New GQR Poll Shows Effort to Block Referendum Produces  Decline in Chavez’s Stan
According to a new national survey, the widespread public perception that  Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is blocking a recall vote on his presidency has  helped produce a dramatic decline in his level of support.
A strong majority (59 percent) of Venezuelan voters  believes that Chavez is trying to prevent the recall referendum from taking  place, even though nearly two-thirds (64 percent) favor holding a referendum.  Two-thirds (67 percent) of the electorate also believes the president will do  anything to hold on to power, and the same share disapproves of Chavez’s  performance on human rights.
 
The sense that Chavez is trying to defy the popular will on the  referendum has helped lift support for revoking his mandate by 10 points since  November to 62 percent, according to the survey by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner  Research, a polling firm based in Washington, D.C.
The survey, which involved face-to-face interviews with  1,000 adults, was conducted from March 12 to 22 for RCTV, a Venezuelan  television and radio network.    
 
The survey indicates that Chavez’s standing among his lower-class base  has eroded, as a strong majority (58 percent) of the poorest half of the  country’s voters now favor revoking his mandate. 
The Venezuelan Constitution allows for a recall vote after the mid-point  of elected officials’ terms.   Venezuela’s electoral council has ruled that only 1.8 million of the 3.4  million signatures collected by the opposition in support of the referendum are  valid.  2.4 valid million signatures  are required.
The electoral council’s stance has done serious damage to its  credibility, the survey shows.  Only  40 percent of voters approve of the council’s performance, a 23-point decline  since November, and 64 percent believe that the council’s decision on the  signatures was driven by political, rather than technical, grounds.
The Venezuelan public is genuinely fearful that if the referendum does  not take place, the country will face intensified unrest.  About two-thirds (64 percent) of voters  believe that if the referendum is not held, there will be greater political  instability and violence.  In focus  groups held this month by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, numerous  participants expressed concern about a potential civil war. 
 
Although most Venezuelan voters remain hopeful that the referendum will  be held, they are also looking to the international community to actively  support the referendum process.   About three-quarters of the electorate supports the role that the OAS and  Carter Center have played as observers and mediators thus far, and a comparable  share of opposition supporters say they would support OAS diplomatic or economic  sanctions in the event the referendum does not take place.
 
 
 
