Hi.  Today's LA Times sub-heads "The president wins by a large margin
despite growing discontent with economic woes and rising crime'
 Other corporate media have twisted similarly.  Horse puckey. He won and 
his neighbors follow broadly because of Chavez's program, hi-lighted below.
The Obama administration substantially funneled money and helped organize
the losing campaign, and seemed to be preparing a stepped up, Iran style  
campaign against Venezuela.  The substantial victory may delay this, but I  
wouldn't make book on it.  After all, the program harms our 1%!  Think
Puerto 
Rico, Cuba, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Haiti, et al; most recently,
Honduras.
Ed 
 
From: Portside Moderator [ <mailto:[email protected]>
mailto:[email protected]]

Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2012 9:08 PM

Official results: With (now) 90 percent voter participation, Chavez - 54.43
percent, Capriles - 44.47  

"Since the Chavez government got control of Venezuela's national oil
industry, poverty has declined by half and extreme poverty by 70 percent.
Access to health care and education have been increased substantially, with
college enrollment doubling. Eligibility for public pensions has quadrupled,
and in 2011 the government started a major housing program that has already
seen 250,000 new homes built."

 (1)

Chavez Re-Election Continues Trend of Left Governments Re-elected in South
America Economic Growth, Expansion of Welfare State Likely to Continue for
Many Years Center for Economic and Policy Research For Immediate Release:
October 7, 2012
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/press-releases/press-releases/chavez-re-elect
ion-continues-trend-of-left-governments-re-elected-in-south-america>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/press-releases/press-releases/chavez-re-electi
on-continues-trend-of-left-governments-re-elected-in-south-america

Washington, D.C.- Hugo Chavez' re-election to another 6- year term shows
that Venezuela, like the rest of South America, prefers governments of the
left that have improved living standards and greatly reduced poverty and
inequality, said Mark Weisbrot [
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/biographies/mark-weisbrot/>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/biographies/mark-weisbrot/], Co-Director of
the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) in Washington, D.C.

"Chavez is often portrayed as though he were from Mars, but really the
similarities between what he has done and what his neighboring left
governments have done are much greater than the differences," said Weisbrot.

Contrary to many press reports, the vote was not close, as CEPR had
predicted it would not be. [
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/adjusting-for-polling-bi
ases-in-venezuelas-2012-presidential-election>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/adjusting-for-polling-bia
ses-in-venezuelas-2012-presidential-election]

[moderator: per CEPR - Official results: With 90 percent voter
participation, Chavez - 54.43 percent; Capriles - 44.47 percent of the vote.
(Remaining going to minor candidates.)]

Chavez' first election in 1998 was the first in a series of elections that
would bring left governments to the vast majority of South America. Weisbrot
noted that these left presidents and their parties have all been re-elected,
some of them more than once: Rafael Correa, re-elected President of Ecuador
by a wide margin in 2009; the enormously popular Lula da Silva of Brazil,
re-elected in 2006, and successfully campaigned for his former Chief of
Staff, now President Dilma Rousseff, in 2010; Evo Morales, Bolivia's first
indigenous president in a majority indigenous country, re-elected in 2009;
JoseC Mujica succeeded his predecessor from the same political alliance -
the Frente Amplio -- in 2009; Cristina Fernandez succeeded her husband, the
late Nestor Kirchner, winning the 2011 Argentine presidential election by a
solid margin.

Since the Chavez government got control of Venezuela's national oil
industry, poverty has declined by half and extreme poverty by 70 percent.
Access to health care and education have been increased substantially, with
college enrollment doubling. Eligibility for public pensions has quadrupled,
and in 2011 the government started a major housing program that has already
seen 250,000 new homes built.

Other left governments, including Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Bolivia
have also reduced poverty and inequality and at the same time taken more
control over their energy resources. Weisbrot noted that all of these
governments are closely aligned and have similar goals for regional economic
integration - Venezuela was recently admitted to Mercosur at the first
opportunity - and all have become much more independent of the United
States.

"It's really not surprising that all of these governments get re-elected,
and generally despite most of the media and the wealth and income of the
country being in the hands of the opposition," said Weisbrot.

"These governments have delivered on a number of their promises."

