At the end of the Electoral campaign From this Thursday in the capital city, the candidate and current mayor of Caracas, Carmen Meléndez, said that, the new management of her government, of being relevant, “I will govern from the territory not from an office. The bureaucracy is over.”
He stressed that “Carmen Meléndez is a woman who fulfills her word and everything that comes will be good for Caracas and Venezuela.”
“(…) I love Caracas, this city has given me a lot, my children are Caracas,” said the candidate in the midst of hundreds of thousands who toured with her the streets from the west of the city and stressed her deep love for the Caracas entity, after traveling during the campaign the 22 parishes of the capital, where she claimed to have been a receptor of the genuine affection of the town.
The mayor said that in three weeks of an “intense campaign”, many were the ones who reminded Chávez, “because Chávez also loved Caracas much” and said that Bolivarian thought is today more alive than ever and that that legacy lives in the heart of the Venezuelan people, just today to commemorate 220 years of the birthday of the liberator Simón Bolívar.
Meléndez described this electoral campaign “as a moment of union and strengthening of the Caracas people, where everyone knows the T of the transformation to solve the problems in their community.”
Zero triumphalism and go out to vote
The candidate finally called the Caracas people that the only thing that remains, from now on, is to vote next Sunday and that the machinery complies with the mobilization to what she warned of “zero triumphalisms” and later, yes, celebrate in the Plaza Bolívar, he said.
Meléndez also mentioned that youth projects will also be chosen in a process that is “unpublished in the world.” He also showed how the voting process should be exercised and called not to be wrong in front of the electoral card.
In the same way, he said that, after the elections of this July 27, he will take a balance to verify the effectiveness of problem solutions to the people in real time.
This Sunday, July 27, the 33rd election will be held in 27 years of Bolivarian Revolution, and mayors will be chosen for the 335 municipalities of the country. In the popular youth consultation, voters may participate since the age of 15, to choose community projects that benefit this sector of society.
