The fight for election integrity and for democracy over autocracy continues on today’s BradCast, from Venezuela to the United States. [Audio link to full show follows below.]

Among today’s topics…

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2 Responses

  1. I believe Venezuela was much more open to international observation in past elections (?).

    Maduro is no prize, but Venezuela will not be one iota better off under someone like Juan Guaidó (except Venezuela’s wealthy class).

    If Guaidó, or someone like him, takes over the country, you can bet Wall St will be popping open the Champagne bottles.

    It should be admitted, massive US sanctions have hurt the country’s economy, and helped keep things unstable, in addition to Maduro’s clumsy leadership.

  2. DonL – My coverage here on the Venezuelan election is not political. I don’t have a dog in the hunt as to who should or shouldn’t be the President, how good they would or wouldn’t be etc. The plain fact is that the centralized Venezuelan National Election Council (stacked with Maduro supporters, FWIW), has not released the polling place results for tens of thousands of them, making it impossible for the public to oversee the election results.

    That is unacceptable, whether it is here or in Venezuela, or anywhere else that claims to have a democratic system.

    I don’t know who won or who lost, and neither does anybody else until that data is made available for public oversight. I have no idea who it will or won’t benefit, nor if the actual winner of the election is good for Venezuela (or the US or anybody else.) And I don’t actually care, in truth about that part of it.