Zulia governor and opposition leader Manuel Rosales Thursday
said President Hugo Chávez's plans to advance a new constitutional
reform run counter the Constitution in force, as it establishes
that no constitutional reform rejected in a vote can be put
for vote again under the same presidential period.
Rosales Thursday branded as "arrogance" President Chávez's
intention to convene a new referendum to approve his constitutional
reform -defeated in a vote held last December 2.
"He is bragging because he is still stunned by the result
(the people's rejection against his intended reform), because
neither him nor his cronies expected such a result," Rosales
told local Unión Radio.
Chávez's project to change 69 out of the 350 articles
comprising the 1999 Constitution, including a provision allowing
for the presidential indefinite reelection and new forms of
property, including community property, was rejected last
December 2 in a referendum with 51-49 percent. Abstention
was 44.11 percent.
Rosales said the Venezuelan people spoke up clearly and said
they do not want a lifetime president; they do not want a
replica of Fidel Castro in Venezuela," Efe reported.