Pro-Maduro parliament fires opposition governor
October 26, 2017A pro-government regional parliament in Venezuela fired a newly-elected opposition state governor on Thursday after he refused to swear loyalty to the country's new all-powerful Constituent Assembly.
Juan Pablo Guanipa, who won the October 15 gubernatorial election in Zulia state, had refused to pledge allegiance to the Assembly, a body Venezuelan President Maduro had set up in July to circumvent the country's parliament, the National Assembly, and tasked with rewriting the constitution.
In response, the regional parliament in Zulia dismissed Guanipa in a closed door meeting.
Guanipa, who stood in the election for the opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), said on Twitter that the regional legislature's decision was an "attack on the will of the people."
Read more: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro defends disputed regional elections
Cracks in the MUD
The MUD has said it does not recognize the Constituent Assembly, yet Guanipa was the only one of five MUD governors to boycott the controversial body.
Maduro's government had made recognition of the Assembly a pre-condition for all governors to assume office.
The decision by four opposition governors to acknowledge the Constituent Assembly has split the MUD. On Tuesday, Henrique Capriles said he would leave the MUD in response.
Read more: Venezuela opposition MUD fractures after Constituent Assembly loyalty oaths
Maduro's shocking win
Venezuela's regional elections ended with a shocking victory for pro-Maduro candidates after polls prior to the vote had indicated the MUD winning a majority of governorships.
The MUD and several foreign governments later accused electoral officials of taking actions to suppress voter turnout in areas of the country home to strong opposition support.
Venezuela's four-year political and economic crisis has left millions facing shortages of basic goods, such as food and medicine.
amp/rc (dpa, Reuters)