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    20
    Feb
    2013
    6:34am, EST

    Polls: Cigar-chomping former communist will be Italy's next leader

    Alessandro Garofalo / Reuters, file

    Democratic Party leader Pier Luigi Bersani, shown with his wife, Daniela, in December, just might be the choice to take over from Prime Minister Mario Monti.

    By Frances D'Emilio, The Associated Press

    ROME -- If opinion polls are right, he's the man headed to win Italy's elections this month.

    No, not Silvio Berlusconi, the flamboyant media mogul chased out of office by Europe's debt crisis and attempting a comeback. Nor Mario Monti, the star economist-turned-premier credited by financial circles with saving Italy from ruin.

    Grabbing fewer headlines but a greater share of support: Pier Luigi Bersani — a cigar-chomping former communist with a resume thick with unglamorous posts and almost zero name recognition outside Italy.

    His high forehead burrowed in a frown, Bersani came across as looking so stern in early campaign posters that aides had to scramble to replace them with ones showing him smiling. Still, he handily beat the easy-going, rakishly handsome young mayor of Florence, Matteo Renzi, in a primary last fall of their Democratic Party to become the center-left candidate for premier.

    'The opposite of Berlusconi'
    And that might point to his appeal: Italians seem to find his complete lack of glamour refreshing after the rambunctious Berlusconi years.

    "His strongest point is he's the opposite of Berlusconi," said Jonathan Hopkin, a political scientist at the London School of Economics. "Berlusconi is a showman. He (Bersani) is not entertaining."

    The ascent of Bersani — whose camp in late January enjoyed roughly 33 percent support against some 27 percent for the Berlusconi side — also has much to do with his ability to draw on the former Communist Party's entrenched network of activists, funding and economic connections, such as business cooperatives. The publication of poll results is banned in the last two weeks before elections in Italy.

    But in the counterintuitive world of Italian politics, Bersani has long embraced economic liberalization in several stints in government.

    As industry minister, Bersani waged an uphill battle to free up such areas of the economy as energy, insurance and banking services.

    Even the smallest reform efforts brought resistance. Operators of Italy's gasoline retail network called a strike in 2007 when the government decided to allow supermarkets to sell gasoline. Similar protests frustrated plans to auction off taxi licenses and to allow supermarkets to sell nonprescription drugs such as aspirin. Years later, even Monti had no luck trying to persuade the powerful lobby of pharmacists to surrender their hold on nonprescription drugs.

    As transport minister, Bersani branded unions "irresponsible" when an airport ground workers' strike combined with an air traffic controllers' strike on the same weekend train workers walked off the job.

    He also worked to undo the center-left's image as supportive of a sprawling state economy, especially in the energy sector. He championed legislation that ended a 37-year-old monopoly by then state-controlled electric utility ENEL.

    Born in 1951 — 15 years to the day after Berlusconi — Bersani grew up in Emilia Romagna, the affluent north-central region at the heart of Italy's so-called "red belt." There, citizens in cities like Bologna voted for decades for Italy's communists, and later, for the communists' post-Soviet heirs.

    Bersani's website shows him posing in a childhood photo with his parents against a backdrop of Esso gas pumps. His father, a car mechanic, ran a gas station.

    In his autobiography, Bersani recounts an episode from his childhood that points to what might drive him as a leader.

    He once organized a strike of fellow altar boys after the church pastor refused to divvy out to the tips that families left for them after weddings or baptisms. "The pastor would seize the money and buy sweets and nougat bars for us at Easter and Christmas. That didn't seem fair to me."

    So during one ceremony, the altar boys took off their cassocks and walked out of the church. "The next Christmas, the pastor gave the boys an equal share of the tips of that year, stipulating one condition: that our mothers knew the exact figure we got."

    Fairness is a quality Bersani promises to promote if elected premier: "At the first Cabinet meeting, we have to think about those who have nothing to eat," he told a campaign rally.

    Related:

    Pope's resignation could thwart Berlusconi comeback

    Italy's comeback kid Berlusconi defends Mussolini

    Disgraced Berlusconi says he'll run for fourth term

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    61 comments

    Former communist? Yeah, fat chance. He'll be Italy's Obama. Of course, after Berlusconi, nothing could shock me about Italian politics.

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  • 22
    Jan
    2013
    8:47am, EST

    Israelis head to polls as shift to right is expected

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looks set to win a third term in office, pushing the country further to the right, away from peace with the Palestinians and possibly towards a showdown with Iran. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    By Lawahez Jabari, Producer, NBC News

    TEL AVIV — Israelis headed to the polls Tuesday in an election that was expected to give Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a third term in office and mark a shift to the political right.

    More than 5.6 million Israeli are eligible to vote, and results are expected Wednesday morning.

    Exit polls showed the Israeli leader's Likud party, yoked with the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu group, would still be the biggest bloc in the 120-member assembly with 31 seats, 11 fewer than the 42 they held in the previous parliament. 

    The vote is expected to be followed by talks between different political parties to form a coalition government since no single party is likely to get an outright majority of the 120 seats in the Knesset.


    Netanyahu’s Likud party is running with the nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party, and opinion polls have showed a surge in support for the far-right Jewish Home party, Reuters reported.

    Several Israeli Arabs and Palestinians claimed Tuesday that Israel was moving toward “fascism and racism” and said that hope for the creation of Palestinian nation as part of the proposed two-state solution to the Mideast crisis was fading.

    In Tel Aviv, however, voter Ari Abacsis, in his late 20s, said Netanyahu was a proven leader.

    Millionaire Naftali Bennett, who is bitterly opposed to a Palestinian state, is set to propel his party into a key position during upcoming elections. NBC's John Ray reports.

