Caracas, Venezuela, December 4, 2005—Yesterday, international observers from the electoral commissions of El Salvador, Colombia, Panama, Uruguay, and Nicaragua declared their support of the National Assembly vote taking place in Venezuela today. "Democracy is constructed by those who participate, thus the withdrawal ... of the opposition parties does not delegitimize the parliamentary elections," said Eugenio Chicas, a magistrate of the electoral council of El Salvador.
In the past week, four important opposition publicly declared their boycott of the December 4 election for the country’s legislature, the National Assembly, citing lack of trust in the National Electoral Council. President Chavez and his supporters, though, say that their withdrawal is an effort to delegitimize the vote in the face of near-certain defeat at the polls. While the parties that withdrew are among the country’s largest, the Electoral Council announced that only 10% of the candidates up for election had formalized their withdrawal.
According to Chicas, the opposition boycott "in no way" delegitimizes the vote because the observers believe that there are adequate technical conditions and is one of the most audited and certified votes in Latin America.