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Foreign media on the referendum
Panama newspapers highlight Chávez's defeat Daily newspaper La Prensa headline read "NO prevails" and "Chávez's government concedes vote is tight," adding that Chávez blamed his defeat on abstention and branded the opposition's victory as "pyrrhic." Also in Panama, daily newspaper Mi Diario headlines read "The Commander was stopped," and underscored that "Venezuela said no to Chávez and his intentions to remain in power forever." US media: Venezuelans denied further powers to Chávez The Washington Post print edition claimed "Venezuelans dealt an irritating defeat to Chávez, as they stopped the proposed changes to the Constitution that could have accelerated the transformation of this oil-rich country into a socialist state." The New York Times website stressed that the vote was very
tight. Los Angeles Times branded Chávez's defeat -"the first one in his nine years in power"- as "astounding." "Some analysts forecast this defeat -which has shattered Chávez's image of invincibility, and is likely to encourage his opponents in the country." Uruguayan press reports: Most Venezuelans told Chávez
No "Reform: the President acknowledged his defeat; the No-bloc gained 50.9 percent of votes," El País reported. Bolivia's press points to rejection of Chávez's
reform Daily newspaper La Razón's first-page headline read, "No-bloc wins in Venezuela and Chávez admits his defeat," stressing this is the first electoral setback for Chávez in nine years. La Prensa reported, "Chávez loses and his Constitution is not given green light." This daily newspaper, in a four-page special supplement, stressed that Chávez lost to "the new opposition and the mobilization of university students." Honduras press reports on triumph of No vote and
Chávez's defeat in referendum "NO triumphs in Venezuela," read a front page headline in daily newspaper La Tribuna, edited in Tegucigalpa, and then, inside, it noted: "Hugo Chávez's constitutional reform rejected in Venezuela." Daily newspaper Tiempo, in northern San Pedro Sula, stated
also in the front page: "NO wins," and added: "Hugo Chávez
accepts his defeat," Efe quoted. "Chávez: The revolution showed its ethic spirit," was
the front page headline of Granma, the official newspaper
of the Cuban Communist Party, in a succinct note reporting
on a press conference held early morning by the Venezuelan
president. According to newspaper El Colombiano, it was "the toughest
setback" for the head of state after nine years in office. "Sure enough, Chávez will not desist from what he could not get last Sunday," said daily newspaper O Estado. The newspaper based in Sao Paulo recalled that Chávez's ex ally and now opponent, General Raúl Isaías Baduel, warned that Chávez "could try to impose on the country the dictatorial reforms that voters rejected." In the meantime, newspaper Valor Económico, stated: "Chávez says that his proposals 'are alive.' Unless he takes the way to radicalization and political suicide, he will have to wait in order to pursue full power again. The referendum proved that most people do not approve that way." "Bolivarianism and the 21st century socialism include massive doses of populist authoritarianism, which expansion under a totalitarian draft constitution was countered by the people," said daily newspaper O Globo. |
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