
EPA
A sticker bearing the name of Venezuela's opposition leader Henrique Capriles is seen stuck on a poster of the late President Hugo Chavez outside of the Military Academy, where the funeral service of Chavez is being held, in Caracas, on March 10.
CARACAS - Venezuelan opposition leader Henrique Capriles said on Sunday he will challenge the late Hugo Chavez's preferred
successor for the presidency of the South American OPEC nation next month, setting the stage for a bitter campaign.
Capriles, a 40-year-old state governor, will face election favorite and acting President Nicolas Maduro. The pair have until Monday to register their candidacies for the April 14 vote.
The election will decide whether Chavez's self-styled socialist and nationalist revolution will live on in the country with the world's largest proven oil reserves.
Former vice president Maduro, 50, a hulking one-time bus driver and union leader turned politician who echoes Chavez's anti-imperialist rhetoric, is seen winning the election comfortably, according to two recent polls.
Maduro pushed for a snap election to cash in on a wave of empathy triggered by Chavez's death last Tuesday at age 58 after a two-year battle with cancer. He was sworn in as acting president on Friday to the fury of Capriles.
Capriles, the centrist Miranda state governor who often wears a baseball cap and tennis shoes, lost to Chavez in October. But he won 44 percent of the vote - the strongest showing by the opposition against Chavez.
Capriles has accused the government and Supreme Court of fraud for letting Maduro campaign without stepping down.
Although the ruling Socialist Party is favored to win, opposition supporters are trying to raise their spirits.
"There's no reason to think that the opposition is condemned to defeat," Teodoro Petkoff, an anti-government newspaper editor, said on his Sunday talk show.
Maduro has vowed to carry on where Chavez left off and ratify his policy platform. He acknowledged he has big shoes to fill.
"I am not Chavez - speaking strictly in terms of the intelligence, charisma, historical force, leadership capacity and spiritual grandeur of our comandante," he told a crowd on Saturday.
Chavez was immensely popular among Venezuela's poor for funneling vast oil wealth into social programs and handouts.
The heavy government spending, along with currency devaluations, has contributed to annual inflation of more than 20 percent, hurting consumers.
"Maduro's success will depend on if he can fix the economy and its distortions," said a former high-level official in the Chavez government
who declined to be named. "If he does that, he could emerge as a strong leader instead of one who is an heir."
DIFFICULT RACE
Maduro's first official meeting on Saturday was with officials from China, who Chavez courted to provide an alternative to investment that traditionally came from the United States.
He has adopted his mentor's touch for the theatrical, accusing imperialists, often a Chavez euphemism for the United States, of killing the charismatic but divisive leader by infecting him with cancer.
Emotional tributes were paid at a religious service at the military academy housing Chavez's casket on Sunday, where people continued to gather.
Chavez railed against the wealthy and scared investors with nationalizations. In heavily polarized Venezuela some in the well-to-do class toasted his death with champagne.
Venezuela's opposition coalition backed Capriles as its candidate on Saturday. Capriles says, if elected, he would copy Brazil's "modern left" model of economic and social policies.
Given the state resources at Maduro's disposal and the limited time for campaigning, Capriles faces an uphill battle.
"If the opposition runs, they'll lose. If they don't run, they lose even more!" tweeted Andres Izarra, who served as information minister under Chavez.
The opposition rank-and-file is heavily demoralized after losing last year's presidential race and getting hammered in gubernatorial elections in December, stoking internal party divisions.
"There's no doubt that it's an uphill race for Capriles," local political analyst Luis Vicente Leon said. "The trouble is that given the
race is so close to Chavez's death, emotions get inflamed and the candidate probably continues to be Chavez rather than Maduro."
"The big challenge for Capriles is not to campaign against Chavez but to try to take the fight to Maduro ... trying to show the huge gap (with Chavez) and relate it to the daily problems Venezuelans face."
Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Good luck, Henrique Capriles
He won't win.
.
Well, imperialism has always been real...
but do you have to reject imperialism to win over it? The international environment favors a new winning approach - by enforcing free enterprise and capitalism ... but with sensible and flexible government regulation. Many countries have adopted this later approach to achieve prosperity for themselves and still maintain a measure of genuine independence from the powerful west.
Piglet
Do you live in America?
What have you got against "the powerful West"?
Remember this conversation the next time you are shopping at Wal-Mart.
If China invests in Venezuela, then US should embargo Chinese goods.
To what end.. the United States has diminished so much and so rapidly as a global leader it would be like Haiti boycotting the U.S..
"Dead man walking". Historically, Chavez's opposition had a tendency to meet an untimely death, disappear, or end up in prison. Ironic that the one nation with the largest oil deposits has the poorest population. Of course the liberal proclaim Chavez was a "man for the people."
He probably will not win.
But at least he can try.
I love Venezuela, but the poor have been sucking Chavez tit too long to make rapid change.
The military will intervene, because their bread and butter is with the socialist regime.
The poor will vote for the socialist because they are used to the freebies.
Once, this place was vibrant.
When I was there before Chavez it was a wonderful place for capitalistic businesses and people.
Now, it is a sewer.
I hope someone wins who puts back in place work ethic.
But, knowing how easily the people can be poisoned, I doubt it.
Case in point, look at the current US.
Venezuela's economy collapsed when oil prices imploded in the 1980's well before Chávez took the reigns of government. Venezuela's real problem is one that whoever wins, (and my bet is that will be Maduro), needs to address. That is its over-reliance on oil as the basis of its economy. Chávez kicked that can down the road; so, maybe a change of face, even if not a change of party will be productive.
Henrique Capriles
You must move on.
The people are poor, and mostly homeless compared to america, but if you give us a chance, will make you a strong nation, with god willing, it has nothing to do about oil, but love. Iran is wrong. Most children from america want to play simple games
if obozo can beat a honest man lik romney capriles hasn't a chance
big max, you need some spelling lessons. And also to learn the meaning of "honest". A tax cheat, by definition is not honest.