    “I think Netanyahu did it in the past and he did it quiet well. Nobody is perfect, but Netanyahu fits the requirements,” he said.

    “He did some good things. He brought back Gilad Shalit [the Israeli soldier held for years in Gaza]. We remember him for that and for a lot of other things,” he added. “All the others didn't prove themselves. He proves himself. I think we don't know what is happening behind the scenes.”

    Young people have 'lost hope'
    Yaffa Braverman, 58, an art gallery owner in Tel Aviv, criticized the number of small parties in Israeli politics.

    “The problem is the system. We need more big parties that are capable of making important decisions, and the way that we'll do it again is based on small parties and everyone fighting for his own chair,” she said. “I think that's why the young generation has lost hope.”

    Avi Shai, 35, financial adviser also from Tel Aviv, said he hoped Netanyahu would develop better relations with the United States and move to the left.

    “I don't see any resolution coming because it's a different situation we're in," he said. "A lot of things can happen in the near and far future. Everything is liquid here in the Middle East. It doesn't matter which prime minister is elected -- a lot of things can happen."

    “I hope that Prime Minister Netanyahu would be more in the left wing and would have better agreement with Obama, which is not the case right now,” he added.

    Palestinians living in Israel expressed a similar lack of hope, but in much stronger terms.

    Hana Hurani, 34, an engineer from Eilaboun in the north and an activist in the National Democratic Assembly, said Israel’s politics were headed toward “fascism and racism.”

    “We, the Arabs, should stress our national identity and our unity as Arabs. Election day is a day on which Arabs try to represent themselves, and after that we go back to a racist reality,” he said.

    “On the Palestinian issue, I expect there to be a stalemate and as there will be more settlement expansion, we will witness the final burial of the two-state solution on which there is an international consensus,” he added.

    'Indifference is fatal'
    Hurani said Israeli Arabs should “be more active” politically: “Indifference is fatal. … Unfortunately, ignorance and abstention from voting is one of our enemies."

    Nijmeh Ali, 30, a political science Ph.D. candidate at the Hebrew University and a lecturer at Al Quds University in Jerusalem, said it was clear from opinion polls that the next government would be right-wing.

    “The Palestinian street is boiling, and it will explode at one point against the existing occupation,” he said.

    “There is racism and discrimination against the Arabs in Israel, and this will not change since we are a defect in the Zionist project, whether we demand our social or political rights. The legitimization of racism will increase,” he added.

    Mustafa Barghuti, 55, a member of the Palestinian National initiative in Ramallah on the West Bank, said most Israelis were voting for Jewish settlements and an “apartheid system at the expense of peace and a two-state solution.”

    “It looks like there is no peace camp in Israel,” he added.

    Fawzi Barhum, a spokesman for the Hamas movement in Gaza, said he expected that Israel would elect the “most extreme and racist government to lead Israel.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related content:

    Avast! Israel's Pirate Party angles for 2 percent of electoral booty

    Charismatic ex-commando pressures Netanyahu from the right as Israel prepares to vote

    75 comments

    I guess this is a really gentle description of reality which is that israelis in general are not nice people and they really do want to continue to occupy the Palestinians and usurping them and their economy like slaves. The checkpoints, the subjugation and humiliation of Palestinians is now normali …

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  • 19
    Nov
    2012
    7:52am, EST

    Too much democracy? Apathy triumphs as UK voters shun latest election

    Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters

    A voter enters a polling station in Hambleden, southern England, on Thursday as the public elected 41 police and crime commissioners.

    By Peter Jeary, NBC News

    LONDON -- Democracy is a valuable commodity; revolutions are fought to win it, lives are lost defending it, constitutions are written to enshrine it and billions of dollars are spent making it mean something. However, an initiative in Britain to extend the scope of democracy has met with an emphatic thumbs-down by the electorate, raising questions about how the nation has its say in who-runs-what.

    On Thursday, voters in England and Wales, with the exception of London, had the opportunity to elect the first-ever Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC). These new regional officials, paid upwards of $150,000 a year, have the power to set policing budgets, fix priorities and hire and fire chief constables -- the most senior officers in the force.

    But in the end, most people didn’t bother to vote.

    Fewer than one-in-six eligible voters cast their ballots, with none of the regions achieving even a 20 per cent turn-out, according to data compiled by the Electoral Reform Society. One polling station in Wales failed to have even a single voter cross its threshold. Among those who did vote, the proportion of invalid ballots was three-times higher than normally seen at a parliamentary election. 

    The turnout was so low that the Electoral Commission, the independent watchdog responsible for monitoring British elections, announced an inquiry into just what went wrong, describing voter apathy as “a concern for anyone who cares about democracy."

    The PCC was the coalition government's latest policy to enable the public to become more closely involved in decision-making. Unlike the United States, Britain has no tradition of voting for positions such as sheriffs and school board officials. In recent years, successive U.K. governments have extended the reach of local democracy, first through national assemblies in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and more recently by instigating directly elected mayors in major cities.

    Perhaps the most noteworthy defeat was handed to John Prescott, who served as Tony Blair's deputy prime minister. He lost in his bid to become a police and crime commissioner for the Humberside Police in northeast England.

    Before the vote, the government stressed the importance of making the 41 new commissioners directly accountable to the public. But as a result of widespread voter apathy, questions have now been raised about the mandate for the PCCs to carry out their duties.

    For example, the new commissioner for Essex, Nick Alston, was elected by just 4.7 percent of those eligible to vote. At one Essex voting booth on polling day, election officials confessed that "just a handful" of voters had turned up in the first three hours.

    'Waste of money'
    One of those who did not vote for Alston – or for anyone - was former Essex police officer, Bob Miller.

    Miller, 65, said he had purposefully spoiled his vote-by-mail as a protest against what he described as, “an undemocratic, unnecessary, waste of money.”

