US recognises Gonzalez as the winner of Venezuela’s election
Multiple countries have called on the electoral authority to show proof of vote counts.
The stakes grew higher for Venezuela’s electoral authority to show proof backing its decision to declare president Nicolas Maduro the winner of the country’s presidential election after the US recognised opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez as the victor.
The US announcement followed calls from multiple governments, including close allies of Mr Maduro, for Venezuela’s National Electoral Council to release detailed vote counts, as it has done during previous elections.
The electoral body declared Mr Maduro the winner on Monday, but the main opposition coalition revealed hours later that it had evidence to the contrary in the form of more than two-thirds of the tally sheets that each electronic voting machine printed after polls closed.
Mr Maduro responded with a quick admonishment: “The United States needs to keep its nose out of Venezuela!”
The US government announcement came amid diplomatic efforts to persuade Mr Maduro to release vote tallies from the election and increasing calls for an independent review of the results, according to officials from Brazil and Mexico.
Government officials from Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico have been in constant communication with Mr Maduro’s administration to convince him that he must show the vote tally sheets from Sunday’s election and allow impartial verification, a Brazilian government official told The Associated Press on Thursday.
The officials have told Venezuela’s government that showing the data is the only way to dispel any doubt about the results, said the Brazilian official, who was not authorised to speak publicly about the diplomatic efforts and requested anonymity.
Earlier, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he planned to speak with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil and President Gustavo Petro of Colombia, and that his government believes it is important that the electoral tallies be made public.
Later on Thursday, the governments of Brazil, Colombia and Mexico issued a joint statement calling on Venezuela’s electoral authorities “to move forward expeditiously and publicly release” detailed voting data, but they did not confirm any backroom diplomatic efforts to persuade Mr Maduro’s government to publish the vote tallies.
“The fundamental principle of popular sovereignty must be respected through impartial verification of the results,” they said in the statement.
On Monday, after the National Electoral Council declared Mr Maduro the winner of the election, thousands of opposition supporters took to the streets.
The government said it arrested hundreds of protesters and Venezuela-based human rights organisation Foro Penal said 11 people were killed.
Dozens more were arrested the following day, including a former opposition candidate, Freddy Superlano.
Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado — who was barred from running for president — and Mr Gonzalez addressed a huge rally of their supporters in the capital, Caracas, on Tuesday, but they have not been seen in public since.
Later that day, the president of the National Assembly, Jorge Rodriguez, called for their arrest, calling them criminals and fascists.
In an op-ed published on Thursday in the Wall Street Journal, Ms Machado said she is “hiding, fearing for my life, my freedom, and that of my fellow countrymen”.
She reasserted that the opposition has physical evidence that Mr Maduro lost the election and urged the international community to intervene.
“We have voted Mr Maduro out,” she wrote. “Now it is up to the international community to decide whether to tolerate a demonstrably illegitimate government.”
Government repression over the years has pushed opposition leaders into exile. After the op-ed was published, Mr Machado’s team told the AP that she was “sheltering”.
Mr Machado later posted a video on social media calling on supporters to gather on Saturday across the country.
The Gonzalez campaign had no comment on the op-ed.
On Wednesday, Mr Maduro asked Venezuela’s highest court to conduct an audit of the election, but that request drew almost immediate criticism from foreign observers who said the court is too close to the government to produce an independent review.
Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal of Justice is closely aligned with Mr Maduro’s government.
The court’s justices are nominated by federal officials and ratified by the National Assembly, which Mr Maduro’s sympathisers dominate.
Mr Gonzalez and Ms Machado say they obtained more than two-thirds of the tally sheets printed from electronic voting machines after the polls closed. They said the release of the data on those tallies would prove Mr Maduro lost.
Asked why electoral authorities have not released detailed vote counts, Maduro said the National Electoral Council has come under attack, including cyber-attacks, without elaborating.
The presidents of Colombia and Brazil — both close allies of the Venezuelan government — have urged Mr Maduro to release detailed vote counts.
The official said this would include the release of voting data and allowing independent verification.
Mr Lopez Obrador said Mexico hopes the will of Venezuela’s people will be respected and that there is no violence. He added that Mexico expects “that the evidence, the electoral results records, be presented”.
Pressure has been building on the president since the election.
The National Electoral Council, loyal to Mr Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela, has yet to release any results broken down by voting machine, as it did in past elections.
It did, however, report that Mr Maduro received 5.1 million votes, versus more than 4.4 million for Mr Gonzalez.
But Ms Machado, the opposition leader, said vote tallies show Mr Gonzalez received roughly 6.2 million votes compared with 2.7 million for Mr Maduro.