2008 Venezuelan regional elections

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Script error: No such module "Sidebar". Regional elections were held in Venezuela on 23 November 2008 to choose 22 governors and 2 metropolitan mayors. The candidates were selected for a term beginning in 2008 and ending in 2012, when the next regional elections will be held. The 2008 regional elections were the second during the government of Hugo Chávez Frías and the first since he founded the United Socialist Party.[1]

The government of the state of Amazonas and nine municipalities were not chosen in this elections because they had been elected after the 2004 regional elections.[2] The Venezuelan opposition managed to attain the metropolitan municipality of Caracas, won by candidate Antonio Ledezma, as well as five state governments; the United Socialist Party, meanwhile, won seventeen.

Henrique Capriles Radonski, the former mayor of the Baruta municipality,[3] became the governor of Miranda, defeating the incumbent, Diosdado Cabello.[4] Adán Chávez, president Hugo Chavéz's brother,[4] became the governor of Barinas. In Carabobo, Henrique Salas Feo, the son of former presidential candidate Henrique Salas Römer, defeated his opponent Mario Silva to become the governor. Pablo Pérez Álvarez became the governor Zulia; he succeeded Manuel Rosales, who had governed from 2000 until 2008 and was a presidential candidate in 2006.[5]

Background

After losing the 2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, the opposition became determined to participate in the 2008 elections.[6] Prior to the elections, the General Comptroller, a Chávez ally, banned almost 300 candidates who had been accused of corruption without making formal charges.[6] Leopoldo López, a rising figure within the opposition who raised fears among the Chávez administration, was one of the hundreds of candidates barred from holding office.[6] The Supreme Tribunal later ratified the bans and removed the candidates from the process.[7][8][9]

In early January 2008, some opposition political parties expressed their willingness to sign a unitary agreement to run in the regional elections of November of that year.[10][11][12] On 23 January, in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the return of democracy to Venezuela, the coalition of National Unity (later known as the Democratic Unity Roundtable) was created, formed by the political parties A New Era (UNT), Justice First (PJ), Democratic Action (AD), Copei, Movement For Socialism (MAS), Radical Cause, Project Venezuela (PRVZL), Fearless People's Alliance (ABP) and Popular Vanguard (VP), reached an agreement committing to present joint candidates in all the states and municipalities of the country.[13] Other political parties representing the more radical opposition such as Alianza Popular, Comando Nacional de la Resistencia and Frente Patriótico denounced at the beginning that they were excluded from the agreement.[14]

With the document, called National Unity Agreement, they expected to seek unitary candidacies for the regional elections, besides proposing ten national objectives of their "vision of the country".[15] The agreement also created a set of rules regarding decisions, including decisions being made by a majority of 3/5ths of members or 70% of the popular vote during election processes, the process to determine a joint candidate either through majority or a primary election and a unified policy framework.[16] Many For Social Democracy (Podemos) leaders expressed their support to the presentation of joint candidacies with the Unity, such as Ricardo Gutiérrez and Ernesto Paraqueima, announcing that they would support the candidacies of the above mentioned agreement for governorships and mayorships.[17][18] Ismael García, secretary general of Podemos and deputy for Aragua, announced on 29 April the support of his party to opposition candidates in the states of Lara and Miranda as well as in the Metropolitan District of Caracas for the regional elections.[19][20]

Candidates

The following list shows the three main candidates according to their political affiliation (government, opposition and dissident or independent) ordered by number of votes attained. The political affiliation is determined by the political parties supporting each candidate. For the 2008 elections, government candidates were supported by the United Socialist Party; opposition candidates were supported by either Justice First, Democratic Action or the Political Electoral Independent Organization Committee parties; and independent candidates were mostly supported by regional parties.

Metropolitan mayors

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Metropolitan mayorship winners and candidates with affiliation, percentage and number of votes attained
Metropolitan Area Affiliation Candidate % Votes
Caracas

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Alto Apure

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Governors

A white man with gray-shaded hair and lens talking with his mouth half-opened
Antonio Ledezma became the mayor of the Metropolitan municipality of Caracas, defeating Aristóbulo Istúriz.
A man smiling while wearing a hat with the colours of the Venezuelan flag: red, blue and yellow.
Henrique Capriles Radonski, whom became presidential candidate in 2012, defeated former vice-president and governor Diosdado Cabello to become the governor for the Miranda state.
A black suited man talking to an audience in front of a microphone
Pablo Pérez Álvarez defeated his adversary Gian Carlo di Martino and succeeded Manuel Rosales as governor of the Zulia state.
Template:Double-dagger Indicates the winning candidate
Governorship winners and candidates with affiliation, percentage and number of votes attained
State Affiliation Candidate % Votes
Anzoátegui

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Apure

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Aragua

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Barinas

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Bolívar

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Carabobo

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Cojedes

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Delta Amacuro

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Falcón

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Guárico

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Lara

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Mérida

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Miranda

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Monagas

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Nueva Esparta

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Portuguesa

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Sucre

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Táchira

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Trujillo

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Vargas

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Yaracuy

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Zulia

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Aftermath

According to the American think tank Freedom House, from this election forward Venezuela ceased to be an electoral democracy,[21] in part due to the disqualification of hundreds of opposition candidates on corruption charges by stating that "the separation of powers is nearly nonexistent" in Venezuela. According to journalist Rory Carroll, Chávez anticipated that the disqualifications would divide the opposition, though the opposition unified instead.[6] After opposition candidate Antonio Ledezma was elected mayor of the Metropolitan district of Caracas, colectivo leader and Chávez ally Lina Ron occupied Caracas' city hall with the support of authorities.[6] Chávez would later establish a "capital district" that remove mayoral powers from Ledezma.[6]

References

General

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Specific

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  20. LF Angosto (2009), Bolívar, espejo de la revolución: los comicios regionales de 2008 en Venezuela
  21. Freedom in the World report: Venezuela, 2009

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Further reading

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