Venezuela will hold its presidential election on July 28, the head of the national electoral council said on Tuesday, though uncertainty remains over who will be the opposition coalition’s candidate with President Nicolas Maduro expected to seek another term.
The country’s Supreme Court in January upheld a ban on holding public office imposed by the country’s controller general against Maria Corina Machado, who overwhelmingly won an October opposition primary to determine its presidential candidate.
A March 25 deadline for candidate registration may force the opposition’s hand. Machado’s campaign said she was in the country’s Andean region and it offered no immediate comment after the election date was announced.
Government-allied lawmakers, opposition groups and others last week proposed a variety of dates, ranging from April to December.
The electoral council “evaluated the different proposals for a schedule that contemplates all the constitutional, legal and technical requirements,” its head Elvis Amoroso said, reading from a statement.
July 28 is the birthday of late President Hugo Chavez, Maduro’s mentor and predecessor, who died in 2013. Tuesday was the 11th anniversary of Chavez’s death.
The government and the opposition agreed in an October electoral deal that the vote would take place in the second half of 2024, that international observers would oversee it and that each side would choose its candidate.
Some opposition figures expressed doubts at the time that Maduro would uphold the deal.