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salawork
7 juin 2010

Former Party criticizes Chavez ally and confirms itself apart before elections.

7Caracas, May 18 .- The leftist party Patria Para Todos (PPT), a former member of the ruling coalition in Venezuela, today denounced the political force of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, seeks "to disqualify candidates and confirm that and discard an alliance in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

"There is a plan to disable the PPT many candidates because it is an alternative,, drawing caricature, a hope," he said in an interview with the Caracas newspaper El Universal, Andrea Tavares, spokesman for the party, which since March has strong disagreements with the ruling United Socialist Party de Venezuela (PSUV), led by Chavez.

The struggle between the two parties, former allies, has led to different leaders of both sides have chosen to switch on charges cross flag politics of disengagement with the "revolutionary process" and "lack of self-criticism."

"It is impossible to arrive at an electoral alliance," said Jose Albornoz yesterday, Secretary General of PPT, reiterating his claims about "assaults and insults" from Chavez to some party members.

The turning point of the break between the two parties forming the coalition that supported Chavez occurred with the incorporation into the PPT of Henri Falcon, governor of Lara (center-east), following 14 years of militancy in the draft Venezuelan leader.

Falcon left denounced Chavez for that lack of "free and open debate" with the driver of the "socialism of the XXI century",, drawing cartoon, who responded by calling his old ally of "counterrevolutionary."

For his part, former Minister Hector Navarro, recalled yesterday during a press conference of the PSUV, the PPT is no longer the "list of allies of President Chavez.

In the next parliamentary elections to be held on 26 September, will choose the 165 members of the unicameral National Assembly (AN), which has a majority.

Now the opposition should be submitted to the elections grouped in the Bureau of Democratic Unity (MUD), which includes 16 national parties, with the aim of initiating the "political change" in Venezuela.

Also, the Venezuelan president has called the elections in September "vital" for the future of the "revolutionary process" that leads past eleven years in Venezuela. 

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