Monday, May 7, 2012

Whom will Chavez name as successor ?

Whom will Chavez name as successor ?
May 7, 2012 ⋅ 3:35 am ⋅ Post a comment

President Hugo Chavez's repeated trips to Cuba for cancer treatment and
the government's silence about his health are fueling rumors that he
will name a successor to run in October presidential elections.

So far, the government has fiercely maintained that there is no
alternative to Chavez, who still leads in the polls. But several names
have begun to circulate among observers to take the helm should Chavez
delegate his powers.

Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro, Vice President Elias Jaua andNational
Assembly President Diosdado Cabello are considered potential candidates.
They are already cited in polls, triggering speculation over the
ramifications of a possible succession battle.

Any departure of Chavez from the national stage would have profound
consequences in Venezuela, where he has governed since 1999. It would
also have a huge impact across Latin America, especially in leftist ally
nations which have been showered with his country's oil wealth.

Jaua will soon be named president of the Council of State, an advisory
body whose creation this week is seen by some analysts as the first step
toward a potential political transition since Chavez experienced a
relapse of the cancer first detected in June 2011.

"With the lack of information, all scenarios are possible, including
Chavez's absence and the naming of a successor" for the October 7 vote,
said Datanalisis polling firm president Luis Vicente Leon.

Chavez returned to Cuba on Tuesday for what he called the "home stretch"
of his radiation treatment, without providing more details. His previous
stay, which was supposed to have been his last, stretched out for 11 days.

The exact nature of the cancer has never been disclosed. The 57-year-old
underwent an operation in Havana on February 26 to remove a second
cancerous tumor in his pelvic area, where a baseball-sized growth was
extracted a year ago.

Usually all over the Venezuelan media, Chavez now rarely appears in
public and has been reduced to sending out tweets during his long
absences in Cuba.

Chavez is running for reelection as a "revolutionary socialist" against
Henrique Capriles, the youthful Miranda state governor and center-left
candidate for the united opposition.

Capriles scoffed at the pervasive uncertainty surrounding Chavez's
political future. "A country cannot be ruled via Twitter, the Internet
or by telephone," he said Friday.

Even in the president's own ranks, tensions and divisions are growing.
But so long as Chavez is alive, "these confrontations will be relegated
to the back stage, because the president of the United Socialist Party
can still destroy" his rivals, Leon said.

For now, the firebrand leftist leader's health is overshadowing the
run-up to the presidential campaign.

Yet "his absence is not yet having an effect on how most Venezuelans
intend to vote," analyst John Magdaleno said.

But Leon warned that the government's silence on Chavez's wellbeing and
ability to run the country could be hiding a political maneuver.

"The president could be trying to prepare a triumphant return and then,
the bigger the speculation about his health, the less he will need to
make new proposals" upon his return, Leon added.

The electoral campaign officially gets under way on July 1, but the law
allows for replacing a candidate unable to run at any time,
constitutional lawyer Enrique Sanchez Falcon noted.

The most prominent face of the left in Latin America, Chavez has rallied
a group of like-minded leaders as a counterweight to the United States.

http://www.yalibnan.com/2012/05/07/whom-will-chavez-name-as-successor/

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