News

Antidotes to Venezuela’s election lies

Back in August, a few weeks after Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro claimed victory in a bid for reelection, his critics stirred a global outcry. Opposition leaders posted polling station results on social media suggesting the unpopular autocrat had lost in a drubbing. In cities around the world and within the South American country itself, people marched.

They called it the “Great Protest for the Truth.”

That push for election integrity received new nudges this week. On Tuesday, the Biden administration recognized Venezuela’s main opposition candidate, Edmundo González Urrutia, as “president-elect.” Simultaneously, in neighboring Colombia, President Gustavo Petro called the July 28 election “a mistake.” He had already declared the vote not “free.”

Previous ArticleNext Article