Chavez mounts new bid for reelection

President Hugo Chavez launched a new campaign last night to change Venezuela's constitution so he can stay in power for as long…

President Hugo Chavez launched a new campaign last night to change Venezuela's constitution so he can stay in power for as long as he keeps winning elections, almost exactly a year after voters rejected the proposal.

The socialist leader said he wanted to move quickly to revive the constitutional reforms he hopes will allow him to rule Venezuela for decades.

"Today, we begin the battle for the constitutional amendment," Mr Chavez told cheering supporters. "If we are going to do it, let's do it quickly. If we are going to do it, there's no tomorrow, no, no, it's now, now."

He later said the amendment should be "ready" in February but did not say when it would be voted on.

"Chavez is here to stay," he yelled at party activists.

Last December, Mr Chavez narrowly lost a broad constitutional reform referendum that would have lifted a two-term limit on presidential office, expanded his powers and enshrined socialism as a state goal.

His new drive comes just eight days after his party won most of the states in regional elections, even though the opposition gained in big states and the capital of Caracas.

Mr Chavez has survived a coup, a recall referendum and a national strike aimed at toppling him during a decade in office. After last year's defeat he vowed to try again. But resurrecting the plan with a new vote next year has risks.

The ex-paratrooper faces an opposition growing in strength and unity that won November 23rd gubernatorial races in Venezuela's most populous states. He will also be asking for votes as the government's income falls due to falling world oil prices.

Without a law change, Mr Chavez will leave office in 2013.

Opposition leader Manuel Rosales, who Mr Chavez has vowed to imprison for being a "mafia boss," said the referendum plan was "diabolical" because the president should focus on solving Venezuela's problems rather than advancing his personal ambitions.

"It is an insult to people that at this stage we are talking about a new electoral campaign when our society is battered by so many issues, especially the high cost of living and inflation," Mr Rosales told Union Radio.

In the regional elections, Mr Chavez's party won 80 per cent of Venezuela's mayoralties and overall received about 1.5 million more votes than the multi-party opposition, encouraging him to try again to win the constitutional reforms.

Reuters