Chavista candidate Nicolas Maduro and his rival Henrique Capriles both announced they would accept any election result. Earlier the opposition slammed Maduro for allegedly violating a media blackout while his Twitter account was hacked during the vote.
Capriles’ campaign team lodged an official complaint against the
government for what they called a “violation of electoral norms” on
the blackout day before the polls opened.
Nicolas Maduro appeared on Venezuelan television on Saturday
visiting the tomb of deceased leader Hugo Chavez and marking the
anniversary of the 2002 coup d’état against the former
president.
"Let's honor his [Hugo Chavez's] memory, his legacy,"
Maduro told Venezuelans in a speech at the tomb, accompanied by
renowned Argentine footballer Maradona.
Maduro also inaugurated the television channel ConCiencia, taking
advantage of his moment in front of the camera to criticize some of
Venezuela’s most famous actors and directors for their support of
Capriles.
Capriles wrote on Twitter that the move was a “flagrant
violation” of election rules. The opposition candidate also
launched an Internet channel to publicize his candidacy on
Saturday, but maintained that he was “respecting the electoral
rules, but those in power don't know anything other than the abuse
of power.”
Acting President Maduro is currently the frontrunner in the polls,
leading by 5 percentage points according to a survey by
Datanalisis. The former bus driver has capitalized on the public
grief that followed Chavez's March 5 death, calling himself the
former president’s “son” and vowing to continue his
legacy.
Despite Maduro’s initial dominance in the electoral campaign, rival
Capriles has gained significant ground in the run-up to Election
Day. The opposition candidate has called for a business-orientated
economic model that he says will emulate Brazil’s recent
growth.
“In the state of Miranda we implemented the FomeZero social
initiative, a Brazilian idea, and in four years we helped more than
75,000 people in extreme poverty,” Capriles said in an
interview with Brazilian outlet Globo.
Political analyst Gearoid O Colmain told RT that the opposition has little support among Venezuelans and Maduro should have an easy victory in this election.
“It is very unlikely that the opposition is going to win. The opposition has very little support on the ground. It is a part of a usual media procedure to claim that the opposition has some sort of credibility. Maduro should have a fairly comfortable victory.”
He adds,“Capriles is not a serious candidate. He is a puppet
of the US. He is an obnoxious character. He got into a lot of
trouble a couple of weeks ago, when he insulted handicap people. He
is not a politician at all. He is on Television in tracksuits and
baseball caps in order to make himself popular and so on. He has
absolutely no policies. He represents a return to the horrible
1990s system of corruption and crime, a tiny oligarchy which had
the power in their hands. There are few people in Venezuela who
will tolerate that.”