    “The whole thing’s a joke,” he said, “It’s not been properly thought through.”

    Miller’s sentiments featured among a number of reasons put forward to explain the low turn-out: the weather was bad (which is why British elections rarely take place in November); candidates had not been funded by the government to provide mail-shots; there had been little national publicity about either the reforms or the election.

    More UK coverage from NBC News

    The organization of the poll was sharply criticized by pressure groups working for democratic reform.

    Katie Ghose, chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society, deplored what she called the "inaction and incompetence" of the preparation amid the government's "piecemeal" approach to democratic reform.

    “Democracy doesn't work on the basis of 'if you build it, they will come',” Ghose said.

    Campaign group Unlock Democracy called for a mass petition of the government minister responsible, demanding she “never allow public elections like this to go ahead on the cheap, at the wrong time of the year and with so little help for the electorate to make an informed decision.”

    But some argue the main reason could be traced to failings at the heart of British democracy.

    Political commentator Peter Kellner deplored the "chipping away" of the foundations of Britain's representative democracy, whereby voters elect politicians, at national and local level, to take decisions for them.

    What Kellner perceived as a "patchwork arrangement" of new democratic initiatives, such as mayors and referendums, had eroded traditional British democracy over the past 40 years.

    “The people seem to have understood far better than the politicians how unattractive that patchwork is,” he said.

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    79 comments

    Sounds like voteing in this country. People are just tired and fed up. Nothing will change it.

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  • 15
    Nov
    2012
    6:37pm, EST

    Sierra Leone president eyes new term amid mining boom

    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    A woman walks past campaign posters for incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Nov. 15, 2012. Ten years after the end of a devastating civil war, Sierra Leone will go to the polls on Saturday to choose between incumbent Koroma and opposition leader Julius Maada Bio.

    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    A Sierra Leone People's Party supporter wears glasses made of wire and reeds in the shape of the party's initials at the final campaign rally for candidate Julius Maada Bio, in Freetown, Nov. 15.

    TILORMA, Sierra Leone (Reuters) — When the European Union's chief election observer Richard Howitt asked people in this remote village last month if they had concerns about Sierra Leone's looming presidential poll, he got a sobering response: what is voting?

    The question from one of the villagers in the gold and diamond mining district of Kenema underscored the challenges facing this West African country ahead of Saturday's elections, which will become the latest test of democracy in a region notorious for flawed polls, civil wars, and coups.

    Incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma, a former insurance executive who came to power in 2007 in elections generally considered free and fair, will face off against former junta leader Julius Maada Bio. Full story…

    See more images related to Sierra Leone on PhotoBlog

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    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    Opposition candidate Julius Maada Bio waves to supporters as his campaign convoy drives through the Kissy neighborhood, en route to his final campaign rally in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Nov. 15.

    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    Supporters of opposition candidate Julius Maada Bio fill the street as his campaign convoy drives through the Kissy neighborhood, en route to Bio's final campaign rally in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Nov. 15. A few supporters displayed symbolic, or real, guns to symbolize the laying down of arms in favor of a non-violent election process.

    Joe Penney / Reuters

    A military police officer stands guard at the final campaign rally for Sierra Leone opposition presidential candidate Julius Maada Bio in downtown Freetown, Nov. 15. Incumbent President Ernest Bai Koroma, a former insurance executive who came to power in 2007 in elections generally considered free and fair, will face off against former junta leader Bio.

    Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    A supporter of opposition candidate Julius Maada Bio rests on a stadium field as he waits for Bio to arrive at his final campaign rally in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Nov. 15.

    2 comments

    ...More potential Obama voters. ...Too bad the election's over.

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    Explore related topics: elections, sierra-leone, africa, world-news, freetown
  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    4:57pm, EDT

    With Iran issue simmering, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu calls early elections

    Lior Mizrahi / Getty Images

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the press in Jerusalem, Israel, Oct. 9, 2012.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Tuesday for an early election, seeking to strengthen his political position after signaling that any military action against Iran could be months away.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Opinion polls suggest Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party will coast to victory in the national vote, which he said in a televised announcement could be held within three months.

    Netanyahu, in office since 2009, cited bickering among his partners in the governing coalition over cuts in the budget as a main reason for opting for a new ballot. Israel was not due to hold a parliamentary election until October 2013.

    "At this time, in the face of the turmoil around us, security and economic, it is my obligation as prime minister to put the national interest above all. Therefore I have decided for the benefit of Israel to hold elections now and as quickly as possible," he said.


    The ballot, which Israeli commentators predicted would be held in January or February seemed likely to focus on two main issues: Iran's nuclear program and the Israeli economy.

    Netanyahu didn't set a date but said it would be "preferable to have as short a campaign as possible," the BBC reported. The prime minister enjoys high approval ratings.

    Israel's Netanyahu: Draw 'clear red line' to stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons

    An election campaign would not necessarily have an impact on any Israeli timetable for possible military action against Iran's nuclear facilities.

    In an attempt to convey what he sees as a threat to Israel's existence, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used a cartoon to illustrate how close he says Iran is to developing a nuclear weapon. In a speech at the United Nations General Assembly he asked the world to help stop them. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    In a speech to the United Nations last month Netanyahu signaled any strike against Iran could wait until next spring or summer, when he said Tehran might be on the brink of building a nuclear bomb.

    Israeli PM tries to strike more neutral pose in U.S. election

    Israel, widely believed to be the Middle East's only nuclear power, says Iran is enriching uranium with the aim of producing an atomic weapon. Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

    Netanyahu will remain as prime minister in a transition government when parliament dissolves itself in the coming days. He presides over a five-party coalition government that controls 66 seats in the 120-member parliament.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    52 comments

    Just in case his erratic decision turns out badly he wants to be able to rebound with a full term; go nuts yahoo. All the press this dbag is getting is unjustified; just like all the war drum beaters in our right wing conmen. Iran is looking like Iraq 2003 or 2.0; NO.

