SAO PAULO (AP) — Venezuela’s opposition was dealt a blow Thursday when countries that had been pressuring President Nicolás Maduro to release vote tallies backing his claim to victory in last month’s presidential election began suggesting a repeat of the contest instead.

The proposal from the leftist governments of Brazil and Colombia, both Maduro allies, came less than three weeks after the results of the highly anticipated election came into question when the main opposition coalition revealed it has proof that its candidate defeated the president by a more than 2-to-1 margin.

The opposition categorically rejected any plan to redo the election.

Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, during a virtual news conference with Argentine media, said that repeating the July 28 presidential election would be “an insult” to the people, and she asked if a second election were held and Maduro still didn’t accept the results, “do we go for a third one?”

In Washington, U.S. President Joe Biden expressed support for new elections in comments to reporters that the White House later appeared to back away from.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Would you prefer a civil war or an invasion to fix it then?

      So combined with

      It’s not like Maduro is going to give up power either way.

      It rather sounds like your end conclusion is “Let Maduro stay in power, who gives a fuck about democracy”?

      • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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        3 months ago

        Wow it’d be crazy if I’d advanced an alternative at the start to completely eliminate any pretense he has instead.

        • Makeitstop@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Redoing the election only takes pressure off Maduro. It’s an empty gesture to appease the opposition for a time, which just gives Maduro room to plan for stealing the next election. And it drags things out for longer, which can easily cause some of the energy to be drained from his opposition, because movements like this tend to fade out after a while.

          And what could possibly be the point? If he won’t concede this time, next time won’t be any different.

          Better to keep putting as much pressure as possible on Maduro and his regime. No reason to make hanging on to power any easier for him, and even if he can’t be convinced to bow out gracefully, if things get bad enough for him, the decision might not be his to make.

          • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Redoing the election only takes pressure off Maduro. It’s an empty gesture to appease the opposition for a time, which just gives Maduro room to plan for stealing the next election. And it drags things out for longer, which can easily cause some of the energy to be drained from his opposition, because movements like this tend to fade out after a while.

            And what could possibly be the point? If he won’t concede this time, next time won’t be any different.

            They know that. That’s exactly the point of trying to deflect and downplay this whole fiasco.

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Wow it’d be crazy if I’d advanced an alternative at the start to completely eliminate any pretense he has.

          You mean when you said

          Isn’t it reasonable when both parties are claiming election fraud? Force a UN-overseen election on paper ballots.

          It’s not like Maduro is going to give up power either way.

          ?

          Give him a do-over, and then acquiesce to the fact that he’s not giving up power even if he loses again. This must be some new form of democracy that I’m unfamiliar with.

          • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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            3 months ago

            Or you remove all pretense he has and his support either evaporates or is forced to publicly renounce democracy.

            But I bet you don’t really care about that, you’ve already got a preference for which nation leads the invasion, huh?

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Or you remove all pretense he has and his support either evaporates or is forced to publicly renounce democracy.

              As you said

              It’s not like Maduro is going to give up power either way.

              So what does that matter? “Oh, he has no support now though!” So? People like you will still be wringing your hands and crying “B-b-but what if there’s a civil war??? We can’t provoke him! Living in a fascist state is better than that, because it’s MY kind of fascist, and fuck what the Venezuelan people think!”

              But I bet you don’t really care about that, you’ve already got a preference for which nation leads the invasion, huh?

              Yeah, Brazil. But I guess that’s not as convenient a boogeyman as the US for justifying your favored fascists.

              The US has enough foreign affairs to be handling at the moment. If there is going to be outside intervention, the Venezuelan people must take up arms in defense of their own rights first; and then that outside support should come from the region, not from a distant superpower.

              Any other fascist apologia you wanna engage in?

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  And if they do another election and Maduro still refuses to concede, you’ll still be sitting here saying

                  Would you prefer a civil war or an invasion to fix it then?

                  • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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                    3 months ago

                    No, I’d say “guess you guys need to do a civil war then”

                    But that’s their business. Not America’s, and not even Brazil’s.

                    It’s called self determination, maybe you’ve heard of it?