Former US President Carter: Venezuelan Electoral System “Best in the World”
2012
Mérida, 21st September 2012 (Venezuelanalysis.com) – Former US President Jimmy Carter has declared that Venezuela’s electoral system is the best in the world.
Speaking
at an annual event last week in Atlanta for his Carter Centre
foundation, the politician-turned philanthropist stated, “As a
matter of fact, of the 92 elections that we’ve monitored, I would
say the election process in Venezuela is the best in the world.”
Venezuela
has developed a fully automated touch-screen voting system, which now
uses thumbprint recognition technology and prints off a receipt to
confirm voters’ choices.
In
the context of the Carter Centre’s work monitoring electoral
processes around the globe, Carter also disclosed his opinion that in
the US “we have one of the worst election processes in the world,
and it’s almost entirely because of the excessive influx of money,”
he said referring to lack of controls over private campaign
donations.
The
comments come with just three weeks before Venezuelans go to the
polls on 7 October, in a historic presidential election in which
socialist incumbent President Hugo Chavez is standing against
right-wing challenger Henrique Capriles Radonski of the Roundtable of
Democratic Unity (MUD) coalition.
Chavez
welcomed Carter’s comments, stating yesterday that “he [Carter]
has spoken the truth because he has verified it. We say that the
Venezuelan electoral system is one of the best in the world”.
Chavez
also reported that he had had a forty minute conversation with the
ex-Democrat president yesterday, and said that Carter, “as Fidel
[Castro] says, is a man of honour”. The Carter Centre has recently
confirmed it will not send an official delegation to accompany the
presidential election, but may have officials observe the process on
an individual basis.
Meanwhile,
the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) electoral accompaniment
delegation arrived yesterday in Venezuela.
The
delegation’s head, former Argentinian vice-president Carlos
Alvarez, mentioned that this was the Unasur’s first electoral
observation mission, and that “for us it’s fundamental to
consolidate our democracies, because it’s taken us a lot of
struggle, effort and time to establish [democracy] in our countries”.
In
press comments after meeting with officials from Venezuela’s
National Electoral Council (CNE) Alvarez declared that based on his
experience of electoral observation in South America, ”Venezuela
has one of the most advanced electoral systems in the region and the
continent, that grants a great deal of confidence and transparency”.
Meanwhile,
secretary of the MUD, Ramón Guillermo Aveledo, accused the CNE
yesterday of being “biased”, and said that it doesn’t adhere to
the National Constitution nor electoral law. In an interview with
opposition TV station Globovision, he clarified his opinion that “we
[the MUD] trust the voting system” but that CNE officials “have a
preference” for the government.
The
CNE has issued warnings regarding both the MUD and Chavez’s
Carabobo Command for infringements of campaign rules relating to
electoral publicity and advertising space.
Pro-Chavez
sources have speculated that the opposition is planning not to
recognise the CNE results in the likely event of a Chavez victory on
7 October. In July, Chavez and Capriles signed an accord by which
both agreed to recognise the result announced by the CNE.
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