Voters in Venezuela are waiting for official results after turning out in large numbers to decide if authoritarian leader Nicolás Maduro wins another six-year term or the country abandons a quarter century of revolutionary socialism.
Before polls closed on Sunday night, independent surveys gave the main opposition candidate Edmundo González a lead of 20 to 30 percentage points. “The expectations which we have make us more than happy,” González said after polls closed. But many Venezuelans fear the government may refuse to recognise an opposition victory.
Both sides have painted the election as a turning point for Venezuela, a once-wealthy oil-exporting nation whose economy has collapsed over the past decade as a result of government mismanagement and tight US sanctions, triggering the exodus of a quarter of the population and the biggest migration crisis in the Americas.
The government and the opposition praised voters for turning out peacefully in large numbers to cast their ballot on electronic machines at more than 15,000 polling stations, with some waiting patiently for hours in the heat.
Washington has suggested that sanctions could be lifted if the election is clean, while Maduro’s allies Russia, Iran and Cuba are hoping for a continuation of the status quo.
US Vice-President Kamala Harris said on X after voting closed that “the will of the Venezuelan people must be respected”. Secretary of state Antony Blinken said “the Venezuelan people deserve an election that genuinely reflects their will, free from any manipulation”.
Maduro has threatened a “bloodbath” should the opposition win. He has painted María Corina Machado, the main opposition leader, as a dangerous fascist and called González a “coward” and a “puppet of the extreme right”.
González, a 74-year-old retired diplomat, is running in place of Machado, who won an opposition primary in October but was banned from standing by the government-controlled Supreme Court in January.
“We’ve already beaten the regime morally, spiritually, and on the streets,” Machado told the Financial Times in her office in eastern Caracas before the election.
Maduro’s government took steps to hamper the opposition campaign, arresting dozens of activists and aides, shutting restaurants and hotels that serve Machado and González and ordering broadcasters not to mention Machado’s name.
Queues formed outside polling stations around the country overnight as people waited to vote on Sunday. Shortly after polls opened, Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores cast their votes in Caracas, both wearing tracksuits emblazoned with the Venezuelan flag.
“The day has come, and it came in peace,” Maduro told reporters. “I recognise and will recognise the electoral referee, the official announcements and I will make sure they are recognised.”
In Petare, a poor neighbourhood in Caracas once considered a bastion of support for former president Hugo Chávez, Marvin Velasco, 52, who works for a state-owned telecommunications firm, waited in the baking sun for four hours to vote.
Like many in line, Velasco once supported Chávez, Maduro’s populist predecessor, but voted on Sunday for the opposition. “People can’t go on hungry and living with water outages, he said, standing across from a mural depicting Maduro, Chávez, and independence hero Simon Bolívar. “There has to be a change.”
On a busy thoroughfare, a street sweeper pulled down one of the many posters of Maduro lining the streets, crumpled it up, and stuffed it in a bin bag.
At a nearby polling station overlooked by a hillside slum, Berta Reyes said she had once supported the ruling socialist party, but was voting for González. “This country needs change for it to prosper, she said, as soldiers directed voters to their booths. “It won’t happen with this government.”
Reilis Salazar, 36, is one of the 7.7mn Venezuelans living abroad. Without work and crime worsening in his neighbourhood, he moved to Chile in 2016. “I came back to vote for Edmundo,” he said. “If he wins then I’ll move back here, if Maduro wins then my friends and family will migrate too.”
Of roughly 30 people asked in Petare, none said they were voting for Maduro.
Machado has run an insurgent campaign on social media and travelled across the country by car, turning out huge crowds despite not appearing on state-controlled television broadcasts or on billboards nationwide.
Maduro’s 2018 re-election was regarded by many countries in the west as fraudulent, leading Washington, Canada and the EU to sanction him and his inner circle.
Amid concerns that Maduro may attempt to manipulate the count or impede access to voting stations, the opposition ran a parallel count and signed up about 100,000 witnesses to monitor the election. International observers were largely absent after the government rescinded an invitation to the EU to monitor the election in May.
Worried that the government could cut power and internet access on Sunday, Machado and González were due to watch the results from a room in Machado’s party headquarters, replete with a diesel-powered generator and Starlink, an internet service owned by Elon Musk that uses satellites outside government control.

