Las Vegas Review-Journal

Venezuela’s Maduro replaces vice president in ‘new start’

- The Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro named a new vice president Thursday in a leadership shuffle that he said sets the stage for a “new start” to his second term overseeing the crisis-rocked country.

The new No. 2, former Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez, has been serving as head of the government-controlled constituti­onal assembly. Rodriguez and her brother, Communicat­ions Minister Jorge Rodriguez, are among Maduro’s most trusted inner circle.

Maduro announced Rodriguez’s promotion on Twitter, calling her a “sister” and “brave young woman” who has been “tested in a thousand battles.”

She replaces Tareck El Aissami, who fills a new role as the government’s top economic policy maker.

Under Venezuela’s constituti­on, the vice president is chosen and serves at the president’s will. The vice president also assumes power if the president resigns or becomes incapacita­ted.

Rodriguez will become the second woman to hold the country’s vice presidency. Six women were appointed to 10 other Cabinet positions that were also filled Thursday.

Maduro coasted to victory last month in an election boycotted by the main opposition parties and broadly condemned as illegitima­te by the U.S. and other foreign government­s.

With his power consolidat­ed, he must now tackle an economic crisis marked by widespread shortages and hyperinfla­tion.

David Smilde, a Venezuela specialist as senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America think tank, viewed Maduro’s reorganiza­tion as a move to consolidat­e his power in the people he trusts most.

The president since the middle of last year has relied heavily on Rodriguez as head of the constituti­onal assembly and on her brother as his chief spokesman and lead negotiator in high-stakes negotiatio­ns with the opposition.

While El Aissami maintains a key role in Venezuela’s power structure, he has his own following at times at odds with Maduro’s, Smilde said.

“I see it as an effort to make sure that the people closest to him are his allies,” Smilde said of Maduro’s changes.

Smilde noted El Aissami will continue in title the economic role he already was performing. “It’s not like he’s being banished from the government.”

 ??  ?? Delcy Rodriguez
Delcy Rodriguez

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