Venezuelan officials announced Tuesday that the country’s much-anticipated presidential election would take place on July 28, but the main opposition candidate remains excluded from the ballot for the time being.
Most expect President Nicolas Maduro to run in this election. His government initially negotiated the details of the election with an opposition faction, but differences between the parties have widened over the past two months.
The date announced Tuesday by the president of the National Electoral Council, Elvis Amoroso, however, responded to at least one request from the opposition, who wanted the elections to take place in the second half of the year, in order to give time to mobilization campaigns and electoral officials to update the lists.
But there is still no provision for candidates condemned to ineligibility by the government, including Mr. Maduro’s most important opponent this year, Maria Corina Machado.
Ms. Machado won an independent primary last year organized by the opposition faction known as the United States-backed Unity Platform. She won more than 90% of the vote, with more than 2 million voters casting ballots in the primaries, including in strongholds of Maduro’s ruling party.
Mr. Amoroso, who heads an Electoral Council loyal to the Maduro government, announced the election date four days after lawmakers proposed more than 20 possible dates, ranging from mid-April to December. He declared that the electoral campaign would be authorized from July 4 to 25, for a vote on the 28th.
The Unity Platform and Maduro’s government agreed in October, during negotiations in Barbados, that elections should take place in the second half of 2024, without specifying which month. However, last month the opposition group’s chief negotiator began pushing for a December vote.
Ms. Machado’s campaign team declined to comment on the election date on Tuesday, saying she was “on tour in the Venezuelan Andes.”
It was Mr. Amoroso, in his previous role as comptroller of the country, who signed off on Ms. Machado’s ban last summer. He did not address the question of his candidacy on Tuesday when the election date was announced.