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Venezuelans vote to lift term limits, handing Chavez a huge victory

Tyler Bridges-MCT Campus

Issue date: 2/27/09 Section: News
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CARACAS, Venezuela _ President Hugo Chavez won a major victory Sunday when Venezuelans lifted term limits, permitting him to run for re-election in 2012 and perhaps beyond.

Chavez's measure won 54.3 percent of the vote, according to the national election board.

Televised images showed Chavez supporters celebrating while fireworks boomed in the Caracas sky.

"Chavez, friend, the people are with you," the president's adoring supporters, wearing their trademark red T-shirts, chanted outside the presidential palace. Standing on a balcony, Chavez led the festive crowd in singing Venezuela's national anthem.

"It is a clear victory for the people!" an exultant Chavez said. "It is a clear victory for the Revolution!"

The result is expected to give fresh impetus to Chavez's decade-long effort to remake Venezuela as a socialist state. It also will fortify his role as the undisputed leader of a resurgent left in Latin America that seeks to check free trade, capitalism and Washington's political and economic reach in the region.

The victory in the national referendum also guarantees continued political tumult in Venezuela and wherever else Chavez injects himself in Latin America.

He leads an anti-U.S. bloc that includes Cuba, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Ecuador and Honduras.

"Venezuela is in the vanguard of change in Latin America," Chavez said Sunday.

During a heated campaign, opponents had warned that a Chavez triumph would give him virtually unchecked power in Venezuela.

"He is a narcissist who thinks he is the only one who can solve the country's problems. This is false," law professor Henrique Iribarren said after voting Sunday.

Chavez and his allies already control the Congress, the judiciary, a majority of the state governorships and the state oil company, which produces half of the country's wealth and 94 percent of its exports.

Sunday's result gives Chavez political momentum that he lost when Venezuelans defeated his first attempt to scrap term limits in December 2007 and again when opposition candidates were elected governors of the country's three biggest states in November 2008.
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