Chavez seeks another six-year term

A Wayuu indigenous woman looks for her identification number on a voter list during presidential elections in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Sunday. The Associated Press

A Wayuu indigenous woman looks for her identification number on a voter list during presidential elections in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Sunday. The Associated Press

By The Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela – President Hugo Chavez sought another six-year term Sunday in an election that weighed the popularity of his oil-funded handouts to the poor against fears of increasingly authoritarian rule by one of the Bush administration’s most outspoken overseas opponents.

Chavez anticipated a crushing victory over tough-talking political veteran Manuel Rosales who has galvanized the opposition by promising to unseat a man he accuses of edging the country toward totalitarianism.

Voters waited for hours in snaking lines, and elections officials predicted a record turnout. An independent AP-Ipsos poll last month and other pre-election surveys gave Chavez a double-digit advantage.

Since he first won office in 1998, Chavez has increasingly dominated all branches of government and his allies now control congress, state offices and the judiciary. He has called President Bush the devil, allied himself with Iran and influenced elections across the region.

Chavez also has used Venezuela’s oil wealth to his political advantage.

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He has channeled oil profits toward multibillion-dollar programs for the poor including subsidized food, free university education and cash benefits for single mothers.

He has also helped allies from Cuba to Bolivia with oil and petrodollars.

On Sunday, the incumbent waved and blew kisses to cheering supporters as he arrived in a red Volkswagen Beetle to vote in a Caracas slum.

“I’m absolutely sure that the process is and will be totally transparent,” Chavez said. “Let’s vote, leave calmly and wait for the results.”

Voting in his hometown of Maracaibo, Rosales grasped the hands of dozens of cheering supporters, saying, “Today the future of Venezuela is at stake.” The crowd chanted “Presidente!”

Rosales complained of scattered voting problems in traditionally pro-opposition areas that he said included delays and apparent malfunctions of electronic voting machines that had printed blank vote receipts. But later, leading Rosales campaign official Gerardo Blyde thanked electoral officials for helping to solve the problems.

Chavez supporters jarred voters awake hours before dawn in Caracas with recordings of reveille blaring from truck-mounted loudspeakers.

“We’re here to support our president, who has helped us so much,” said Jose Domingo Izaguirre, a factory worker who waited hours to vote. His family recently moved into new government housing.

Rosales supporters accused Chavez of deepening class divisions with searing rhetoric demonizing his opponents.

Alicia Primera, a 54-year-old housewife, was among voters so passionate about the choice that they camped out overnight in voting queues.

“I voted for Chavez previously. I cried for him,” Primera said. “Now I’m crying for him to leave. He’s sown a lot of hate with his verbiage.”