CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuela’s Supreme Justice Tribunal on Thursday ratified President Nicolas Maduro’s victory in the July 28 presidential election, sealing institutional backing for the ruling party as the disputed contest fades from international headlines.
Since the vote and deadly anti-government protests which followed, Maduro’s administration has conducted what the opposition, human rights groups and unions have characterized as a crackdown on dissent.
The actions have included arrests of opposition figures and protesters, an investigation into opposition leaders for allegedly inciting the military to commit crimes, the passage of a law tightening rules on NGOs, and forced resignations of state employees allegedly espousing pro-opposition views.
The supreme tribunal has reviewed material from the electoral authority and agrees that Maduro won the election, court president Caryslia Rodriguez said, adding the decision cannot be appealed.
“The results of the presidential election of July 28 released by the national electoral council, where Nicolas Maduro was elected president of the republic, are validated,” said Rodriguez.
The electoral authority has said since the night of the election that Maduro won just over half of votes, though it has not published full tallies.
The opposition has published online what it says are 83% of voting machine tallies, which give its candidate Edmundo Gonzalez a hearty 67% support.
After weeks of heated dispute, Venezuela’s Supreme Court has certified President Nicolas Maduro’s election win.
The supreme court has no constitutional right to carry out any electoral functions, making its ruling null, the opposition has said.
“Sovereignty rests with the people and is intransferable. Organs of state emanate from and are subject to popular sovereignty,” Gonzalez said in a social media post after the ruling.
A copy of the court’s decision will be shared with the attorney general, Rodriguez said, so it can be included in criminal investigations being carried out into supposed irregularities connected to publication of “presumably false” election results online.
Both Gonzalez and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado are being investigated for several crimes, including allegedly inciting members of the military to commit crimes, after they called on security forces to uphold election results.
Many Western countries have urged full publication of the results, while Russia, China and others have congratulated Maduro on his victory.
Sources have told Reuters the U.S. has drafted a list of about 60 government officials and family members who could face sanctions in the first punitive measures since the vote, but most solutions for the crisis floated by the international community have either been ignored or rejected by the government, the opposition or both.
The ratification gives Maduro, who took office in 2013, another six-year term, set to begin in January.
The president, a long-time ruling party official before he rose to the presidency, had asked the court to verify the results. The court’s judges summoned all the candidates to hand over the copies of voting machine tallies they are entitled to by law.
Gonzalez did not attend the summons. The opposition says the court, though constitutionally independent, operates as an arm of the ruling party.
The opposition’s failure to hand over its copies and Gonzalez’s non-appearance are “blatant disrespect”, Rodriguez said, and exposes him to sanctions, though she did not specify what kind.
The electoral council should publish its definitive results, Rodriguez added, without giving further details.
At least 23 protesters have been killed at anti-government demonstrations since the election, and some 2,400 arrested, according to the United Nations. Maduro says the demonstrators are extremists and fascists.