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Hands Off 
Venezuela!<https://www.facebook.com/hands.off.venezuela?ref=stream&hc_location=stream>
This article is by Eugenio Martinez, who covers elections for Venezuela’s
newspaper El Universal.
Venezuela's Election System Holds Up As A Model For The World
Comment 
Now<http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2013/05/14/venezuelas-election-system-holds-up-as-a-model-for-the-world/#comment_reply>

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*This article is by Eugenio Martinez, who covers elections for Venezuela’s
newspaper *El Universal* and is the host of the weekly TV show*El Termómetro
*.*
 [image: Nicolas
Maduro]<http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nicolas_Maduro.jpg>

Nicolas Maduro (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Two weeks ago Venezuelans went to the polls to elect a president to
transition their country into the post-Chavez era. Nicolas Maduro, Chavez’s
hand-chosen successor, and his opponent, Henrique Capriles, had spent 34
days hurling criticisms and promises back and forth as they attempted to
woo voters and guide Venezuela’s future.

Maduro, representing the Chavista movement, was expected to win easily, and
few anticipated taht his margin of victory would be an ultra-narrow 1.83%.
Judging by his defiant speeches after the election, Maduro seems to believe
he inherited the throne and the legitimacy of a wide-margin victory.

However, the slim margin propelled Capriles on a quest for lost votes, a
crusade to prove electoral irregularities and cast doubt on the outcome.
This campaign has exposed deep political rifts among our citizens when it
is essential that the people of Venezuela have the greatest confidence in
the election process.
<http://www.forbes.com/sites/mattsymonds/2013/05/14/does-an-mba-make-you-happy-the-mba-happiness-index-2013/>Does
An MBA Make You Happy? The MBA Happiness Index
2013<http://www.forbes.com/sites/mattsymonds/2013/05/14/does-an-mba-make-you-happy-the-mba-happiness-index-2013/>[image:
Matt Symonds]*Matt Symonds*Contributor<http://www.forbes.com/sites/mattsymonds/>
<http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2012/10/25/i-banned-all-internal-e-mails-at-my-company-for-a-week/>I
Banned All Internal E-Mails at My Company for a
Week<http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/2012/10/25/i-banned-all-internal-e-mails-at-my-company-for-a-week/>[image:
Forbes Leadership Forum]*Forbes Leadership
Forum*Contributor<http://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesleadershipforum/>

Venezuela employs one of the most technologically advanced verifiable
voting systems in the world, designed to protect voters from fraud and
tampering and ensure the accuracy of the vote count. Accuracy and integrity
are guaranteed from the minute voters walk into the polls to the point
where a final tally is revealed.

The system Venezuela uses has some of the most advanced and voter-friendly
security features in modern elections. Voters use a touch-sensitive
electronic pad to make and confirm their choices. After confirmation, the
electronic vote is encrypted and randomly stored in the machine’s memories.
Voters audit their own vote by reviewing a printed receipt that they then
place into a physical ballot box.

At the end of Election Day, each voting machine computes and prints an
official tally, called a precinct count. It transmits an electronic copy of
the precinct count to the servers in the National Electoral Council’s
central facility, where overall totals are computed.

By mutual agreement between the contenders, 52.98% of the ballot boxes are
chosen at random, opened, and their tallies compared with the corresponding
precinct counts. This audit step ensures that no vote manipulation has
occurred at the polling place. The extent of this audit, the widest in
automatic elections, leaves little room for questioning.

The series of tests before, during, and after a Venezuelan election is
thorough and intense, conducted in the presence of election officials and
political parties to ensure proper functionality and full confidence in the
system. When it comes to elections, Venezuela has become a highly advanced
nation of auditors, with the most advanced audit tools at its disposal and
a voting process that is as transparent as any in the world.

Even though the election to succeed Chavez was announced with only 34 days
to campaign and organize the election mechanics, the National Electoral
Council and Smartmatic, the company that developed the highly-sophisticated
voting machines and the technology supporting them, managed to perform more
than 12 audits on the voting platform, many in front of both Capriles’ and
Maduro’s representatives.

Like any candidate who suffers a narrow defeat at the polls, Mr. Capriles
is entitled to keep his dream alive. He can continue trying to prove that
somehow the outcome was affected by a corrupt electoral ecosystem. His
people are betting that scrutinizing the manual electoral book and the
government-controlled electoral roll will reveal a clue to how their
triumph slipped away. In a nation of auditors and entirely transparent
election mechanics, that quest is certainly their right, but their chance
of changing the election’s outcome may be very slim.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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