CARACAS, Venezuela — Nicolás Maduro struts across the stage, flapping his arms to a trap merengue beat as a high-pitch rooster crow blasting from a wall of speakers energizes throngs of diehards gathered to support the Venezuelan president's re-election bid.
Campaign jingles are never an afterthought in music-loving Venezuela, and this catchy one about a ''fighting cock'' that always manages to win perfectly matches the embattled leftist leader's political moment.
Since the late Hugo Chávez passed the torch of his Bolivarian revolution to his loyal aide 11 years ago, Maduro has survived an almost impossible litany of threats. They range from a drone attack and mass protests over the collapse of the oil-rich economy to an international criminal investigation for human rights abuses and a $15 million U.S. bounty tied to allegations of drug trafficking.
But Sunday's election has emerged as his toughest challenge yet, one that if he loses could be his last dance.
Baseball or politics?
A new biopic, produced for the campaign, reveals new details about Maduro's upbringing. It recounts how the future president grew up in a working class barrio of Caracas torn between his love of baseball and student activism.
''Make a decision,'' a coach tells the teenage pitcher portraying Maduro in the movie when he arrives late to the diamond. ''It's either baseball or politics.''
In real life, after embracing his father's radical politics, Maduro was sent to communist Cuba in 1986 for a year of ideological instruction — his only studies after high school.