http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/12/07/venezuela-opposition-claims-victory-in-legislative-elections/
CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuela's
opposition won control of the National Assembly by a landslide,
trouncing the ruling party and altering the balance of power after
almost 17 years of socialist rule.
The opposition coalition won at least 99 seats in the incoming
167-seat legislature, electoral authorities announced after midnight
Sunday. The ruling socialist party won 46 seats. The 19 remaining races
remain up for grabs, but if enough are won by the opposition it could
give the coalition a two-thirds supermajority needed to strongly
challenge President Nicolas Maduro's grip on power.
The streets of the Venezuelan capital of Caracas broke out in shouts
of joy, fireworks and car honks after National Electoral Council
President Tibisay Lucena announced the partial results six hours after
polls closed. In the plaza in wealthy eastern Caracas that was the
epicenter of last year's bloody anti-government protests, a small group
of opponents, some of them sipping champagne, burned red shirts that are
the obligatory revolutionary attire.
Within seconds, Maduro recognized the opposition's win, saying that
despite an adverse result Venezuela's democracy had triumphed. But he
recalled the long history of U.S.-supported coups in Latin America in
blaming the "circumstantial" loss on a conservative "counter revolution"
trying to sabotage the oil-dependent economy and destabilize his rule.
"I can say today that the economic war has triumphed," Maduro,
surrounded by his party's top leadership, said from the presidential
palace.
Opposition leaders meanwhile spoke in strident terms, a prelude to
what's likely to be a period of intense political fighting in a deeply
polarized country mired in an economic crisis. Voter turnout was a
stunning 74 percent, near levels normally seen in presidential voting,
as Venezuelans punished Maduro's government for widespread shortages, a
plunging currency and triple-digit inflation that has brought the
economy to the edge of collapse.
"Venezuelan families are tired of living the consequences of the
failure," Jesus Torrealba, head of the Democratic Unity opposition
coalition, told supporters at campaign headquarters. "The country wants
change and that change is beginning today."
The opposition victory deals a serious setback to the socialist
revolution started almost 17 years ago by the late Hugo Chavez, who
until his death in 2013 had an almost-magical hold on the political
aspirations of Venezuela's long-excluded masses.
It was also a major blow to Latin America's left, which gained power
in the wake of Chavez's ascent but more recently has been struggling in
the face of a region-wide economic slowdown and voter fatigue in some
countries with rampant corruption. Last month, Argentines elected a
conservative businessman over the chosen successor of Cristina
Fernandez, who was a close ally of Chavez. In Brazil, President Dilma
Rousseff is battling impeachment over a corruption scandal in her
long-ruling Workers' Party.
Maduro had repeatedly vowed in recent weeks to take to the streets
and defend his mentor Chavez's legacy if his party lost. But on Sunday
night he softened his tone, urging his supporters to regroup from the
loss in calm.
"I call on all of our people to recognize in peace these results and
re-evaluate many political aspects of the revolution," he said.
But some government supporters were bracing for a fight.
"Now everything will just get worse. The Chavistas will go to war
with the opposition," said Diana Areaz, who waited with her friend who
makes a living dressing up as Cuban revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara
to hear the results.
For Areaz, who was 8 years old when Chavez came to power, the defeat was unimaginable.
"I've only ever known one government. But the truth is Maduro
abandoned the revolution, and now it's hardly a revolution at all," she
said.
The result marked the opposition's first major electoral victory since Chavez became president.
Voting was mostly peaceful, though fears of unrest prompted some
Venezuelans to line up before dawn so they could cast their ballots and
go home to wait for results. Foreshadowing the historic win, several
ruling party governors were caught on film braving boos and insults as
they entered their polling places, including Chavez's brother Adan.
The opposition is likely to use its newfound leverage to pass an
amnesty for dozens of opponents jailed during last year's protests. Some
hardliners are vowing to seek a recall referendum to cut short Maduro's
term before it ends in 2019.
But reining in Maduro, who became president after Chavez died in
2013, will be tough. Maduro's near-complete grip on other branches of
government like the Supreme Court mean he can easily outflank a hostile
congress. And some have already floated the idea that outgoing lawmakers
can pass a law granting Maduro special decree powers to ride roughshod
over the new congress, which won't be sworn in until January.
Their work will be easier if they obtain a two-thirds majority of 112
lawmakers -- still a possibility if enough of the undecided races break
the opposition's way. Such a super majority would allow the congress to
sack supreme court justices, pass major legislation and even convene a
convention to rewrite Chavez's 1999 constitution.