Chavez vows to beat the "devil" in December vote

By Staff
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Google Oneindia News

CARACAS, Venezuela, Nov 27: Venezuela's leftist President Hugo Chavez on Sunday promised hundreds of thousands of supporters he would win a resounding victory in his December 3 reelection bid he describes as a challenge to Washington.

The former soldier and self-styled revolutionary is favoured in the polls to beat rival Manuel Rosales after building a solid political base through a social development campaign financed by oil revenues. Chavez supporters flooded Caracas thoroughfares yesterday waving flags and banners, congregating in different parts of the downtown a day after Rosales sympathizers held a similar march to close his campaign in the capital city.

''We are confronting the devil, and we will hit a home run off the devil next Sunday,'' said Chavez, who ruffled feathers in October by calling US President George W Bush the devil in remarks at the United Nations. ''On December 3 we're going to defeat the most powerful empire on earth by knockout,'' Chavez said.

Donning red like most of his supporters, Chavez delivered a two-hour speech marked by his signature combination of fiery leftist rhetoric and crowd antics typical of pop music concerts. He spent nearly ten minutes trying to see which of four groups of demonstrators in different parts of downtown Caracas could cheer louder -- then told them all to be quiet. ''Whoever talks first will turn into a donkey,'' he thundered, only to break into his unmistakable giggle.

Following his speech, Chavez drove through the packed Avenida Bolivar standing atop a campaign vehicle, dancing to political jingles and occasionally reaching into the crowd to shake hands with supporters. ''He's the only president who has valued us, he's the only president who has been able to make things happen,'' said Marianela Torrealba, between sobs, in an interview with state television that openly supports Chavez.

MARCH AND COUNTERMARCH

The Chavez rally contrasted with the opposition march on Saturday in which Rosales maintained an emotional but stern tone, rarely cracking a smile and struggling to make to jokes. Rosales' campaign has targeted key issues like soaring crime rates, government intimidation of voters and growing dissatisfaction with Chavez's energy cooperation deals with other countries that Rosales describes as ''giveaways.'' Rosales in August successfully united a fractured opposition movement that failed to oust Chavez through a botched coup and a grueling two-month oil strike in 2002 and a failed recall referendum in 2004.

But most polls still give Chavez a wide lead, with one AP-Ipsos poll showing Chavez sweeping 59 percent of likely voters compared to only 27 for Rosales, who points to opposition linked polls that show the race much tighter. First elected in 1998, Chavez, a close ally of Cuba's Fidel Castro, has galvanized the nation's poor with promises of a revolution.

But he has sparked outcries among middle class critics who call him an authoritarian. The US State Department describes him as a menace to regional democracy, though Venezuela remains the fourth-largest exporter of oil to the United States.

Reuters

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