Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Guaidó stripped of ‘presidenti­al’ role

Venezuela opposition votes him out and reorganize­s leadership ahead of elections.

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CARACAS, Venezuela — For three years, Juan Guaidó led the Venezuelan opposition’s efforts to bring about new elections and remove President Nicolás Maduro.

But on Friday, dozens of politician­s who once backed Guaidó voted in favor of removing the 39-year-old engineer and replacing his U.S.supported “interim government” with a committee to oversee presidenti­al primaries this year and protect the nation’s assets abroad.

The vote ref lects a changing balance of power within the opposition, which is trying to find new ways to connect with voters ahead of the nation’s 2024 presidenti­al election.

Three of Venezuela’s four main opposition parties backed the proposal to remove Guaidó, who was supported only by his own Popular Will party.

After the vote, Guaidó said the move would create a “power vacuum” that could encourage more foreign nations to recognize the Maduro administra­tion.

“If there is no interim government, who will they recognize in its place?” he said. “Today we have jumped into the abyss. And given up on an important tool in our struggle.”

Guaidó’s opponents said new ways of connecting with voters should be found. The interim government has no sway over local institutio­ns and is unable to provide basic services, with some Venezuelan­s mocking it as a “fake” government.

“It’s with a heavy heart that I make this vote,” said Luis Silva, a member of the Democratic Action party who participat­ed in the online session for the vote. “We haven’t been able to come up with a unanimous decision, but we need to look for new strategies.”

Daniel Varnagy, a political science professor at Simon Bolivar University in Caracas, said the opposition had generated high expectatio­ns under Guaidó’s leadership but failed to keep its promises to people yearning for a change in governance.

“He promised to cease [Maduro’s] usurpation, lead a transition and organize fair elections, and none of that happened,” Varnagy said.

Guaidó rose to leadership of the opposition in 2019 when he was president of the then-opposition-controlled legislatur­e, which had begun its five-year term in 2015 after what many observers considered Venezuela’s last fair elections. It was the last institutio­n not controlled by Maduro’s socialist government.

The National Assembly argued that Maduro won his second presidenti­al term illegally in 2018 because his main rivals were banned from running. So the opposition legislator­s created an “interim government,” headed by Guaidó, that was meant to last until Maduro stepped down and free elections could be held.

Guaidó organized protests in Venezuela, sneaked out of the country for an internatio­nal tour and was recognized as the nation’s legitimate leader by the United States and dozens of European and Latin American government­s that rejected Maduro’s rule.

His interim administra­tion was also given control of Venezuelan government assets abroad that had been frozen, including Citgo, the Houston-based oil refiner.

But the Guaidó-led opposition failed to win over the Venezuelan military or the nation’s courts to its side, while Maduro’s administra­tion faced down street demonstrat­ions and tightened its grip on the South American nation.

The failure to drive out Maduro frustrated Venezuelan­s, who are struggling with high inflation, food shortages and the lowest wages in South America — hardships that prodded millions to migrate in recent years.

In a poll taken by Venezuela’s Andres Bello University in November, only 6% of Venezuelan­s said they would vote for Guaidó if he participat­ed in presidenti­al primaries, while a few other opposition leaders got bigger numbers.

Guaidó’s influence has also diminished since late 2020, when the National Assembly that elected him as interim president was replaced by new legislator­s chosen in elections boycotted by opposition parties.

Many members of the 2015 National Assembly are now in exile, but they continue to claim to be Venezuela’s legitimate legislativ­e branch and hold online meetings.

On Friday, 72 of the 109 former legislator­s who participat­ed in the online session voted in favor of a measure calling for replacing Guaidó’s interim administra­tion with a committee made up of other opposition leaders.

 ?? Matias Delacroix Associated Press ?? VENEZUELAN opposition leader Juan Guaidó speaks in Maiquetia in February. The U.S. and other nations recognize him as his country’s legitimate president.
Matias Delacroix Associated Press VENEZUELAN opposition leader Juan Guaidó speaks in Maiquetia in February. The U.S. and other nations recognize him as his country’s legitimate president.

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