Latin America suffered its worst long-term economic growth failure from
1980-2000, with income per person growing by less than 6 percent, as
compared with 92 percent in the prior two decades. [
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/the-scorecard-on-develop
ment-1960-2010-closing-the-gap>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/the-scorecard-on-developm
ent-1960-2010-closing-the-gap]

Weisbrot noted that Henrique Capriles had done better than previous
opposition candidates partly because he ran as a "center-left" candidate,
pledging to preserve some of the major social gains of the Chavez era.

Looking ahead, Weisbrot said he expected that "growth will very likely
continue and Venezuela will expand its welfare state." He noted that the
economy has been growing for two-and-a-half years, and inflation has been
falling even as growth has accelerated. ]
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/venezuelas-economic-reco
very-is-it-sustainable>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/publications/reports/venezuelas-economic-recov
ery-is-it-sustainable] "With a sizeable trade surplus, relatively low levels
of public debt and debt service, and hardly anyone projecting a long-term
decline in oil prices, Venezuela's economic growth can continue for years to
come." Weisbrot noted that Venezuela is sitting on the world's largest oil
reserves, about 500 billion barrels, and is currently using about one
billion barrels per year.

(2)

Carter Center Affirms a Clean Electoral Process and Secret Ballot in
Venezuela; U.S. Media Offers a Contrasting View, Without Evidence by Dan
Beeton Center for Economic and Policy Research October 6, 2012
<http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/the-americas-blog/carter-center-affirms
-a-clean-electoral-process-and-secret-ballot-in-venezuela-us-media-offers-a-
contrasting-view-without-evidence>
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/the-americas-blog/carter-center-affirms-
a-clean-electoral-process-and-secret-ballot-in-venezuela-us-media-offers-a-c
ontrasting-view-without-evidence

The Carter Center released its pre-election report on the Venezuelan
electoral process yesterday. The response from the U.S. media has, with the
exception of a few wire service articles, been silence. Instead, papers such
as the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, and Washington Times have, in
recent days, raised the specter of possible fraud, government recrimination
against opposition voters, and possible violence that could result from
people not accepting the election's outcome. The Washington Times, for
example, began an article Thursday by reporting:

"With Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez facing the most serious re-election
challenge of his 14-year reign, international observers are bracing for the
possibility of social unrest if the outcome is close when voters go to the
polls Sunday."I think the probability of upheaval and protests increases the
closer the vote gets," said Christopher Sabatini, senior director of policy
at the Americas Society and the Council of the Americas in New York.

A close vote count between Mr. Chavez and his fresh- faced challenger
Henrique Capriles Radonski may trigger a street-level clash between
viscerally opposed supporters of the two. "There are rumors that Chavista
armed organizations are ready to come down from the hills should Capriles
win," said Mr. Sabatini. "The other side is that if Capriles loses in a
squeaker, his supporters have some pretty good basis to claim fraud."

The New York Times, as we noted yesterday, interviewed an opposition voter
who claimed to be afraid to vote for Capriles since it might put her future
career in jeopardy - despite being perfectly willing to be cited by name in
the Times article, and despite making her political inclinations very clear
on social media.

The Los Angeles Times, meanwhile, reported yesterday:  For Capriles to win,
many voters who lean in his direction will have to overcome fear that they
will lose their jobs or benefits in the event of a government change, that
there will be an increase in political violence if Chavez loses, or that the
government somehow will find out they voted for Capriles and take
retribution.

So what does the Carter Center say about the possibility of fraud, and
ballot secrecy?

Under the heading "Security of the voting machines," their report [PDF]
states:

Political party and domestic observer technical experts have participated in
the 16 pre-election audits of the entire automated system, including
hardware and software as well as the fingerprint databases, in the most open
process to date, according to opposition technical experts. The MUD experts
who have participated in the audits have said they are confident in the
security mechanisms and the secrecy of the vote.

The report goes on to describe how an encryption key is needed in order to
tamper with the machines' software, which is "created by contributions from
the opposition, government, and CNE."

