
Venezuela’s opposition and authorities closed the campaign’s formal opening on Thursday with marches that drew thousands of people to the money.
The dramatic differences between the main contenders, as well as their tools, were summed up by the activities three days before the highly anticipated vote on Sunday.
On a large phase set up on one of the town’s main roads, President Nicolas Maduro, who is running for president for a second term, gathered supporters and roused the audience with artistic intermissions and dances throughout his address. He claimed that his detractors are pro-violent and described himself as a man of peace in a speech delivered to the group, which was part of it transported to Caracas on state-owned cars.
” Who of the 10 applicants offers peace and stability”? Maduro asked the group. Yet it was he who in recent days spoke of a conceivable post-election “bloodbath”.
Meanwhile, former minister Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, who is representing the Unitary Platform alliance, and antagonism head Maria Corina Machado gathered much fewer followers. Gonzalez and Machado walked through the area on a system attached to a vehicle until they reached a working-class area of the money.
Their ability to set up appropriate stages, including on Thursday when their audio system was not strong enough to allow all supporters to hear, has been impacted by their lack of funding and authorities persecution against Machado and any services provider who might volunteering or deal with the strategy.
State broadcast transmitted live the remainder of Maduro’s protest and ignored the opponent’s event.
The United Socialist Party of Venezuela’s election on Sunday will face its most difficult political test in a long time.
Many voters continue to cast their verdicts on Maduro, who is still controversial among him. He is to blame for the difficult problems that has plagued them for more than 11 decades. At the same time, after decades of boycotting elections and gathering groups, the main opposition events have come together to support a second candidate, Gonzalez.