CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — His smile is confident, his hair well-combed and his eyes are squinting slightly: The first candidate you’ll likely see on the ballot in Venezuela’s upcoming presidential election is Nicolás Maduro, the incumbent seeking reelection.
Unlike some of his nine challengers, Maduro shows up not once or twice, but a whopping 13 times on the ballot — and he’s certain to catch the voters’ attention.
Each time, it’s for one of the several political groups he is representing in the highly anticipated July 28 presidential election. Maduro takes up the entire first of the ballot’s four rows while the rest of the candidates’ photos are sprinkled here and there, including that of former diplomat Edmundo González Urrutia, the only contender with real chances of denying the president a third term.
Still, the sheer number of Maduro’s images appearing on the ballot belies the seriousness of the moment.
Venezuela faces its toughest electoral test in decades. The outcome could give Maduro another six years in power or end the self-described socialist’s policies that once successfully boosted anti-poverty programs but whose sustained mismanagement later pushed the country into an ongoing economic crisis.
Venezuela’s electoral rules allow for candidates’ pictures to appear on the ballots — the electronic ones within Venezuela and printed for those voting abroad — as many times as the number of parties that support them. This year’s ballot has 38 pictures, each with every candidate’s name and party underneath.
Seasoned Venezuelan voters are also used to seeing many candidates on the touchscreens used in the South American country’s elections.
But for some, that many photos could be confusing.
“I get dizzy when I see Maduro so many times on that card, but I know that the danger is in the candidates who do not represent us,” said Sonia Guevara, a 38-year-old office worker, referring to some opposition candidates who are seen close to the government.
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