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  • 8
    Oct
    2012
    12:07pm, EDT

    NBC's Kerry Sanders answers questions about Chavez re-election in Venezuela's elections

    In Venezuela, Hugo Chavez won another 6-year term as president of the oil-rich nation with official results showing the socialist leader garnering 54 percent of the vote. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

    CARACAS, Venezuela – President Hugo Chavez scored a comfortable election victory and vowed to deepen his self-styled socialist revolution after a bitterly fought race against a youthful rival who has galvanized Venezuela's opposition.

    The state governor who lost Sunday's presidential vote, Henrique Capriles, accepted defeat as Chavez swept to a 10-point victory margin, the smallest yet for him a presidential race. Chavez won 55 percent of the vote against 45 percent for Capriles with more than 90 percent of the vote counted.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Venezuela's Hugo Chavez wins 3rd term

    NBC News’ Kerry Sanders is in Caracas reporting on the elections. Earlier today he answered reader questions about Chavez re-election. 

    Click on the link below to replay the informative chat. 

    Photoblog: Chavez wields Bolivar sword at victory rally

     

    31 comments

    The exit polls showed that Hugo was not winning.......so he put tanks and armed soldiers on the streets . Voter fraud and guns win every time ! The man needs to be assasinated !!!!!!

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    1:59pm, EDT

    NBC's Kerry Sanders answers questions about the Venezuela elections

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez faces the toughest election of his 14-year rule on Sunday in an election pitting him against Henrique Capriles.

    Chavez, 58, is looking to win another six-year term to consolidate his self-styled socialist revolution in the oil nation.

    Chavez faces fierce opposition as election looms

    Capriles, a 40-year-old state governor, is his fresh-faced opponent promising jobs, less crime and an end to cronyism.

    What are Chavez’s chances of victory? Will the elections be free and fair? How will the outcome affect U.S.- Venezuela relations? What about the price of gas in the U.S.? 

    NBC News’ Kerry Sanders is in Caracas reporting on Sunday’s election. He answered reader questions about the elections earlier today.

    Click to replay the informative chat below. 

    Venezuelan elections: Face-off between the showman and the lawyer

    22 comments

    Do you really think this maniac is going to leave power willingly? really?

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    5:17am, EDT

    In Venezuela's elections, will oil wealth trump desire for change?

    Reuters, AFP / Getty Images

    Venezuela's opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles (left) and President Hugo Chavez attend campaign rallies on Thursday.

    By Kerry Sanders, NBC News

    Updated:4:10 p.m.ET

    CARACAS, Venezuela -- There's a rule that holds true in Venezuela's capital: Five miles equals one hour.

    Caracas traffic seems to be in constant gridlock because gasoline, at 24 cents a gallon, is cheap. And one consequence of living in an oil-rich nation is that nearly everyone has a car.

    The standstill, however, is also a metaphor for Venezuela's progress and the central theme of this nation's elections.

    NBC's Kerry Sanders answers reader questions about the elections 

    On Sunday, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, 58, will face the toughest election of his 14-year rule. Chavez and his oil-financed largesse are pitted against fresh-faced challenger Henrique Capriles' promise of jobs, safer streets and an end to cronyism.


     

    Chavez staged a remarkable comeback from cancer this year and wants a new six-year term to consolidate his self-styled socialist revolution in the oil-rich nation.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Where's the oil benefit?
    The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries estimates Venezuela has the largest oil reserves in the world, but Caracas resident and anti-Chavez political operative David Smolansky says his country has little to show for it.

    With just days left, candidates make final appeals ahead of Venezuela's election

    "Venezuela has more oil that Dubai, still we have little to show for it. Our infrastructure is falling apart, we have food shortages, and street crime is an epidemic. I have a friend who was shot and killed for his Air Jordan sneakers," said Smolansky, 27. "I believe, and others agree, that the government is complicit in that the corrupt police here ignore crime." 

    This weekend Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez will be facing his toughest political challenge since rising to power. If Chavez wins, analysts think Venezuelan bonds will sell off dramatically. CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera reports.

    But others argue Chavez has delivered.

    His supporters receive free housing and don't go hungry. They shop at state-run grocery stores where food is available at half price. Poverty in Venezuela has dropped from 50 percent to 32 percent in the last decade.

    To Argenis Moreno, a 29-year-old Chavez supporter at a rally on Thursday night, the president represents "the interests of the people." He said he appreciates the improvements Chavez has made to the health and education system.

    Asked if he believes life has improved under Chavez, Moreno replied, "Yes, of course it's a better life." And with a fist pump and a "Chavez!" cheer he expressed confidence that Chavez would win re-election.

    Venezuelan elections: Face off between the showman and the lawyer

    The golden goose
    Oil production slipped 30 percent in the last decade after the government regained control of the oil industry in 2003. Critics say when ExxonMobile, Chevron, Total and ConocoPhillips were forced out, Chavez began to neglect the proverbial golden goose.

    Slideshow: Hugo Chavez through the years

    The life of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez from his rise as a lieutenant colonel after his failed coup attempt in 1992.

    Launch slideshow

    The only attention "the oil goose" gets comes when the golden eggs are laid, the critics say. Venezuela shares its oil bounty at below-market prices with Iran, Nicaragua, China, and Bolivia, to name but a few. 

    Playing the game
    Andy Lipow, a Houston-based oil industry analyst, says Venezuela has not properly maintained or invested in its oil industry equipment, which is why oil output continues to fall.

