CARACAS, Venezuela — Edmundo González has become a beacon of hope for millions of Venezuelans. They want to call him president. He believes he won that office at the ballot box last year. The government of President Nicolás Maduro says he did not.
The stakes for Friday's swearing-in of the man who will govern Venezuela for the next six years have never been higher in this century.
González had never imagined he would be carrying the weight of the main opposition faction, the Unitary Platform coalition. He had not even run for office before the July election.
A virtually unknown grandfather less than a year ago, he now has heard tens of thousands of people chant his name as loudly as they screamed ''Freedom! Freedom!'' at rallies across the South American country.
But González has paid the price for challenging the 25-year rule of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela. Under pressure, he has gone into exile. And on Tuesday, he said son-in-law Rafael Tudares had been kidnapped in the capital, Caracas.
''At what point did being related to Edmundo González Urrutia become a crime?'' his daughter, Mariana González de Tudares, said in a statement that suggested the government was behind her husband's disappearance.
The coalition of main opposition parties, in a statement, characterized it as a ''forced disappearance for political reasons.'' The government's centralized press office did not respond to a request for comment.
González, 75, had been enjoying retirement after a career as a diplomat when the coalition selected him in April as a last-minute stand-in for opposition powerhouse Maria Corina Machado. She had been blocked by the Maduro-controlled Supreme Tribunal of Justice from running for office after she swept the opposition's October 2023 primary with more than 90% of the vote.