The White House has tried to walk back the president’s remark, insisting that it was already “abundantly clear” who won the vote
US President Joe Biden has said that he supports Venezuela holding a new round of elections, as a number of countries have rejected the results of the latest vote in the South American nation. Caracas, in response, has accused him of intervening in Venezuela’s internal affairs.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro officially won the country’s presidential election last month, securing a third term in office. However, while countries such as Russia, China and Caracas’s regional allies have congratulated the incumbent on his victory, the Venezuelan opposition, most Latin American states and the G7 nations have refused to recognize the results, expressing “serious concerns” about the integrity of the electoral process.
Washington officials have declared that the election was won by Maduro’s main rival, the Western-backed opposition figure Edmundo Gonzalez. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has even gone on record stating that the White House officially recognizes Gonzalez as the president elect.
On Thursday, Brazilian President Lula da Silva and Colombian President Gustavo Petro, both of whom have also refused to recognize Maduro’s victory, called on Caracas to hold a new round of elections and invite international observers to monitor the process.
Caracas and the Venezuelan opposition have rejected the proposal, with both sides insisting that they had legitimately won the vote in July.
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Shortly after Lula and Petro announced their suggestion, Biden was asked by reporters if he supported the idea of a new election being held in Venezuela in order to resolve the political crisis in the country. “I do,” the US leader said in response.