    "If President Chavez gets reelected, I expect that we will see lower crude oil sales to the U.S. as Venezuela and the U.S. move further apart, and that's going to cost the consumer more money for their gasoline," Lipow said.

    The South American country is the fourth-largest supplier of oil to the United States, but neither Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton nor President Barack Obama has made any statements on the upcoming elections.

    Fears abound ahead of close Venezuelan elections

    Erick Langer, director of the Latin American Studies Center at Georgetown University, says their silence is strategic.

    "By simply ignoring what President Chavez says to the United States, the U.S. wins because the U.S. is not playing Chavez's game," he said.

    That game is characterizing the United States as the boogieman. And, as his mentor Fidel Castro in Cuba once did, Chavez rallies the population against the boogieman and, consequentially, unifies their support for the man already in power. 

    The opposition
    At 40-years old, Capriles is a Chavez counterpoint: young, thin, and -- some say -- sexy.

    Catholic Capriles has been especially offended when Chavez supporters call him a Nazi: His maternal grandmother fled Adolf Hitler-occupied Germany.

    'Ghetto Chavez' and the battle for Venezuela's youth

    The unmarried Capriles does not fit neatly into the Capitalism versus Socialism argument.

    He is a well-financed, wealthy politician with left-of-center ideology. He has vowed to shed Chavez's vision of a state-led economy for a balance between social welfare and free enterprise.

    Capriles has also been given a good shot at victory by coalescing various opposition groups. Together they agree on one thing: Chavez must go.

    Too many Chavez supporters believe the nation's oil is "like a water faucet, that you open it and the dollars just starts coming out," said Jorge Pinon, a research fellow at the University of Texas at Austin.

    As long as people have that simplistic understanding, "I believe there is a good likelihood that Chavez will be reelected," he added. 

    Mood of the people
    There's excitement on both sides, and a 90 percent voter turnout is predicted.

    Supporters throw stones in Venezuela pre-election clash

    Venezuela is more than twice the size of California, with a population of close to 29 million. Half of the population is under the age of 26 years old.

    After hitting the polls on Sunday, most Venezuelans expect to learn who won by early Monday. Most best-known pollsters put Chavez in the lead. But two have Capriles just ahead, and his numbers have edged up in other surveys.

    Once the winner is decided, a new debate will begin: Was every vote counted? Was the system rigged?

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Tourists fined as Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'
    • Venezuela vote: Oil wealth to trump calls for change?
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    • Saudi Arabia's Ikea catalog is missing something: women
    • From war zones, photographer brings scars, searing images
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    296 comments

    Sounds like the Chinese got a better deal than we did for freeing Kuwait.

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  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    6:46am, EDT

    Billionaire tycoon claims surprise victory as key US ally Georgia votes

    Georgy Abdaladze / AP

    Billionaire and opposition leader Bidzina Ivanishvili, left, and his wife Ekaterine Khvedelidze pray in a church in Tbilisi, Georgia, on Monday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    Updated at 1:30 p.m. ET: One of the world’s richest businessmen claimed to have inflicted a surprise narrow defeat on the incumbent pro-Western party in Monday’s elections in Georgia, a key ally of the United States neighboring Russia.

    Billionaire tycoon-turned-politician Bidzina Ivanishvili claimed his opposition political alliance Georgian Dream had staged a remarkable upset and was heading for control of the former Soviet republic's parliament.

    However, incumbent President Mikheil Saakashvili insisted his United National Movement was on course to retain power.


    Reports said thousands of Georgian Dream supporters had gathered in the capital, Tbilisi, as the polls closed at 8 p.m. local time (12 p.m. ET). AFP journalist Paul Gypteau wrote on Twitter that the capital's Freedom Square was full with "cheering" people, while International Young Democrat Union observer Katrina Rice posted pictures showing crowds in the streets.

    Rival claims could open the way to a post-election standoff. Any instability would worry the West because of the Caucasus country's role as a conduit for Caspian Sea energy supplies to Europe and its pivotal location between Russia, Iran, Turkey and Central Asia.

    It is recklessly wild here. twitter.com/Veribatim/stat�

    — Katrina Rice (@Veribatim) October 1, 2012

    Ivanishvili, 56, is a once-reclusive investor and philanthropist listed by Forbes as the 153rd richest person alive having made a fortune, estimated at $6 billion, from investments across the border in Russia.

    Voters on Monday chose between him and Saakashvili, a pro-Western leader who swept to the presidency after the bloodless Rose Revolution of 2003 and fought a five-day war with Russia in 2008.

    The new parliament’s 150 seats consist of 73 directly-elected constituency representatives and 77 nominees allocated from party lists based on overall share of the popular vote.

    Reuters reported that one exit poll predicted Georgian Dream was ahead in the constituency vote while the UNM said it believed it had done well in individual constituencies.

    Nicholas Clayton, editor of Kanal PIK TV English in Tbilisi, posted on Twitter that early exit polls were so far in the opposition's favor.

    Living in a palatial $50 million glass residence overlooking Tbilisi, Ivanishvili previously used his wealth - equivalent to half the GDP of the country he hopes to run - to support local arts and culture before deciding to enter politics. His supporters say Saakashvili’s regime remains undemocratic despite post-Soviet-era reforms, with undue government pressure on courts and control of the media. Video footage showing the abuse and rape of inmates at a prison in the capital, Tbilisi, has boosted the alliance.

    Kremlin stooge?
    Along with supporters, he has been pressing his case in Washington by spending more than $1 million in recent months on a U.S. lobbying campaign, according to a Washington Post report citing disclosure records.

    Saakashvili, 44, argues voters should choose the West-leaning agenda – it has close relations with NATO - and his supporters accuse Ivanishvili of being a Kremlin stooge that would allow the former Soviet outpost to be dominated by Russia.

