The fascist Venezuelan opposition in a desperate appeal called to  boycott 
the December 4Th  National Assembly and Parliamentarian Elections but resulted 
in a severe  blowback to them.    They pretended to illegitimate the  National 
Assembly trough their call for abstentions along with their vicious  
withdrawal of three of the five major opposition political parties such as   
the long 
institutional ones of “Accion Democratica, COPEI, and  Projecto Venezuela” 
after they had  already committed formally with  representatives from the OAS 
and 
from the  EU their participation during the Dec. 4th  elections.   
Companheros and Companheras: Venezuela has won one more time, and now  167 
seats in the National Assembly are to secure a real bolivarian revolutionary  
agenda  while these major opposition  political parties who thought to defeat 
the bolivarian revolution not only have  lost credibility before the 
international opinion but also are risking to loose  their political status .   
  

VIVA LA  VENEZUELA  BOLIVARIANA LIBRE Y SOBERANA!  

DOWN WITH THE VENEZUELAN FACISTS AND WITH  THOSE  WHO HARBOR  AND SUPPORT 
THEM!  
Bolivarian Circle of Los  Angeles “Ezequiel Zamora”
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 (http://www.nytimes.com/)  
 
____________________________________
December 5, 2005

Chávez's Grip Tightens as Rivals  Boycott Vote 
By _JUAN  FORERO_ (http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=JUAN 
FORERO&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=JUAN FORERO&inline=nyt-per) 
 
BOGOTÁ, Colombia, Dec. 4 - _Venezuela's_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/venezuela/index.html?inline=nyt-geo)
   
firebrand president, _Hugo  Chávez_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/hugo_chavez/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , took overwhelming 
control of the National Assembly on Sunday after  five major opposition 
parties boycotted a national election for all 167  congressional seats. 
Venezuela's leftist government increased its slight majority to take nearly  
all the congressional seats, the ruling party said, as up to 75 percent of  
eligible voters stayed away from the polls. 
The outcome will permit the National Assembly to change the Constitution  
easily, as well as enact a range of major changes supported by Mr. Chávez, in  
areas ranging from Venezuela's health system to the criminal code. 
The withdrawal of the parties also ensured that Venezuela's opposition has,  
for all practical purposes, ceased to exist in an organized form, paving the 
way  for an easy victory by Mr. Chávez for another six-year term in the 
election for  president late next year. Mr. Chávez, first elected in 1998, has 
already served  longer than any leader of a major Latin American country, 
except for 
_Fidel  Castro_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/fidel_castro/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
  of Cuba. 
"Chávez would have annihilated them anyway," Alberto Garrido, a critic of the 
 government and an author of several books about the president, said by phone 
 from Caracas. "Now, they are starting from scratch. There are people in the  
opposition, but the opposition leadership is in tumult, without a strategy.  
Tomorrow, Monday, they will not know what to do." 
With polls indicating that government candidates would crush them in the  
election, opposition leaders had for weeks threatened to pull out. They accused 
 
electoral authorities of using digital fingerprint machines at polling sites  
that would permit the government to determine how individuals had voted. Last  
Monday, in a decision brokered by the Organization of American States, the  
National Electoral Council announced that it would not use the machines. 
But to the surprise of election monitors, opposition parties began announcing 
 their withdrawal on Tuesday, with some anti-government leaders charging that 
an  open vote could not be guaranteed because four of five members of the 
Electoral  Council are viewed as partial to Mr. Chávez. The opposition decision 
appeared to  be aimed at appealing to international support and discrediting 
Venezuela's  government, which has strong approval ratings. 
"The main objection was the digital fingerprint machine, which was removed,  
and now their line is we don' t trust the system, there must be another trick  
there," said José Miguel Vivanco, the Americas director of Human Rights 
Watch,  which has been harshly critical of Mr. Chávez.  
"It's really hard to understand what exactly the political opposition  
leadership has in mind," he said. "But certainly it is not going to help them 
to  
present themselves as victims that deserve solidarity from the international  
community. With these kinds of tactics I don't think they'll gain any  ground." 
Of some 5,516 candidates running for office, about 556 dropped out - just  
over 10 percent but representing a vast majority of candidates from five major  
anti-Chávez parties. The boycott, coupled with heavy rains, prompted  
anti-government voters like Ángel Rodríguez, 46, a chauffeur, to decide not to  
vote. 
"We wanted an election with established rules of the game and to count the  
votes as they really are," he said. 
But in neighborhoods like Petare, a Chávez stronghold, Chrislaine Sael, 32, a 
 homemaker, called boycott leaders "people who've never had the dignity to 
say,  'I failed.' " 
She added, with satisfaction, "This is the death of those  parties." 
Jens Gould contributed reporting from Caracas, Venezuela, for  this article.



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