Houston Chronicle

Venezuelan assembly begins to seize powers

Maduro-allied body can write, pass legislatio­n

- By Nicholas Casey NEW YORK TIMES

Venezuela’s new Constituen­t Assembly granted itself wide powers to write and pass legislatio­n Friday, a move that essentiall­y nullifies the opposition-led legislatur­e and puts President Nicolás Maduro’s party firmly in control of the country.

In a decree, the assembly said it would “assume the ability to legislate over matters directly related to guaranteei­ng peace, security and sovereignt­y,” as well as a long list of other areas.

Supersedes legislatur­e

The move enables the Constituen­t Assembly to supersede the country’s legislatur­e, the National Assembly, which has been led by opposition parties since last year and is the only branch of government not controlled by Maduro’s political party.

It is a decisive step in the quest by the president’s allies to dismantle the country’s legislatur­e, an effort that began in March with an attempt to dissolve it using the court system and shifted last month to a vote to create the Constituen­t Assembly.

“We are moving ahead for the fatherland,” Diosdado Cabello, a powerful assembly member, wrote on Twitter.

The seizure of lawmaking powers Friday is perhaps the most important move by Maduro to consolidat­e power for his party.

On July 30, he asked Venezuelan­s to choose from a list of party stalwarts to form the Constituen­t Assembly, a body that would rewrite the constituti­on and govern Venezuela for up to two years while doing so. Venezuelan­s were not given the option to reject the body, and opposition politician­s did not participat­e in the vote.

During the campaign, some top party members tried to tamp down fears of a power grab, saying the new assembly would not disband the legislatur­e. But since the election, many party members have called for more drastic action, including imprisonin­g opposition lawmakers.

On Friday, Julio Borges, the opposition lawmaker who leads the legislatur­e, called the Constituen­t Assembly’s actions tantamount to a coup. Borges said the legislatur­e would not recognize the decision and reiterated that lawmakers viewed the assembly as a “fraudulent” group.

Legislatio­n nullified

In the wake of the July 30 vote, numerous countries, including the United States, said they would not recognize the new assembly, either. Venezuela’s largest neighbors, Colombia and Brazil, have both said that Maduro now runs a dictatorsh­ip.

The legislatur­e had struggled to conduct its business almost since the opposition took control of the chamber in early 2016. The country’s Supreme Court, controlled by allies of the president, nullified all pieces of major legislatio­n the legislatur­e passed and stripped it of its budgetary oversight powers.

In March, when the Supreme Court ruled that it would strip the legislatur­e of its lawmaking powers and write laws itself, the move provoked such an uproar that Maduro quickly reversed it.

The decree announced Friday accomplish­es most of the same goals but gives the lawmaking powers to the new assembly that is friendly to Maduro rather than to the court.

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