    Voting in the election, which got under way at 12 a.m. ET, was brisk, with lines forming outside several polling stations in the capital Tbilisi, a Reuters correspondent observed.

    David Mdzinarishvili / Reuters

    Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili talks to the media at a polling station during the parliamentary election in Tbilisi on Monday.

    "Besides being a contest for parliament, it is also a shadow leadership election," said Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. He said the vote "marks a turning point for Georgia".

    The Washington Post on Monday said Saakashvili was facing "a serious challenge" and described the electon as "deeply polarizing."

    The West wants a stable Georgia because of its role as a conduit for Caspian Sea energy supplies to Europe and its pivotal location between Russia, Iran, Turkey and Central Asia.

    "Political leaders should be chosen through the ballot box and not on the streets," parliamentary delegation heads from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the Council of Europe, NATO and the European Parliament said on Saturday.

    "The most important thing is that those who are dissatisfied should not create disorder," said voter Yelena Kvlividze, 45.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The prison abuse video, aired on two channels opposed to Saakashvili including one owned by Ivanishvili, has undermined the president's image as a reformer who imposed the rule of law and rooted out post-Soviet corruption.

    "I'm voting against violence and abuse - how can I do otherwise after what we have all seen on TV?" Natela Zhorzholia, 68, said outside a polling station at a school in the capital, Tbilisi. She said she would vote for Georgian Dream.

    Ivanishvili hopes the scandal will convince swing voters that Saakashvili has become an undemocratic leader who tramples on rights and freedoms. 

    Human Rights Watch also said Wednesday that Saakashvili's government had used 90-day prison sentences against protesters and political activists, a situation it said “violates the country’s international commitments to safeguard against arbitrary detention”. Earlier this year, it issued a report slating the lack of due process and fair trial rights for those accused of “administrative offenses” such as minor breaches of public order.

    'Peace and stability'
    Many Georgians just want political and economic stability. The economy, hit by the 2008 war and the global financial crisis, has been growing again since 2010 but inflation is likely to hit 6-7 percent this year.

    "I voted for peace and stability," said Georgy Ugrekhelidze, 76. "I want this government to carry out what it has started."

    Elected in 2004 after the Rose Revolution protests toppled president Eduard Shevardnadze, a former Soviet foreign minister, Saakashvili cultivated close ties with Europe and the U.S. and sought to bring Georgia into NATO.

    At a station in Tbilisi election officials prepare for the opening of polls #Georgia #gvote twitter.com/IRIglobal/stat�

    — IRI (@IRIglobal) October 1, 2012

    He curbed police bribe-taking, made frequent power outages a thing of the past and presided over an economic resurgence. But opponents say he has curtailed democracy, persecuting opponents, and he faces criticism for leading Georgia into the 2008 war with Moscow in which Russian forces routed his army.

    In a recent analysis of the campaign, Shaun Walker of the U.K.'s Independent newspaper wrote:

    Saakashvili's people talk of a thriving democracy knocking on Europe's door, with the old Soviet mentality erased by efficient reforms and replaced with an effervescent meritocracy. Ivanishvili's brigade declare Georgia a totalitarian state, controlled by a ruthless cartel of a few men around Saakashvili who have scooped up all the economic and political resources for themselves, control the majority of media and are painfully sensitive to even the smallest criticism. The truth, unsurprisingly, is somewhere between the two extremes.

    In a blog posted on the Financial Times website, Georgia analyst Michael Cecire observed that Saakashvili's reforms have turned Georgia from one of the most corrupt of the ex-Soviet regimes to the least in the space of less than a decade through measures such as the decision in 2005 to sack the entire traffic police force and replace it with university graduates. 

    Georgia is one of 15 former republics of the Soviet Union that gained independence when country the fell apart in 1991. The Soviet collapse ended nearly two centuries of almost continuous dominance of Georgia by Russia and the Soviet Union. 

    Tension with Russia erupted into a five-day war in August 2008, when Saakashvili's government launched an offensive on South Ossetia. Russian forces drove Georgian forces out of the region and penetrated deep into Georgia before withdrawing. 

    Slideshow: Georgia crisis

    Umit Bektas / Reuters

    View images of victims, soldiers and world leaders embroiled in the Georgia conflict.

    Launch slideshow

    Other parties include the Christian Democratic Party, led by former journalist Georgy Targamadze, which calls for a greater role for the dominant Georgian Orthodox Church. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    42 comments

    So .... like so many other people in the world, democracy means that the people of Georgian have a choice of "leaders" - Washington D.C. or Moscow. ....

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  • 17
    Sep
    2012
    9:30am, EDT

    All-female bloc seeks to shake things up, make impact on Palestinian elections

    /

    Maysoun Qawasmi, the leader of "By Participating, We Can," attends a meeting in the West Bank city of Hebron on Sept. 13.

    By Mohammed Daraghmeh, The Associated Press

    HEBRON, West Bank -- A new group running for municipal elections in Hebron is offering residents an alternative to politics as usual in the conservative West Bank city: Women at the helm, instead of men.

    The all-female list, which is called "By Participating, We Can," is gearing up for next month's vote with a campaign that aims both to win at the polls and to convince voters that women can lead just as well as men.


    "Men here traditionally want their women to stay at home, and when they allow them to go out to work, they send them to do traditional jobs like teaching," said Maysoun Qawasmi, the 43-year-old group leader, who entered the race this week.

    "But we want them to go further, to work like men in all possible jobs they can," she said.

    The group is fielding 11 previously independent candidates for the Oct. 20 vote. Should the bloc succeed in garnering significant public support, the women hope ultimately to unite and form an official political party.

