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31.213.458 von lvb28 am 18.08.07
00:51:24Chavez likely to win end
to term limits -pollsters
By Enrique Andres Pretel
CARACAS, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Venezuela's leftist President Hugo
Chavez is likely to win a referendum this year on scrapping term
limits that would help clear a path for him to rule for decades,
pollsters say.
The anti-U.S. leader included an end to term limits in a
constitutional reform proposal that Venezuelans will vote on in
December, sweetening what for many is a bitter pill with some
populist measures, such as reducing the work day, they say.
Pollsters say the referendum will pass because it will be a
straight "yes" or "no" on the overall package and will reflect
majority support for a president who has used Venezuela's oil
wealth to finance programs for the poor.
Thirty-one percent of voters plan to approve the referendum, while
27 percent would reject it, Hinterlaces, a local company often
associated with the opposition, said on Monday in publishing a poll
of 900 people on the referendum.
Many voters are undecided or plan to abstain, it said.
Chavez's reforms proposal also eliminates central bank autonomy,
strengthens state expropriation powers and contains language that
could curb the authority of elected regional officials.
With Latin Americans generally skeptical about presidents who want
to change laws to extend their rule, Chavez's apparent moves to
consolidate power have even drawn criticism from the second largest
party supporting him.
But populist measures, including extending social security
benefits, will likely win out, said Luis Vicente Leon of polling
firm Datanalisis.
"In the over-arching proposal of the work day versus indefinite
re-election, the positive response to the populist measures far
outweighs any negative associated with more controversial aspects
of the reform," he said.
CHAVEZ RULES
U.S. officials and opposition leaders fear Chavez will use the
power he has amassed in Congress, the military, judiciary and state
oil company to cling to office even if his popularity falls.
Chavez has repeatedly vowed he will govern until 2021 if he
continues to win elections, and has sometimes said he could stay in
power well beyond that.
When he took office in 1999, he was due to leave only five years
later but he pushed a constitutional change that has helped keep
him in charge. Without another reform, he would have to leave in
2013.
Chavez led a failed coup in 1992 but is a proven winner at the
ballot box, winning 11 times in elections or referendums.
Pollsters doubt many voters will make a detailed analysis of the
changes in 33 articles of the constitution.
"Chavez will try to pin the reform on his popularity ... so that
any constitutional debate is relegated to an after thought," said
Oscar Schemel of Hinterlaces.
Pollsters generally believe Chavez is popular with a solid majority
of Venezuelans, who back his spending on subsidized food, schools
and clinics.
Chavez will face the referendum vote a year after winning a
landslide re-election. He is one of Latin America's most popular
leaders despite a year of difficulties, including protests at his
refusal to renew an opposition TV station's license.
Santiago Castillo, a boatman in the village of Choroni, said he
supports Chavez because fishermen can now obtain spare parts more
easily.
"If Chavez says it's good ... he knows, he sticks up for the poor,"
he said of the reform proposal. "I'll vote for whatever Chavez
says. Long live Chavez."
Keywords: VENEZUELA CHAVEZ/REFERENDUM