Who is election rival for Chavez’s party? - Islamic Invitation Turkey
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Who is election rival for Chavez’s party?

Who is election rival for Chavez’s party

With the death of Venezuela’s popular president, special elections will be held in April 14, and as predicted, Capriles is the only name to be mentioned among opposition.
Capriles was toughest rival for Chavez during 14 years past and during the October elections. The young lawyer scored 45 per cent of the votes, but conceded defeat against Chavez, who was fighting cancer.

Now, young Capriles must fight with Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela’s acting president endorsed by Chavez as his party’s nominee for elections if he died.  More information on Capriles is provided.

Links to Zionist circles Henrique Capriles, 41, underwent a severe blow for defeat against Chavez in 2012 elections, but this is not to forget that he was Chavez’s toughest rival during past 14 years. Capriles, a law graduate, although lost the elections, he managed to gain the governorship of the important and populated province of Miranda.

Unlike Chavez, he grew up in a wealthy family. Analysts believed that if Capriles unites the opposition in a short time he has to elections, he will have larger hopes to win. Capriles was elected to Venezuela’s parliament, Congress when he was only 26 as youngest representative, and two years later, was speaker of the Congress. He has been accused of homosexuality, having links to Zionist circles, and shunning the Catholic majority of Venezuelans. Unlike Chavez, who deemed US and Israel as the world’s biggest problems, Capriles has stated that if he is elected, he will improve relations with US and Israel.

Chavez’s legacy to perpetuate?
Hugo Chavez and his party managed to uproot the illiteracy in Venezuela through a plan, as UNESCO report shows, known as Robinson 1 in 2005. Through Robinson 2, Chavez presented public education for all in high school years. High school enrollment in 2011 rose to 73.3 per cent. Between 2005 and 2011, Chavez built about 8,000 health care centers.

The ratio of doctors rose from 20 per 100,000 populations to 80 per 100,000 populations. Health insurance was extended and spread to cover most deprived people.

Healthy drink water access was 82 per cent in 1999. Now it is 95 per cent. Chavez built 700,000 houses since 1999 to the present. 140 per cent of food is produced inside the country. Free meal, eradication of hunger and malnutrition, rise in the least wage from $ 16 in 1999 to $ 330 in 2012, decreasing unemployment from 15.2 per cent to 6.4 per cent in 2012 were among his achievements. In 1998, 65 per cent of the labor force received the
least wages, and now the figure is only 21.1 per cent. Disabled women without income now receive 80 per cent of the least wage. This is 60 per cent for men.

All these statistics indicate that Chavez and his party served his people during the presidency, and now time will show whether Chavez’s legacy perpetuates or a US and Israeli-backed candidate will come to power.

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