-worn, get-out-the-vote machine spearheaded by loyal state employees. It also enjoyed a pervasive state media apparatus as part of a near monopoly on institutional power.

Challenger Henrique Capriles‘ aides accused Chavista loyalists in the judiciary of putting them at glaring disadvantage. Prosecutors and state regulators impoverished the campaign and opposition broadcast media by targeting them with unwarranted fines and prosecutions, they said

Capriles’ main campaign weapon was thus jujutsu: To simply point out “the incompetence of the state,” as he put it to reporters in a news conference Saturday night.

Maduro was still favored, but his early big lead in opinion polls halved over the past two weeks in a country struggling with the legacy of Chavez’s management of the world’s largest oil reserves. Many Venezuelans believe his confederates not only squandered but plundered much of the $1 trillion in oil revenues during his time in office.

People are fed up with chronic power outages, crumbling infrastructure, unfinished public works projects, double-digit inflation, food and medicine shortages and rampant crime that has given Venezuela among the world’s highest homicide and kidnapping rates.

Capriles is a 40-year-old state governor who lost to Chavez in October’s presidential election by a nearly 11-point margin, the best showing ever by a challenger to the longtime president. He showed for Maduro none of the respect he accorded Chavez. Maduro hit back hard, at one point calling Capriles’ backers “heirs of Hitler.” It was an odd accusation considering that Capriles is the grandson of Holcaust survivors from Poland.

“Capriles ran a remarkable campaign

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/yclM8ffOn8w/