    But the women are well aware of the challenges they face in conservative Palestinian society, and the chances of an all-woman ticket performing well at the polls -- for now at least -- appear slim.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Trying to attract other women voters
    Qawasmi said the candidates are campaigning door-to-door to attract what they see as their natural electorate -- fellow women.

    If elected, Qawasmi promises to open women-only facilities, like a sports club -- an idea that has faced opposition by religiously conservative Muslims in Hebron who believe it is immodest for women to play sports.

    She predicts her group could nab three out of the Hebron council's 15 seats, and she has ambitious hopes that after the vote, when the council chooses the mayor, she will be selected for the post.

    A journalist for the Palestinian news agency Wafa, Qawasmi also holds training sessions to empower Palestinian women in the West Bank. She wears a hijab, or headscarf, but also dons pants and a blouse, and describes herself as secular.

    PhotoBlog: Flying through the air, Palestinian youths practice parkour

    At a recent meeting at Qawasmi's Hebron home, the group's members took turns sharing their personal stories of success.

    Liyana Abu Asheh, 28, said she worked as a civil engineer, stunning locals by helping pave the streets, and now runs her own private business. Asma Deis, 38 and recently widowed, said she's opening a small cleaning materials factory on her own to support her five children.

    "Women can make the impossible possible," Deis said.

    PhotoBlog: West Bank cities erupt in violent protests over escalating prices

    Politically active
    While Qawasmi's bloc is unique in its composition, women have long been politically active in Palestinian politics, and some hold office in the government run by the Palestinian Authority. There are six female ministers in the 24-member Cabinet of Western-backed Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. In the 132-member Palestinian legislative council, there are 17 female lawmakers.

    But other indicators show that women in Palestinian society have largely retained traditional roles. Only 16 percent of women in the West Bank are employed, and in Hebron the number drops to 10 percent. If the women's bloc were to win seats, it would likely challenge taboos in Hebron and beyond.

    /

    Members of "By Participating, We Can," attend an election meeting in the West Bank city of Hebron.

    These elections are the first in the city of 200,000 since 1976. Local polls held elsewhere in 2005 were cancelled in Hebron, and current mayor Zoher Esaili was installed by Fatah in a bid to prevent its rival Hamas, an Islamist group which has broad support in the city, from winning the post.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    Hamas and Fatah had a violent falling out in 2007, and now separately govern the West Bank and Gaza Strip, respectively.

    Qawasmi's group is up against a Fatah list and independents. Hamas is likely to sit out the vote pending reconciliation with Fatah, which could slightly increase Qawasmi's chances.

    Skepticism
    Highlighting the challenge the party faces before the vote, even female Hebron residents were skeptical of the all-woman group.

    Slideshow: Ramallah: Portrait of a Palestinian city

    Signs of progress emerge in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

    Launch slideshow

    "It's a daring step. I'm proud of them, but to be practical I will vote for another party headed by a man," said Rawya Sarsour, a first-year university student.

    Construction worker Ali Nathshe was blunt about his opposition: "They will fail."

    Full coverage of the Middle East & North Africa

    Even if the group does not make it into the council, Qawasmi believes her campaign will still emerge victorious by showing that women can indeed lead just as well as men.

    "We will open the door for women in Hebron to struggle for their rights," Qawasmi said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    8 comments

    I truly hope they succeed without being executed by the men of Islam. The fact the Muslim Men are so afraid of their women is valid since they have been dominated as a subservient group is a good reason to be afraid. When a group of people are used to treating others with barbarous act, as is demons …

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  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    5:32am, EDT

    In showdown with new president, Egypt's top court says ruling on parliament final

    Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

    Supporters of Egypt's Mohamed Morsi cheer with a sign that reads "All of us with your right decision President Morsi" in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Monday.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 1055 a.m. ET: Egypt's highest court insisted Monday that its ruling that led to the dissolution of the Islamist-dominated parliament was final and binding, setting up a showdown with the country's newly elected president.

    The court, which ruled on June 14 that the Islamist-led parliament had been elected based on unconstitutional rules, also said it would review appeals challenging the constitutionality of President Mohammed Morsi's decree.

    "We will hear these cases tomorrow (Tuesday)," the court's head, Maher el-Beheiry, told Reuters. 


    The announcement on state TV came a day after Morsi recalled the legislators, defying the powerful military's decision to dismiss parliament after the Supreme Constitutional Court ruled that a third of its members had been elected illegally.

    However, both sides appeared together Monday at a military graduation ceremony. Morsi sat between the head of the armed forces Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi and Chief-of-Staff Sami Anan. The three sat grim faced for most of the ceremony, but Tantawi and Morsi exchanged a few words while seated on the reviewing stand. 

    As Morsi takes symbolic oath, many fear the 'Islamization of Egyptian society

    The court's judges made the decision in an emergency meeting even as the speaker of the dissolved legislature, Saad el-Katatni, called for parliament's lower chamber, the People's Assembly, to convene on Tuesday. The court's ruling did not cover parliament's upper chamber, known as the Shura Council, which is largely toothless.   

    Both Morsi and el-Katatni are longtime members of the Muslim Brotherhood, which has long been at odds with the military and with other Islamists.

    Mohammed Morsi officially became the president of Egypt on Saturday, as a new era of government takes shape. NBC's Kate Snow reports.

    The military had been running Egypt since Hosni Mubarak was ousted last year. But, shortly before the handover to the elected president, the army put some curbs on the presidency and gave itself legislative powers.  

    After a little more than a week in office, Morsi's move highlights the power struggle likely to define his term, pitting long repressed Islamists against generals used to calling the shots and an establishment full of Mubarak-era officials.

