Henrique Capriles

Venezuelan politician
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: Henrique Capriles Radonski
Quick Facts
In full:
Henrique Capriles Radonski
Born:
July 11, 1972, Caracas, Venezuela (age 52)
Also Known As:
Henrique Capriles Radonski
Title / Office:
governor (2008-), Miranda

Henrique Capriles (born July 11, 1972, Caracas, Venezuela) is a Venezuelan politician who ran as the united opposition presidential candidate against Venezuela’s longtime leader Hugo Chávez in 2012 and lost. When Chávez died in March 2013, the opposition again united behind Capriles as its candidate in the special election to replace the late president. Capriles lost that election by a very narrow margin to acting president and Chávez protégé Nicolás Maduro and demanded a full recount, alleging widespread voting irregularities.

Capriles’s maternal grandparents were Jewish Holocaust survivors who immigrated to Venezuela from Poland and became wealthy by establishing the country’s most prominent chain of movie theatres. His father, whose family had emigrated from the Netherlands to Curaçao and then to Venezuela, was a successful businessman. Capriles, despite his Jewish roots, was raised like his father, as a Roman Catholic. After studying at the Universidad Católica Andrés Bello and Universidad Central de Venezuela, he practiced law, first for Venezuela’s internal revenue office and then at two prominent private legal firms. His education also included stints in Europe and the United States.

In his early 20s Capriles became involved in politics, and in 1998, as a member of the Social Christian Party (COPEI), he was elected to the lower house of Venezuela’s legislature. At age 26 he was the youngest member ever to join that body, and he rose to become its president before constitutional reform eliminated the lower chamber and made the legislature unicameral. In 2000 he cofounded the centre-right First Justice party and was elected mayor of the municipality of Baruta, part of Greater Caracas. He was reelected in 2004, but he began serving some four months in prison while awaiting the conclusion of his trial, having been accused of violating international law by trespassing into the Cuban embassy compound as part of an attempted coup against Chávez in 2002. Capriles was tried twice (2006 and 2008); both times the charges were dismissed.

In 2008 he surprised many by besting one of Chávez’s closest allies, Diosdado Cabello, the incumbent, to be elected governor of Miranda, Venezuela’s second most populous state. The national profile of the telegenically handsome, slender, and charismatic Capriles rose dramatically in his new post. Although portrayed by chavistas (adherents to the political system and ideology established by Chávez) as a representative of the country’s old wealthy elite, Capriles cast himself as a “centrist” or “centre-leftist” and as a “humanist” who, like his political hero, Brazil’s former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, was sympathetic to the needs of the business community while also advocating strong social welfare programs.

When the long-divided opposition parties united in support of a single candidate to challenge Chávez in the 2012 presidential election, Capriles decisively won the history-making primary election to choose the candidate for this coalition, the Democratic Unity Table (MUD). Central to the election was the issue of the health of Chávez, whose ongoing battle with cancer had forced him to leave Venezuela several times for treatment but who remained the immensely popular champion of the country’s poor even as others accused him of undermining Venezuela’s oil-rich economy. Capriles ran a spirited campaign, but, in the end, Chávez, benefiting from a tight hold on the country’s media, won the election, taking 55 percent of the vote to 44 percent for Capriles. Nevertheless, while chavistas won 20 of 23 state gubernatorial races in December, Capriles was reelected in Miranda, defeating former vice president Elías Jaua.

When Chávez, recuperating from an operation in Cuba, was unable to return to Venezuela for his scheduled inauguration in January 2013, Capriles was among those who vehemently criticized the open-ended delay of the inauguration that allowed Chávez to hold power despite the unknown state of his health. Upon Chávez’s death in March, Capriles announced his intention to run against interim president Nicolás Maduro in the special election to fill the presidency for the remainder of Chávez’s term. Although Maduro appeared to have a strong lead in the opinion polls, the vote on April 14 was razor-close: Maduro won by capturing nearly 51 percent of the vote over just more than 49 percent for Capriles, who alleged that there had been widespread voting irregularities and demanded a recount. The National Election Council called for an audit of the ballots in the 46 percent of precincts that had not already been automatically audited under Venezuelan election law. However, Capriles refused to participate when the Council did not comply with his demand that the audit include an examination of the registers containing the fingerprints and signatures of voters. Capriles vowed to mount a legal challenge to the election results.

When that challenge came to nought, Capriles returned to his political power base as the governor of Miranda, but he never left his position at the centre of the national conversation as the leader of the opposition and the principal advocate for its efforts to remove Maduro from office. After the opposition won control of the National Assembly from Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela (Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela; PSUV) in December 2015, Capriles championed the opposition’s legislative efforts to free the opponents of the Maduro government who had been imprisoned. He also backed a proposed amendment to the constitution to reduce the term of the president from six to four years. The Supreme Court upheld the constitutional legality of that change but ruled that it could not be applied retroactively to Maduro’s current term.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

Capriles shifted his focus to the effort to put Maduro to a recall vote. He joined protestors in the streets (and was pepper-sprayed by police) in May 2016 after the election commission was slow to consider and validate a petition with some 1.8 million signatures that would trigger a broader petition that would pave the way to a recall vote. Capriles was vehement in his condemnation of the state of emergency declared by Maduro on May 14, ostensibly in the name of national security, which the president claimed was threatened by right-wing Venezuelans and foreign interests who allegedly were plotting to destabilize the country. The declaration, which was rejected by the National Assembly, granted greater powers to the police and army to control the public and made it easier for Maduro to circumvent the legislature. Saying that Maduro had put himself above the constitution, Capriles challenged the armed forces: “The hour of truth is coming, to decide whether you are with the constitution or with Maduro.”

A rapprochement between the Capriles-led opposition and the Maduro government appeared to be underway in October with the beginning of negotiations between the two parties that had been initiated by Pope Francis. By December, however, the talks had broken down. Moreover, at the end of March 2017, the Supreme Court effectively dissolved the legislature and assumed its functions after declaring that the body was in contempt. Swift and extreme international condemnation of these actions prompted Maduro to press the court to rescind its declaration regarding the legislature. In early April, however, the Maduro administration banned Capriles from holding public office for 15 years, accusing him of a variety of infractions, including his alleged failure to acquire proper approval for contracts and budgets in his capacity as the governor of Miranda state. A defiant Capriles refused to step down from that office, accused Maduro of seeking dictatorial control of the country, and called on his supporters to redouble their street protests.

At the end of July, the opposition boycotted the election that Maduro had called to elect a new “constituent assembly,” putatively in order for it to draft a new constitution. Thousands took to the streets as violent protests rocked the country, but the constituent assembly took office and began to function as a Maduro-supported alternative legislature. Gubernatorial elections were held in Venezuela’s 23 states in October (nearly a year after they were originally scheduled to have been held). Capriles left the opposition coalition in protest after four successful opposition gubernatorial candidates bowed to Maduro’s will and pledged allegiance to the constituent assembly. Nevertheless, with the opposition splintering, he remained a vocal critic of the Maduro government as it became increasingly autocratic. Capriles’s credibility was shaken, however, by accusations that he had accepted bribes from the Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht, which was at the centre of the Petrobras scandal.

Jeff Wallenfeldt