The results of the latest round of state and municipal elections
point to a subtle shift in the political landscape in Venezuela. While President
Hugo Chávez 's ruling leftwing Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (PSUV) was
the clear outright winner, the rightwing opposition electoral coalition, Unidad
Opositora, won important tactical victories in the country's main electoral
corridor, including the capital Caracas and the surrounding state of Miranda.
Both sides claimed victory. The vote, which also saw the defeat of leftist
Chavista dissidents by the PSUV, is likely to presage a return to the fierce and
bitter political polarisation of the country into firmly pro- and anti-Chávez
camps. With the government set to face a severe test of its economic stewardship
in 2009, amid falling oil revenues and run-away inflation, the political
atmosphere in the country may become increasingly charged ahead of key
legislative polls in 2010 and the subsequent presidential vote in 2012. The
president's reaction to the vote was telling: barely a week later he launched a
fresh bid for a constitutional reform to lift the ban on presidential term
limits.End of preview - This article contains approximately 1153 words.
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