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Argentina's Macri Backtracks on Ousting Venezuela From Mercosur


FILE - Argentina's president-elect Mauricio Macri backs off on threats to try to oust Venezuela from South America's Mercosur trade bloc.
FILE - Argentina's president-elect Mauricio Macri backs off on threats to try to oust Venezuela from South America's Mercosur trade bloc.

Argentine President-elect Mauricio Macri's incoming government will not seek to suspend Venezuela from South America's Mercosur trade bloc, backtracking from earlier comments after Venezuela's ruling Socialists took a beating in Sunday's parliamentary elections.

Macri had said he would seek Venezuela's suspension from Mercosur because of accusations of rights abuses committed by President Nicolas Maduro's socialist government, saying he would trigger the bloc's democratic clause to do so.

The democratic clause seeks to punish anti-democratic governments with isolation from the group.

"The democratic clause is applied to facts, and the facts were yesterday's election. I think that today we can say that the elections have worked as established by the democratic framework and it appears that the results, which have been recognized by President Maduro, are a majority for the opposition," Argentina's foreign minister-designate, Susana Malcorra, told local radio Monday.

"Nothing indicates that there is a reason for the democratic clause to be applied," Malcorra said in an interview with radio Mitre.

FILE - Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro acknowledged the Socialists party’s defeat in Sunday's parliamentary elections.
FILE - Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro acknowledged the Socialists party’s defeat in Sunday's parliamentary elections.

Venezuela's opposition trounced the ruling Socialists on Sunday to win the legislature for the first time in 16 years and gain a long-sought platform to challenge Maduro's rule.

Maduro quickly acknowledged the defeat, the worst for the ruling "Chavismo" movement since founder Hugo Chavez took power in 1999.

"We must congratulate the Venezuelan people and recognize that the government has made a clear sign of recognition of the results of the elections," Malcorra said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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