CARACAS — Venezuelan opposition leader Henrique Capriles challenged President Hugo Chavez on Friday to debate the country's problems in the final month of campaigning for the October presidential election. Capriles said he wants to debate issues such as education, health care and crime. “I challenge them. We're going to debate our government proposals. We're going to debate wherever they wish," Capriles said in a speech in eastern Monagas state. Chavez said in a campaign speech in Caracas that Capriles and other opposition leaders are “the worst of the worst" and represent the interests of the wealthy and “fascism." “Let's hope some new real political leaders of the right emerge," Chavez told a crowd of cheering supporters. “Let's hope they give Venezuela something we need: a serious, responsible ... opposition in order to be able to debate." Chavez is running for another six-year term in the Oct. 7 vote and is expected to face the toughest re-election contest of his nearly 14-year-old presidency. The leftist president has used strong insults against his rival throughout the campaign, and on Friday said Capriles comes from “a current of the far right ... Nazis, Nazis. It's pure fascism." Capriles has previously responded to similar comments demanding respect for his family and the Jewish heritage of his late grandmother, a Holocaust survivor. Speaking to supporters Friday, Capriles said his opponent has turned to insults because he has nothing new to propose. “Whoever hurls insults, it's that his ideas have run out," said Capriles, who describes his views as center-left and favors combining social programs for the poor with a business-friendly approach. Chavez told supporters that his rival has a hidden agenda to impose a package of right-wing measures “that would lead Venezuela to a civil war." — AP