
CARACAS: Venezuela’s state plans to begin negotiations with the US state this week. Less than a fortnight before a highly anticipated presidential election in which he and his party are facing their toughest challenge in years, President Nicolas Maduro announced Monday.
Maduro, who is running for a second term, wants the US government to revoke terrible economic sanctions that were put in place next ten years. He characterized the speech as “urgent” during his regular TV present.
The Associated Press contacted the Biden administration for reply, but the Biden administration did not respond right away.
The US government has proposed to reestablish dialogue and strong dialogue for two continuous months, according to Maduro. After two months of contemplation, I finally decided to go ahead with the American government and next Wednesday to resume discussions with them to abide by the agreements reached in Qatar and to restore the terms of the immediate discourse.
The United Socialist Party of Venezuela’s 25-year rule, which began with the vote of Hugo Chavez as president, is shaping up to be the biggest problem the party has faced. The group seeks to control all branches of government for six more years, but its foundation is divided, diminished, and disappointed.
Ten individuals, including Maduro, will be on the poll. Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, who represents the opponent’s Unitary Platform partnership, is the only candidate with a true chance of defeating the leader.
Maduro and the opposition alliance reached an agreement last year to improve the conditions for a free and fair election. However, as Maria Corina Machado’s rapid increase became a genuine threat to his election chances, he has since changed his mind.
After he consented, the US granted Maduro some comfort from the restrictions but resisted it because his ruling party continued to veer off of all government agencies to stabilize the harmony, including by thwarting Machado’s election.
Machado’s chosen replace was barred from the poll, too. She and the alliance are now backing Gonzalez, a former minister.