    Fresh legal wrangle
    Morsi's move also threatens a fresh legal wrangle over whether Morsi can overrule a decision by the Supreme Constitutional Court to dissolve parliament, creating more uncertainty at a time when the economy is creaking after 17 months of political turmoil.

    "President Mohamed Morsi ordered the reconvening of the elected parliament to hold sessions," according to a presidential statement read out by Morsi's aide Yasser Ali.

    As Morsi takes symbolic oath, many fear the 'Islamization of Egyptian society'

    This was a significant move on the part of Morsi and the Brotherhood, according to Dr. Omar Ashour, a scholar at the Brookings Doha Center and director of the Middle East Politics Graduate Studies Program at the University of Exeter.

    "This may end being a game of 'chicken' (to see) who withdraws his decision first," he said in a comment emailed to msnbc.com.

    Analysts said they had not expected an easy relationship between the army and the Islamist president, but most believed Morsi would tread cautiously to avoid any swift escalation. The Brotherhood has repeatedly said it does not want confrontation. 

    "This is an early conflict. Everyone was expecting this to happen but not now, unless this decision was taken in agreement with the army council, but I doubt this," political analyst Mohamed Khalil said.

    Journalists Mona Eltahawy and Ethar El-Katatney provide updates on the developments in Egypt where newly elected president Mohammed Morsi has assumed power over the country.

    Morsi's decree was announced shortly after he received his first official U.S. visitor in the presidential palace, Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, whose country gives $1.3 billion of aid to Egypt's military every year.

    Burns praised Egypt's progress but said there was more to be done. "It will be critical to see a democratically elected parliament in place and an inclusive process to draft a new constitution that upholds universal rights," Burns said after meeting Morsi and before the decree was issued.

    Early vote
    After a call for a show of support by the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, with the biggest bloc in parliament, a few hundred people gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square. "We love you Morsi," they chanted, along with "Down with military rule."

    Morsi has resigned from both the Brotherhood and its party.

    In his decree, Morsi called for an early parliamentary election for a new assembly within 60 days of the nation approving a new constitution, which has still to be drafted.

    Post-revolution Egyptians to US: Stay out

    That suggested a possible attempt at compromise by indicating the assembly, criticized by some for a poor initial performance and dissolved by court order just months after it was elected, would not serve a full four-year term. 

    "The military wanted to dissolve parliament and the Brotherhood doesn't. There has to be somewhere they can meet in the middle or there will be an indefinite stand-off," said Shadi Hamid of the Brookings Doha Center.

    "This could be a compromise arrangement for the short term, so the military gets part of what it wanted - a new parliament in coming months - and Islamists can avoid a situation where the military dominates a legislative authority," he said.

    The Supreme Constitutional Court called an emergency session on Monday to review the Morsi's move, the court's deputy Maher Sami told the state news agency MENA, signaling there could be a prolonged legal wrangle.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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    88 comments

    News apparently travels very slow- snailmail-when it comes to real important news known to the rest of the world. This was already known to others Sunday 10 am EDT- Pres.Morsy indeed has ordered (Executive Order like Obama)the reconvening of dissolved Egyptian Parliament (over 70% hard line Islamist …

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  • 6
    Jul
    2012
    3:53pm, EDT

    Libyan election worker killed day ahead of balloting

    Less than a year after Moammar Gadhafi's fall, Libyan's vote in what U.N. General Secretary Ban Ki-moon hailed as "a march toward democracy." It's the country's first democratic election in more than half a century as Libyans choose a National Congress. Lindsey Hilsu, Channel 4 Europe, reports.  

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    BENGHAZI, Libya -- Gunfire killed a Libyan election commission worker riding in a helicopter Friday, officials said.

    The helicopter carrying ballots for Saturday's election made a forced landing at Benina International Airport outside the eastern town of Benghazi, an official said.

    It was the latest attempt to derail elections in a region where many seek more autonomy and argue they will be under-represented in a new 200-member congress that will name a prime minister and pave the way for full parliamentary polls next year.


    "We were preparing to receive the voting material as it arrived on a helicopter from Tripoli but it was hit and one man died," Ahmed Abdelmalik, an employee at an election commission branch told Reuters.

    Hamed Al-Hassi, head of the military council for the Cyrenaica region, confirmed the incident but said the identity of the attackers was not immediately known.

    Manu Brabo / AP

    A Libyan election official works at a polling station Friday in Tripoli.

    "A helicopter carrying ballots and flying over the region of Hawari (south of Benghazi) was struck by small arms fire," army spokesman Colonel Ali al-Sheikhi told Agence France Presse.

    Earlier protests by groups seeking greater autonomy in the east forced the closure of three ports, shutting down around half of Libya's oil exporting capacity.

    On Thursday, the main storage center for election materials in the eastern town of Ajdabiya was badly damaged in a suspected arson attack.

    Watch World News videos on msnbc.com

    The elections are Libya's first free national vote in over half a century and come barely a year after the ousting of Moammar Gadhafi by a NATO-backed uprising. Regional and tribal loyalties suppressed under Gadhafi have since come to the fore.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "We expected this issue," Emad El-Sayih, deputy head of Libya's High National Election Commission (HNEC), told Reuters.

    "There is no security in this country -- the interior ministry and the army are incapable of protecting the elections. The (election) commission is in a state of depression."

    Several East Libya groups want the country's interim rulers to review the allocation of seats in the General National Congress. The  system allocates 100 seats to the west, including Tripoli, 60 to the oil-rich east and 40 to the sparsely settled south. Advocates of federalism are demanding an equal distribution of seats among Libya's regions.

    The National Transitional Council has led rebels during the eight-month war and held power in its aftermath.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

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    4 comments

    الله يساعد الشعب الليبي جيد وأطيب التمنيات من أجل مستقبل أفضل.

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