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Venezuelan Opposition Presidential Candidate Machado Names Substitute While Fighting Ban


Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado waves as she puts an arm around Corina Yoris in Caracas, Venezuela, March 22, 2024. On Friday, Machado named Yoris as a substitute to her presidential bid while she fights a government ban on her running for office.
Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado waves as she puts an arm around Corina Yoris in Caracas, Venezuela, March 22, 2024. On Friday, Machado named Yoris as a substitute to her presidential bid while she fights a government ban on her running for office.

Venezuelan opposition powerhouse Maria Corina Machado on Friday named a substitute to her presidential bid while she fights a government ban on her running for office.

The announcement comes as Machado faces increasing political repression from the government of President Nicolas Maduro as well as pressure from foreign leaders and fellow government opponents to abandon her candidacy.

Machado made the announcement two days after authorities arrested two of her campaign staffers and issued warrants for seven more, accusing them of links to an alleged anti-government plot.

She told reporters that college professor Corina Yoris will be registered as an opposition faction's presidential candidate ahead of a Monday deadline. The presidential election is set for July 28.

Substitute opposition presidential candidate Corina Yoris exits a press conference accompanied by opposition leader opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, in Caracas, Venezuela, March 22, 2024.
Substitute opposition presidential candidate Corina Yoris exits a press conference accompanied by opposition leader opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, in Caracas, Venezuela, March 22, 2024.

"Today is a great day and we have taken a big step, a great step, for the electoral victory in which we will defeat Nicolas Maduro," Machado said from her campaign headquarters in Venezuela's capital, Caracas. She said Yoris is "a person with my full confidence, honorable, who will carry out this process with the support and trust of everyone."

Machado, a former lawmaker, overwhelmingly won an October primary election organized by an opposition faction. But the governing party-loyal Supreme Tribunal of Justice in January affirmed a ban on her running for office, and fellow government critics pressed her to stand down to get behind an alternate candidate.

The primary of the United States-backed Unitary Platform coalition was organized by an independent commission without any assistance from Venezuela's electoral authorities.

Machado is not part of the coalition, but she was allowed to run as an independent.

But the government moved to block Machado's candidacy from the start, announcing she was barred from running for office only a few days after she officially entered the primary race in June. After she won the primary, authorities issued arrest warrants for three of her staffers in connection to an alleged plot to sabotage a referendum the government held in December over a territorial dispute with Guyana.

Authorities did not arrest the staffers, but they took into custody Roberto Abdul, a longtime collaborator of Machado with whom she co-founded a pro-democracy group more than two decades ago.

She filed paperwork with the country's top court in December alleging in part that her ban from office was null and void because she was never officially notified of the administrative decision. The following month, without ever holding a single hearing, the court reaffirmed the ban.

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