Since I have to be at the voting center at 5 AM, I better go to bed early, getting up that early is my only objection to being part of the electoral process. But I am as ready as can be.
We are there, ready for the vote. It is really a freakish show in Venezuela when we have elections. First, we have the involvement of the military, a vestige of the times when we had coups and the like. Well, I guess we need them again. Except it is not clear to me what role they play. They are supposed to be “guarding” the schools and the voting material so you have to wonder where they were when four fingerprint machines were stolen at a voting center in Caracas. In my center that would have been quite difficult, go figure. In any case, we used military even in the days we had no machines.
The second quirky thing is that no alcohol is sold anywhere for three days. Yeap, starting yesterday, you could not purchase any liquor at stores, bars or restaurants. Thus, I had to fight my way around people today at the supermarket to buy some soda that I would have normally bought at a liquor store but they were closed. You have to wonder what consuming alcohol yesterday had to do with how you would vote tomorrow. It was nice of the restaurant I went to today for lunch to serve me wine in coffee mugs, they have my loyalty. The food was very good too.
The people at the supermarket is another quirk. They were packed today. It was as if they would not open for days. It is the feeling that “we don’t know what may happen”, but nothing ever happens after elections in Venezuela. In any case, most supermarkets will open tomorrow anyway, so I am not sure what the lady with the two shopping carts was worried about today.
Campaigning has been shut down for three days in another quirky rule: No campaigning after day x. I can understand no campaigning on voting day, but why three days before?
Oh yeah! We close the border tomorrow all day, while voting lasts. Another one I fail to get.
Chavistas have set up posters with crib sheets on how to vote, a block away from all voting centers. Well, why not, the “tarjeton” (ballot) is so complicated you do need a crib sheet:
And this is only ballot #1 for the two nominal Deputies in my district and the list Deputy, there is a second one for the mysterious Parlatino and the indigenous Deputy. (Another quirk, everyone votes for the indigenous “representatives”)
In the one above you have the possibility of voting in three ovals, like for Chavez’ PSUV top, left, where you would vote List, and its two candidates. But, all parties supporting PSUV, like the communist party (PCV), UPV and MEP have separate choices. Thus voting for any of the top four is essentially the same.
The same happens with the unity candidates, whose votes are mostly at the bottom, for example, way at the bottom you have equal votes for MR, Primero Justicia, Causa R and Podemos. They are all the same, but they are all there. No matter which one you choose, it is the Unity list, Maria Corina Machado and Enrique Mendoza. Only some quirky parties like OPINA only have one oval for the list vote, refusing to endorse Maria Corina Machado or Enrique Mendoza, the unity candidates in my circuit.
Why is this so complicated?
Easy, if you want your political party to retain its formal identity with the Electoral Board, you need to obtain a certain percentage of votes or you have to start over and get a petition and file like a new party. It’s a pain to do that in twenty different states.
Who will I vote for? Clearly for the opposition, but likely for Causa R to help them retain their status as a party in my district. They work hard, they may not get the votes to bypass a new registration. Thus my, yes, quirky vote, I like their leaders and style.
So, all systems set to go. We are all ready. I will try to post tomorrow using my phone, hope it does not rain much, it has been raining cats and dogs all day, it would be a pity of results were to be affected by such an external and non-democratic factor.
Posting is quite easy with my cell phone, the problem is that if lines are long and there is crowding I will have no time for it. My voting table has 546 people, if it takes one minute for each voter, assuming everyone goes and vote, it would take close to ten hours for the process to be completed. Except that people tend to go and vote in the morning so it is inevitable that lines will form. Assume 30% abstention, that’s 327 voters, if half decide to go before noon, then that would require more than one voter a minute, with the current system and the number of older people voting, that’s simply impossible at my center, particularly as older people show up very early, clogging the lines.
So, looking forward to the opposition getting 65 Deputies or more. It all depends on abstention, which is the toughest factor to predict in Venezuela. Very low abstention (~15%) favor Chavez, higher level abstention (~30-40%) favors the opposition, even higher levels favor Chavismo again.
For the opposition, blocking Chavez from obtaining a super majority (2/3) is the first task at hand. Not achieving this would be a serious defeat for the opposition. The second task, which would be a very strong victory for the opposition, would be if it obtained 50% of the popular vote, even it that meant only 40% of the Deputies in the Assembly. Beyond that, it would be sweet, but it looks hard to have more Deputies than Chavismo in the Assembly.
Results are very sensitive to the levels of popular vote. If the opposition gets around 47% of the popular vote, it would not reach 33% of the Deputies, if it got near 54% of the vote, it would have a majority of the Deputies in the Assembly. That shows how rigged the system is, a 6% to 7% difference in popular vote, gives a 21% increase in the number of Deputies.
So, good luck tomorrow, hope your lines and the waiting are short and I better go to sleep, it will be a very long day, even if you don’t have to get up before 5AM.
September 26, 2010 at 11:38 am
Great job Miguel, keep my hopes up !
September 26, 2010 at 7:47 am
Be watchful of the usual CNE tricky electronic voting practices where your vote is not counted if you miss a step, or the imfamous multiple electronic votes because the machine was not working properly, and the “corrective” action of tearing up the redundent paper receipt as if that would in some way prevent multiple voting errors. Nobody will count the paper receipts for accuracy and the boxes will be burned by the national guard in the following days. Of course the zombies will rise from the cemeteries to cast a few ballots for the PSUV. The bottles of easily removed purple dye will be distributed to select voting stations, and expect the usual reports of being denied to vote because your identification was used to vote earlier in the day.
Massive voting turnout will force them to cheat…Just catch them doing it.
September 26, 2010 at 6:44 am
I think it was not quirky at all to eliminate alcohol 3 days before the elections when tensions are so high.Venezuela is a country of violence, heavy drinking and rampant drug and alcoholism, not to mention high levels of traffic accidents, mental illness, and depression.Alcohol only adds to the problems.
I wish you , Venezuela, and all of us who are looking on and care about Venezuela, luck.Godspeed, and all the best to you Miguel.
Looking forward to hear some positive results.
September 26, 2010 at 6:31 am
Hi Miguel,
I’ll vote for Causa R too. Back in the 90s when A. Velazquez was governor they had a motivated team of public servants in Bolivar State. Hopefully the are ‘la misma gente”.
One day in the long transit line to cross the Orinoco? (paso de chalana en Barbacoas) an official car skipped the ~2hr line. We all ‘sucker’ citizens assumed it was the usual abuse of power. To our surprise the car came back to its original spot, and the news spread that it was the governor of Bolivar (AV) making sure that nobody skipped the line, because he was going to do it as everybody else.
Not bad in a country like ours……Yes we can, maybe one day? 😉
Take care
September 25, 2010 at 9:21 pm
BTW: Our Foreign Minister blames “capitalism” for the rains:
http://www.noticias24.com/actualidad/noticia/173797/responsabiliza-al-capitalismo-voraz-de-las-lluvias-y-el-cambio-climatico/
What are they doing to help the environment?
Nothing…
September 25, 2010 at 9:20 pm
I think rain is bad for Chavismo in the end. Looks like rain all over:
http://provo.net/Weather.html
It’s interesting, in the past I found everyone helps everyone when it rains.
September 25, 2010 at 9:17 pm
Very confusing Miguel but Im sure we will have a lot of time to do the Monday morning quarterbacking. I find the rain interesting. Does that favor us or them? Will us or them be passing out garbage bags or Brazilians umbrellas?