The breakdown of the opposition that unleashed the negotiation for primaries



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A morning marked by the dismay of failure had several opposition leaders on Thursday. The day after they failed to achieve a unitary pact of primaries for the regional governor elections and ended up dividing into two blocks, the political readings declined and recriminations were sharpened from side to side, leaving even more evidence of the breakdown of trust in the sector.

Meanwhile he Wide Front was deployed in various media to clarify why they withdrew from the headquarters of the Socialist Party – the center of negotiations in the sector – and registered their primaries apart from the rest of the center-left, their peers from the Progressive Convergence and Christian Democracy -who signed an alliance with Citizens and the PRO– deepened their attempt to hold their counterpart responsible for self-inflicted defeat.

Turn in Unity for Change some privately lamented what they saw as a true “betrayal” by the Progressive Party (PRO). In that community, meanwhile, they relieved the role that he played Marco Enriquez-Ominami in the negotiations that ended with his party divorced from his partners and agreeing with the former Concertación. The former presidential candidate defended that the PRO join the unitary efforts and not be isolated next to the PC and FRVS.

In the Communist Party Their leader, William Teillier, de-dramatized the frustrated opposition unit and assured that “not everything is over”, aiming to seek Default alliances with the Broad Front and the rest on the left. Despite the fact that some assure that the communists were once again isolated, within that party this is seen as an opportunity for a better deployment of their main presidential letter: Mayor Daniel Jadue.

In Citizens the signing of the pact with the former Concertación also brought internal recriminations. “This is Venezuela in a political party,” said a member of the national council, who assured that María Ignacia Gómez, the president of the store, did not have the legal powers or the support of the bases to comply with the agreement. From the board, however, they ruled out any irregularity in the process.

While in La Moneda and the ruling party they take happy accounts of the opposition division, despite the fact that in that sector the negotiations were also on the verge of failure.

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