Current:Home > ContactVenezuela’s government and opposition agree on appeal process for candidates banned from running -WealthGrow Network
Venezuela’s government and opposition agree on appeal process for candidates banned from running
View
Date:2025-04-18 13:43:10
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Venezuela’s government and a faction of the opposition have agreed on a process through which aspiring presidential candidates who were banned from running for office can attempt to get that decision reversed. The timeline to file an appeal opened Friday.
The agreement, released late Thursday by negotiators from each side and the Norwegian diplomats guiding the dialogue, gives the candidates until Dec. 15 to challenge their ban — a tool the Venezuelan government has repeatedly used to sideline adversaries, including most recently against opposition leader and presidential candidate María Corina Machado.
The deal is part of a broader agreement signed in October between a U.S.-backed opposition group and the government of Nicolás Maduro focused on electoral conditions ahead of the 2024 presidential election. It is also expected to keep the U.S. government from re-imposing some economic sanctions on Maduro’s administration.
The October agreement triggered some sanctions relief in the oil, gas, and mining sectors. But the U.S. government, aware that Maduro has breached agreements before, threatened to reverse some of the relief if Venezuela’s government failed to establish by the end of November a timeline and process to quickly reinstate all candidates.
The agreement announced Thursday instructs interested candidates to file an appeal in person before the electoral chamber of Venezuela’s top court, which is stacked with judges who are loyal to the government and just over a month ago suspended the opposition’s primary election process.
The steps outlined in the agreement also force interested appellants into a quasi-gag order, banning them from incorporating “offensive or disrespectful concepts against the institutions of the State” in their appeal and public statements.
The document leaves open to interpretation what constitutes offensive or disrespectful comments. It also lacks a timeline for the judges to rule on the request, stating only that they would do so “in accordance with the principles of speed, efficiency and effectiveness included in the Constitution.”
“It’s just really puzzling, it’s really thin, and it’s really quite comical in many senses,” said Ryan Berg, director of the Americas Program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. “We’ve been demanding this process, but this is essentially tantamount to Maduro telling us when in the future he decides to make an executive decision on candidate bans.”
Despite the process’s lack of clarity, Berg said, it seems likely “that’s going to be sufficient” for the Biden administration to hold off on snapback sanctions review.
Machado, a former lawmaker and longtime government foe, won the opposition’s presidential primary with more than 90% of support. The government announced a 15-year ban against Machado days after she had formally entered the race, but she was able to participate in the election because the effort was organized by a commission that received no help from Venezuela’s electoral authorities.
Machado’s campaign on Friday declined to comment on the appeal process. Her ban alleges fraud and tax violations and accuses her of seeking the economic sanctions the U.S. imposed on Venezuela.
“On Oct. 22, people took care of the irrational attempt to block me,” she told supporters Thursday before the agreement was announced. “The only thing that matters to me is what people think. The only thing I am dedicated to ... is to build this citizen force that is going to defeat Nicolás Maduro or whoever they feel like putting against me.”
A United Nations-backed panel investigating human rights abuses in Venezuela earlier this year said Maduro’s government has intensified efforts to curtail democratic freedoms ahead of the 2024 election. That includes subjecting some politicians, human rights defenders and other opponents to detention, surveillance, threats, defamatory campaigns and arbitrary criminal proceedings.
Negotiations between Maduro’s government and the U.S.-backed opposition Unitary Platform, began in 2021 in Mexico City with the mediation of Norwegian diplomats. But the dialogue stalled at various points.
From the start, Maduro demanded that the U.S. drop economic sanctions and unfreeze Venezuelan funds held overseas. The opposition sought guarantees for the election to avoid conditions in previous votes that were widely considered to favor pro-government candidates.
____
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
veryGood! (9538)
Related
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- McDonald's brings back Smoky BLT Quarter Pounder with Cheese: See when you can get it
- Brett Favre asks appeals court to to re-ignite lawsuit against Shannon Sharpe
- New Mexico village ravaged by wildfire gets another pounding by floodwaters
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- FAA investigating after video shows jetliner aborting landing on same runway as departing plane
- Death of man pinned by hotel guards in Milwaukee is reviewed as a homicide, prosecutors say
- McDonald's unveils new Kit Kat Banana Split McFlurry: Here's when you can get it
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Pennsylvania is getting a new license plate that features the Liberty Bell
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Sen. Bob Menendez's lawyer tells jury that prosecutors failed to prove a single charge in bribery trial
- Blake Lively Shouts Out Her Hottest Plus One—and It's Not Ryan Reynolds
- Giants on 'Hard Knocks': Inside combine interviews, teeing up Saquon Barkley exit
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- A look at heat records that have been broken around the world
- NYC man and Canadian national plead guilty to exporting U.S. electronics used in Russian weapons in Ukraine
- Regal Cinemas offer $1 tickets to select kids' movies this summer: See more movie deals
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Olivia Munn Marries John Mulaney in Private New York Ceremony
Deep-fried bubblegum, hot mess biscuits: Meet the 2024 Iowa State Fair's 84 new foods
Minnesota trooper accused of driving 135 mph before crash that killed teen
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Though Biden says he's staying in presidential race, top Democrats express doubts
Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed as Japan’s Nikkei 225 hits a new high, with eyes on Fed
Dartmouth College Student Won Jang Found Dead in River