The Americas | Venezuela’s regime digs in

After protests over a stolen election, the goons crack heads

Yet the brazenness of Nicolás Maduro’s theft crosses a line

A woman walks in front of a crossed-out advertisment of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in Valencia, state of Carabobo, Venezuela.
No poster childPhotograph: Getty Images
|CARACAS

ONLY ONE reason prevails for why Nicolás Maduro ever became Venezuela’s president. It was not his skill at winning elections. Nor his willingness to steal them. It was certainly not his oratory. It was simply that his charismatic predecessor, Hugo Chávez, who had cancer, appointed him as heir. In the build-up to Venezuela’s latest presidential election, held on July 28th (Chávez’s 70th birthday), a video of the late populist announcing his decision, in 2012, was broadcast repeatedly as a kind of talisman.

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