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  • Several posts on social media claim that the total percentage of votes in the recent Venezuelan election, in which results have been disputed, added up to 109%. But the graph shown alongside these claims shows several candidates had a combined vote share of 4.6% (adding up to 100%), not 4.6% each. Honesty in public debate matters You can help us take action – and get our regular free email Where does the 109% figure come from? The posts making this claim feature a screenshot of a graph broadcast by Telesur, a state-funded TV network headquartered in Caracas, Venezuela. The graph features five candidates, and adding up the percentages next to their names equals 109%. However, this calculation assumes the three candidates with 4.6% got a 4.6% vote share each. That figure is actually their combined percentage of the vote share. Using Google Lens, Full Fact was able to find the same graph in a video on Telesur’s YouTube channel. Seconds later the TV channel shows another page full of other candidates who also have 4.6% next to their names. An English version of the TV channel also shows head of the country’s National Electoral Council (CNE), Elvis Amoroso, saying other candidates received 462,704 votes, or 4.6% of the vote between all eight. Who won the Venezuelan election? The CNE declared President Nicolás Maduro the winner of the election held on 28 July, but the result has been disputed. CNE head, Mr Amoroso, is a close ally of Mr Maduro. He announced that with 80% of ballots counted, President Maduro had 51% of the vote, compared to 44% for his main rival. But the opposition led by Edmundo González has dismissed the CNE’s announcement as fraudulent and says it has proof their leader won most votes. They say Mr González had won with 70% of the votes and that therefore he was the rightful president-elect. The UK Foreign Office has said it is “concerned by allegations of serious irregularities in the counting and declared results of Sunday's presidential election in Venezuela” and called for “the swift and transparent publication of full, detailed results to ensure that the outcome reflects the votes of the Venezuelan people”. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken also said the US had “serious concerns that the declared outcome does not reflect the will or the votes of the Venezuelan people”.
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