Venezuela election: Maduro declared winner in disputed vote
Election officials say the president has an unassailable lead but the opposition vows to contest the result.
www.bbc.co.uk
The ongoing disturbance in Venezuala continues. Maduro has - very controversially - been declared president by the elections authority there over his closest rival 51% - 44%. This is despite Maduro being behind heavily behind his rival Edmundo Gonzalez in most reliable pre-election opinion polling. The elections authority is staffed by pro-Maduro loyalists. The opposition have claimed that the election was rigged, and key information that would allow verification appear to be absent, leading numerous countries to question whether the election result was genuine.
The opposition, in line with pre-election polling, suggests the margin was around 70-30 against Maduro. As another sign that the election may have been fraudulent, it is notable that anti-Maduro feeling was particularly strong in the run-up to this election compared to previous, and numerous one-time Chavez-supporting strongholds appear to have turned against Maduro.
The wider backdrop is that for around ten years Venezuala has been undergoing an economic and social crisis, and a third of the population (8 million) are estimated to have fled abroad. Although at face value GDP appears reasonable in the last couple of years, mostly from oil revenues, inflation has been rampant, productivity has been shrinking, there are goods shortages, and this has exacerbated severe poverty. Maduro has blamed this on US sanctions (now being eased), although many economists cite government mismanagement as a significant factor. Maduro has also become increasingly authoritarian.