The software on the machines cannot then be tampered with unless all three
parties join together to "open" the machines and change the software. In
addition, each voting machine has its own individual digital signature that
detects if there is any modification to that machine. If the vote count is
somehow tampered with despite these security mechanisms, it should be
detectable, according to all the experts who have participated in the
process, because of the various manual verification mechanisms.  [moderator:
the Carter Center report is found here -
<http://www.cartercenter.org/resources/pdfs/news/peace_publications/election
_reports/venezuela-pre-election-rpt-oct-2012.pdf>
http://www.cartercenter.org/resources/pdfs/news/peace_publications/election_
reports/venezuela-pre-election-rpt-oct-2012.pdf]

The report also notes:

Venezuela started creating a database of fingerprints of voters eight years
ago to be able to prevent multiple voting by one person, or impersonation of
voters. The database is nearly complete. Only seven percent of registered
voters are not entered or have poor quality prints. These voters can enter
their fingerprints on election day. (The MUD [opposition coalition backing
Henrique Capriles, the Democratic Unity Roundtable in English] is satisfied
with the data collection process.) [Emphasis added.].

This system is intended to address one of the complaints from both the
government and the opposition in the past: in places where party witnesses
were not present, the president of the voting table could "stuff the ballot
box electronically" by repeatedly activating the voting machine him or
herself.

The report also describes MUD satisfaction with other key aspects of the
process:

The coalition that supports the Capriles's candidacy (Mesa de Unidad
Democratica-MUD) reported that they have monitored and tested the voters
list continuously and find it acceptable. A study they conducted of the
evolution of the list since 2010 concluded that the growth was in line with
demographic changes in the country: population growth of citizens at least
18 years of age was 4.3 percent, while the voters list grew 7.6 percent. The
coverage of the list consequently rose about 3 percent to 96.7 percent of
the population.  The MUD investigated the "migration" of voters, or change
in voting location, and found that 97 percent of voters relocated by the
electoral body were aware of their new voting place and satisfied with the
change.

Pollworkers (miembros de mesa) are chosen by lottery from the voters list
and trained by the CNE. The opposition MUD reported that it received the
list in July and that it has determined that there is no partisan bias in
the selection. Contrary to U.S. press reports, the Carter Center is
describing ways in which the electoral system is becoming more secure
against fraud.

Regarding ballot secrecy, the report states:

The introduction of the SAI system for the 2012 elections has raised a
concern among some voters that their identity can be linked to their vote,
thus violating the secrecy of the vote, with the potential for
recrimination. This concern has no basis, however.

The software of the voting machines guarantees the secrecy of the vote. The
software instructs the machines to scramble the order of the votes, scramble
the order of the voter identifications, and to keep these scrambled files in
two separate archives. It cannot be modified without violating the digital
signature of the machines, which detect modifications, and without knowing
the three-party encryption key described above.

MUD technicians have therefore categorically concluded there is no evidence
whatsoever that it is possible to connect or reconstruct the link between
fingerprint/ID number and the vote. [Emphasis added.]

At the end of the day, 53 percent of voting tables will be audited, in a
thorough process:

A comparison of a count of the paper receipts and the electronic tally at
the end of the voting day with the presence of voters, political party
witnesses, domestic observers, and the general public is conducted in a
large sample of approximately 53 percent of the voting tables, selected at
random. Additionally, party witnesses receive a printout of the electronic
tally from every machine. The CNE gives the party a CD with the results of
each machine and publishes them on the website so that all of these results
can be compared.

It is also notable that, regarding the supposed media advantage of Chavez
over Capriles, the Carter Center reports echoes CEPR's findings on the
actual audience share of state versus private media: 

The market share of the state-owned media, particularly television, is quite
small. According to media consultants, Venezuelan state TV channels had just
a 5.4 percent audience share; 61.4 percent were watching privately owned
television channels; and 33.1 percent were watching paid TV). [Ultimas
Noticias recently reported a distinct media advantage for Capriles over
Chavez, in campaign coverage on the private media.]

In sum, the MUD opposition coalition is satisfied with the integrity of
Venezuela's electoral system; it is Christopher Sabatini, the LA Times, New
York Times, and other U.S. voices that are not, along with some of the more
extreme members of Venezuela's opposition - and perhaps Venezuelans who have
been led to believe the ballot isn't secret by a vociferous opposition
media. It should perhaps not be surprising to hear Sabatini raise unfounded
fears of fraud and violence - after all, he is the former NED Director for
Latin America and the Caribbean (including during the NED-supported 2002
coup d'etat against Chavez). But prominent U.S. newspapers are at least
supposed to have some objectivity in their reporting.

___________________________________________

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