Explainer: Venezuela's 2024 Presidential Elections
Explainer: Venezuela's 2024 Presidential Elections
Nicólas Maduro keeps stacking the deck to win come July 28, but polls favor opposition candidate Edmundo González.
The big question for Venezuela’s July 28 elections may not be who voters prefer but whether their preference will be respected.
The previous presidential election, which took place in 2018, was marked by irregularities. The reelection of Nicólas Maduro was considered illegitimate by the EU and countries around the world. Now, Maduro is seeking to extend his already decade-long reign with another six-year term. But will this race be free and fair?
The fact that Venezuelans will even have the chance to go to the polls was not a given just a few months ago. The framework for this election was established in through the Barbados Accords, signed in October 2023 by the Maduro government and an alliance of opposition parties known as the Unitary Platform. The agreement set out conditions for the election, including that it must take place in the second half of this year, electoral reforms must be made, and international observation must be allowed. It also covered guarantees for the opposition’s participation and primary election process. The United States, which was not party to the accords, agreed to drop some sanctions to get Maduro to stick to his Barbados pledges.
A few conditions have been met. The opposition did have its primary in October 2023. And, Maduro set the date for July 28—his deceased predecessor Hugo Chávez’s birthday, marking a date that is early but within the promised range. But other promises have been violated, with one key example being the January disqualification of presidential candidate Maria Corina Machado, who won the opposition primary with 93 percent of the vote. This prompted international outcry and the resumption of some sanctions.
Now, the Unitary Platform has a new candidate, former diplomat Edmundo González Urrutia, and polls suggest he has a commanding lead of as much as 50 points over Maduro. What is González proposing? And how might Maduro undercut his rivals?
AS/COA Online covers the electoral context and the candidates.
Polls indicate a preference for opposition candidate Edmundo González Urrutia ahead of current leader Nicolás Maduro. But will the vote be fair?
The Baker Institute’s Francisco Monaldi covers what Washington’s plans for sanctions relief means for Venezuela’s oil sector and 2024 elections.
Bloomberg’s Fabiola Zerpa and Amherst College’s Javier Corrales discuss the Venezuelan leader’s bleak record as the country prepares for 2024 elections.
A unified opposition has a real chance to restore democracy on July 28, write the AS/COA Chairman and President and CEO in Americas Quarterly.
AS/COA covered 2024's elections in the Americas, from presidential to municipal votes.