Los Angeles Times

Venezuela congress keeps power

High court backtracks, ending crisis. The rare victory emboldens president’s opponents.

- By Mery Mogollon and Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Mogollon reported from Caracas and Times staff writer McDonnell from Mexico City.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s beleaguere­d opposition emerged with a rare political victory Saturday as the nation’s Supreme Court reversed a pair of decisions that had sparked domestic and internatio­nal condemnati­on against the government of President Nicolas Maduro.

The high court’s sudden turnaround seemed to defuse the latest political crisis to shake the South American nation. But the protracted battle between the opposition and the Maduro government showed no signs of ebbing, and may intensify in coming days.

Maduro’s administra­tion initially defended the extraordin­ary rulings that had stripped the opposition-led National Assembly of its duties and enhanced the power of the beleaguere­d president.

But late Friday, after an emergency meeting with his security staff, Maduro appeared on television and asked the court to review its decisions. The president pronounced the issue resolved and invited his opponents to sit down in talks.

“I insist that the Venezuelan opposition return to the road of dialogue, return to the road of sovereignt­y,” Maduro said.

But emboldened opposition leaders said there would be no dialogue until the government met some of their longtime demands, such as moving forward presidenti­al elections scheduled for next year.

“The only possible dialogue is the vote,” declared Julio Borges, president of the National Assembly, or congress.

Maduro’s opponents said they would proceed this week with an effort to remove members of the Supreme Court, a proMaduro body that has consistent­ly blocked congressio­nal measures. That effort seemed certain to ignite more political fireworks.

While calling for dialogue, Maduro also returned to his frequent assertion that Venezuela is the victim of “dark” forces orchestrat­ed from the United States, longtime adversary of the socialist leadership in Caracas.

“Venezuela is experienci­ng a political lynching,” Maduro said on television. “It is a brutal assault by very dark forces who want to take over our homeland.”

The Venezuelan opposition, long fractured and dispirited, seemed encouraged after the rare victory against Maduro. Whether that means the opposition is coming closer to achieving longer-term goals remains in question, however.

“The grave situation that faces Venezuela continues!” Henrique Capriles, former presidenti­al contender and opposition leader, said in a Twitter message from Washington, where he was visiting. “There is nothing to clarify with respect to the constituti­on!”

He and other opposition leaders repeated a series of demands, including the holding of early elections, the release of what they call political prisoners and an end to “persecutio­n” of opposition figures.

On Saturday, the opposition held a rally in Caracas, the capital. Many carried Venezuelan flags and placards with slogans such as, “No to dictatorsh­ip” and “Out with Maduro.”

National Guard forces used tear gas to scatter an opposition group advancing in the capital.

The Supreme Court, which earlier in the week issued a pair of rulings that essentiall­y stripped the nation’s legislativ­e branch of its powers, issued several clarificat­ions Saturday on its website. The revised language reversed the earlier, controvers­ial rulings labeling the National Assembly in “contempt” of the law.

Those rulings were met with censure from both internatio­nal and domestic critics. Some labeled the court’s action a coup d’etat.

Even the nation’s attorney general, Luisa Ortega Diaz, considered a Maduro loyalist, called the rulings a “rupture” of the constituti­onal order, a comment that signaled deep divisions within the ruling socialist party. Her pointed critique appeared especially damaging to any government effort to justify what many viewed as a Maduro power grab.

The court decisions triggered a new wave of street protests. Maduro’s foes had long assailed the Supreme Court as a tool of the president. The magistrate­s have blocked a succession of congressio­nal measures since the opposition gained control of the National Assembly in 2015.

The opposition seeks to end 18 years of socialist rule that critics say has wrecked the economy and left the nation a political, economic and social basket case, despite its vast oil reserves and previous status as one of Latin America’s richest countries.

 ?? Juan Barreto AFP/Getty Images ?? VENEZUELAN opposition activists rally in Caracas. The Supreme Court earlier in the week issued a pair of rulings that essentiall­y stripped the nation’s opposition-controlled legislativ­e branch of its powers, only to issue reversals in the face of...
Juan Barreto AFP/Getty Images VENEZUELAN opposition activists rally in Caracas. The Supreme Court earlier in the week issued a pair of rulings that essentiall­y stripped the nation’s opposition-controlled legislativ­e branch of its powers, only to issue reversals in the face of...
 ?? Federico Parra AFP/Getty Images ?? L AW M A K E R Rafael Guzman joins a protest against President Nicolas Maduro’s government. Critics say socialist rule has wrecked Venezuela’s economy.
Federico Parra AFP/Getty Images L AW M A K E R Rafael Guzman joins a protest against President Nicolas Maduro’s government. Critics say socialist rule has wrecked Venezuela’s economy.

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