Venezuela Opposition Shifts Strategy, Will Take Part in Elections
CARACAS (Reuters) -
Venezuela’s main opposition parties have said they will participate in November regional and local elections, a strategy reversal after boycotting previous elections they argued were not free or fair.
The opposition’s decision was made as a more-than two-year push to oust President Nicolas Maduro through international pressure and calls for the military to switch allegiances has failed.
That frustration has led many opposition politicians to clamor for Juan Guaido - an opposition legislator elected in 2015 and later recognized by the United States as interim president - to change tack, as U.S. sanctions add to the OPEC member’s economic woes.
“For those who think that the solution is not electoral ... then what is it?” Henry Ramos Allup, a leader of the Democratic Action opposition party, asked at a news conference in Caracas.
Maduro welcomed the opposition’s announcement as a change from calls for sanctions and military intervention.
“The decision to participate in the elections once again is worthy of applause,” he said on state television. “I will sit in my armchair with popcorn on November 21 to watch Juan Guaido vote.”
Earlier on Tuesday, Freddy Guevara - a leader in Guaido’s hardline Popular Will party - called for “coexistence” with Maduro rather than trying to force a change in government. read more.