Profile: Nicolas Maduro, Venezuelan leader loyal to Chavez's socialist legacy

Source: Xinhua| 2018-05-21 15:11:49|Editor: Liangyu
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CARACAS, May 20 (Xinhua) -- Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was reelected for a second six-year term in the presidential election Sunday, according to the National Electoral Council.

Maduro was reelected by a wide margin, garnering over 5.8 million votes, almost 68 percent of the total. His closest rival, Henri Falcon, received roughly 1.8 million ballots and the third-place candidate, Javier Bertucci, got 925,042 votes.

Maduro was first elected in 2013, pledging to strengthen the Bolivarian Revolution launched by former President Hugo Chavez.

Born on Nov. 23, 1962 into a working-class family in the capital Caracas, Maduro went on to work for seven years as a bus driver for the city's Metrobus transit system. There, he founded the Caracas Metro Union and also served as coordinator of the Bolivarian Workers Force.

It wasn't until an attempted coup on Feb. 4, 1992 by the Chavez-led Revolutionary Bolivarian Movement, that Maduro began his political activism alongside Chavez.

By 1999, Maduro was elected deputy of the Constituent Assembly charged with drafting a new constitution, which Venezuelans approved in a referendum in December that year.

In 2000, Maduro was elected deputy to the National Assembly. In 2005, he was elected president of the legislative body until Chavez appointed him as foreign affairs minister in 2006.

He later served as vice president of the country until 2013, the year Chavez died from cancer.

In his final address to the nation in December 2012, prior to traveling to Cuba for the last time to undergo a surgery, Chavez called on Venezuelans support Maduro as his successor.

Chavez described Maduro as having "the greatest capacity" to continue leading, "always along with the people, and subordinate to the interests of the people, the fate of this country."

Maduro did go on to win the presidency in April 2013, garnering more than 7.5 million votes.

During his five years in office, Maduro has faced immense difficulties, including economic sanctions imposed by the United States and Europe.

Maduro's 2013-19 term began with a wave of violent protests that marked the start of a protracted campaign by the right-wing opposition to overthrow his government.

The economic and political battles being waged between the country's progressive and conservative forces have sparked shortages of staple foods and essential daily necessities, such as medicine.

In 2016, the inflation rate reached 274 percent, according to the latest figures from the Central Bank of Venezuela.

Despite 22 rounds of wage increases over the past five years, salaries have failed to keep up with skyrocketing inflation.

In 2017, Maduro called for the election of a National Constituent Assembly to revise the constitution, in a bid to break the power deadlock between the executive branch and the opposition-controlled legislature.

In February 2018, his government unveiled the world's first oil-backed cryptocurrency, the Petro, to counter the financial and economic sanctions by independently raising capital.

He has also spearheaded economic reforms to diversify the economy, which has long relied on the revenue generated by oil exports.

His reelection campaign stressed the need to continue strengthening social programs and boosting production to overcome the economic crisis.

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