Chavez wins Venezuela vote: sources

By Saul Hudson and Ana Isabel Martinez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez appeared headed for victory on Sunday in
a referendum on allowing the leftist to rule for as long as he keeps
winning elections, government-linked sources said, citing exit polls.

Three exit polls showed the anti-American leader won by between six and
eight percentage points in a vote where turnout was low, the two sources
said.

If his victory is confirmed, the referendum vote on a raft of reforms
would allow Chavez -- in office since 1999 -- to run for reelection
indefinitely, control foreign currency reserves, appoint loyalists over
regional elected officials and censor the media if he declares an
emergency.

Chavez has said he wants to rule for life and turn the major oil exporter
into a socialist state.

The opposition was skeptical of the government sources' exit poll data.

"According to our information, it is a statistical tie," said Leopoldo
Lopez, a popular mayor of a Caracas municipality. He did not give details
of any exit polls, other than to say the difference was "two points up,
two points down."

Most pre-vote opinion surveys predicted a close vote on the package of
constitutional changes that the opposition and even some former longtime
allies say is authoritarian.

Pollsters had said a low turnout would favor Chavez, who activated a
state-backed get-out-the-vote campaign against an underfunded, fragmented
opposition.

The left-wing leader, a fierce critic of the United States and close ally
of communist Cuba, has never lost a national vote and had predicted he
would win by at least 10 points.

"SENT BY GOD"

Even before any official results' were announced, some of Chavez's
supporters began to celebrate.

Dressed in red and waving Venezuela's red-blue-and-yellow national flag,
they danced in the streets and drove cars and motorcycles around Caracas
honking horns.

"The reform is very important for the country, we want to support our
president," said Marlene Vanegas, 70, who described herself as a
"full-time revolutionary" and Chavez loyalist. "he was sent to us by
God."

The government-linked sources said two exit polls showed Chavez won 53
percent of the vote, compared with 47 percent for the "No" camp, and
another showed 54 percent to 46 percent.

Led by a mix of political parties and university students, the opposition
had pointed to some pre-referendum polls showing it could win.

It has lost to Chavez in almost yearly national votes and also failed to
topple him with a coup in 2002, a national strike and a recall
referendum.

Foreign investors worry that the opposition could contest the result if
it suspects fraud, sparking political turbulence after a campaign marred
by violent street clashes.

"(The vote) will deepen divisions and polarization," said Jesus Ghersi,
25, an engineering student serving as an official poll watcher for the
opposition.

Many Venezuelans believed the vote was a pivotal moment for the OPEC
nation.

"We decide the future," the El Nacional newspaper said in a headline that
covered much of its front-page on Sunday.

Chavez wants the new constitution endorsed to give him a mandate to
create a Cuba-inspired socialist state. After his landslide reelection a
year ago, he decreed sweeping nationalizations, and promises more state
intervention in the economy if he wins the referendum.

Opposition leaders complain his policies are a throwback to failed
systems such as the Soviet Union and communist Cuba.

"If they approve this reform, as of midnight tonight we have turned into
a communist country. I'm convinced of that," said Elias Martinez, 55, an
actor.

(For more on Venezuela's referendum, click on
http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/venezuela)

(Additional reporting by Fabian Andres Cambero, Patricia Rondon and Jorge
Silva, Writing by Saul Hudson; Editing by Kieran Murray)

Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the
prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any
errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance
thereon.

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