Venezuela ruling party officially makes Maduro its candidate in the July presidential election
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Saturday became his party’s official nominee for July’s highly anticipated presidential election, which would allow him to stroll into a third consecutive term with no real competition on the horizon.
Not unusual to Venezuela, the election has been plagued with controversy since Maduro’s main opponent, María Corina Machado — who swept an opposition coalition’s primary election with more than 90% of votes — was disqualified by Venezuelan authorities to hold public office for 15 years.
Maduro accepted the nomination as the ruling United Socialist Party’s candidate for the July 28 presidential election during a party gathering in Caracas, saying he has “the support of the people.” According to the party, its decision was backed by over 4 million members who chose their candidate last week.
“A man alone would not be here. I am here for the people,” Maduro said. “Here, the candidate is not Maduro. Here, the candidate is the people.”