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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Omar Barboza
9th President of the National Assembly of Venezuela
In office
5 January 2018 – 5 January 2019
Preceded by Julio Borges
Succeeded by Juan Guaidó
Personal details
Born
Omar Enrique Barboza Gutiérrez

(1944-07-27) July 27, 1944 (age 79)
Maracaibo, Venezuela
Political party Un Nuevo Tiempo
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Unity Roundtable
Occupation Advocate, Politician

Omar Enrique Barboza Gutiérrez (born 27 July 1944) [1] is the president [2] of the Venezuelan political party Un Nuevo Tiempo ("A New Era"), in opposition to Nicolás Maduro.

In February 2009 a constitutional amendment to remove term limits on public offices in Venezuela was approved by 54% of voters in the 2009 Venezuelan constitutional referendum. Barboza said "We're democrats. We accept the results," to The Associated Press, [3] but claimed that the results were skewed by Hugo Chávez's broad use of state resources to win the vote, through state-run news media, political pressure on 2 million public employees and frequent presidential speeches ( cadenas) which all television stations in Venezuela are required to air, and added that "Effectively this will become a dictatorship."

Sources

Political offices
Preceded by President of the National Assembly of Venezuela
2018–2019
Succeeded by
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Omar Barboza
9th President of the National Assembly of Venezuela
In office
5 January 2018 – 5 January 2019
Preceded by Julio Borges
Succeeded by Juan Guaidó
Personal details
Born
Omar Enrique Barboza Gutiérrez

(1944-07-27) July 27, 1944 (age 79)
Maracaibo, Venezuela
Political party Un Nuevo Tiempo
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Unity Roundtable
Occupation Advocate, Politician

Omar Enrique Barboza Gutiérrez (born 27 July 1944) [1] is the president [2] of the Venezuelan political party Un Nuevo Tiempo ("A New Era"), in opposition to Nicolás Maduro.

In February 2009 a constitutional amendment to remove term limits on public offices in Venezuela was approved by 54% of voters in the 2009 Venezuelan constitutional referendum. Barboza said "We're democrats. We accept the results," to The Associated Press, [3] but claimed that the results were skewed by Hugo Chávez's broad use of state resources to win the vote, through state-run news media, political pressure on 2 million public employees and frequent presidential speeches ( cadenas) which all television stations in Venezuela are required to air, and added that "Effectively this will become a dictatorship."

Sources

Political offices
Preceded by President of the National Assembly of Venezuela
2018–2019
Succeeded by

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