Waterloo Region Record

Venezuela’s Maduro still hasn’t gotten the message

- This editorial appears on Bloomberg View:

Another day, another cloud of pepper spray and tear gas in the streets of Caracas. The autocratic government of President Nicolas Maduro has hardly changed its spots.

It may have seemed otherwise, after the Venezuelan Supreme Court was forced to reverse its unconstitu­tional takeover of the country’s legislatur­e. But Maduro has continued to suppress peaceful protests of his rule. So it will be up to Venezuela’s neighbours to restore democracy, stability and prosperity to the country with the world’s biggest oil reserves.

The U.S., given the resentment of both its current leadership and past role in the region, can play but a limited role. U.S. Senator Marco Rubio discovered as much when he threatened the government­s of the Dominican Republic and El Salvador with cutbacks in U.S. assistance unless they voted with the U.S. against Venezuela at the Organizati­on of American States. They reacted as one might expect — with disdain.

To its credit, the U.S. has wisely refrained from calling for Venezuela’s suspension from the OAS. For one thing, it doesn’t have the votes to prevail. But even then, kicking Venezuela out won’t solve the country’s problems.

Twenty OAS members have made clear in two back-to-back meetings that they are determined to hold Venezuela to account and push it to restore democracy. Moreover, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay have started a process that could drop-kick Venezuela from the Mercosur trading bloc.

Mexico, which will host the OAS General Assembly in June, is also playing a constructi­ve role (another reason, if any were needed, for President Donald Trump to reconsider his bullying of America’s southern neighbour).

Venezuela’s deepening economic chaos and tightening repression demand a response, not least for the growing burden they impose on its neighbours. Political prisoners should be freed; long-delayed elections must be held; and the integrity of its institutio­ns restored. Drawing on its own hard history, the hemisphere has long argued that such changes can only be helped, not imposed. Now it must prove that this approach can work better than its oft-tried alternativ­es.

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