2000 Venezuelan general election

[1] Venezuela was going through economic problems: although the price of oil had tripled since Chávez had become president, the economy had shrunk by 7%, unemployment had increased and foreign investors had moved away from the country.[citation needed] Only two politicians, Antonio Ledezma and Claudio Fermín, both former members of Democratic Action and former mayors of the Libertador Municipality of Caracas, made public their intentions to run against Chávez, both independently.Unexpectedly, in mid-February 2000, Chávez allies Francisco Arias Cárdenas, Jesús Urdaneta and Joel Acosta Chirinos; made a public statement giving Chávez an ultimatum to imprison some members of his government, claiming they had irrefutable evidence proving their corruption, including the president of the legislative power, Luis Miquilena, and foreign affairs minister José Vicente Rangel.[5] The new opposition leader received support from La Causa R and a handful of small leftist parties, although not from Democratic Action and Copei.Even though some analysts considered Arias Cardenas more pragmatic than Chávez, others such as Eleazar Díaz Rangel declared that they were basically the same.
Hugo ChávezFrancisco Arias CárdenasDemocratic ActionHenry Ramos AllupHenrique Salas RömerAndrés VelásquezHenrique CaprilesFatherland for AllManuel RosalesConvergenceEduardo LapiMIGATOJosé Gregorio BriceñoVenezuela1999 constitutionNational Electoral CouncilAntonio LedezmaClaudio FermínLuis MiquilenaJosé Vicente Rangelmixed member proportional representationsingle seat districtsFifth Republic MovementRadical CauseProject VenezuelaMovement for SocialismJustice FirstA New EraFearless People's AllianceUnited for Human RightsCommunist Party of VenezuelaRed Flag PartyPeople's Electoral MovementDemocratic Republican UnionUnited Multi-Ethnic Peoples of AmazonasAuthentic Renewal OrganizationIndigenous representativesEl País (España)Elections and referendums in VenezuelaPresidential electionsParliamentary electionsRegional electionsMunicipal elections1999 (Apr)1999 (Dec)President of VenezuelaEarly lifeMilitary careerCoup attempt of 1992Presidential election of 1998Death and state funeralPresidencyCabinet of Hugo ChávezPresidential election of 2006United Socialist Party of VenezuelaConstitutional referendum of 2007Constitutional referendum of 2009Presidential election of 2012Coup attempt of 2002Venezuelan general strike of 2002–2003Recall referendum of 20042005 Venezuelan parliamentary electionReferendum2010 Venezuelan parliamentary electionBoliburguesíaBolivarianismBolivarian CirclesBolivarian missionsBolivarian RevolutionChavismoColectivosEconomic policyPlan Bolívar 2000Socialism of the 21st centuryVenezuelan communal councilsForeign policyBank of the SouthBolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA)Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC)PetrocaribeAló PresidenteBolivarian propagandaEl ocaso del socialismo mágicoEl pueblo soy yoHugo Chávez's cult of personalityMi amigo Hugo¿Por qué no te callas?Public image of Hugo Chávez¿¡Revolución!?teleSURThe Silence and the ScorpionVenezuelanalysisVenezuela Information Office← Rafael CalderaNicolás Maduro →TenureVargas tragedyDecree 1011Tascón ListAssassination of Danilo AndersonUnited Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV)Detention of Maria Lourdes AfiuniPDVAL affairDeath of Franklin BritoYare prison riot2013 Uribana prison riotDaktari Ranch affairRodrigo Granda affair2006 Chávez speech at the United NationsSouth American Energy Summit2008 Andean diplomatic crisisOperation EmmanuelLos Maniceros massacre2010 Colombia–Venezuela diplomatic crisisElections2000 trade union referendum2004 recall referendum2005 parliamentary election2006 presidential election2007 constitutional referendum2009 constitutional referendum2012 presidential electionFlorentinoGuaicaipuroHabitatIdentidadMercalMirandaRobinsonVuelta al CampoVuelvan CarasZamoraNational Center for Foreign CommerceSnitch LawCon mis hijos no te metasPlaza Altamira military2002–2003 general strike