Los Angeles Times

Venezuela’s Maduro gets a boost as allies take over Assembly

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CARACAS, Venezuela — Parading giant portraits of Hugo Chavez and independen­ce hero Simon Bolivar, allies of President Nicolás Maduro retook control of Venezuela’s National Assembly on Tuesday, the last institutio­n in the country he didn’t already control.

The symbolic restoring of the images to Venezuela’s legislatur­e capped a celebrator­y day for the ruling socialist party in which it claimed to have avenged the humiliatin­g defeat f ive years ago when government opponents won control of the legislatur­e and proceeded to remove portraits of the two national icons in a fierce — if futile — challenge to Maduro’s lock on power.

Jorge Rodriguez, the new assembly president, vowed to “exorcise” from the legislativ­e palace all vestiges of its previous occupants, whom he accused of plotting from its neoclassic­al chamber Maduro’s violent overthrow with the help of foreign mercenarie­s and the Trump administra­tion.

“Just so there are no doubts, pretty soon we’ll spray every corner of the parliament­ary chambers with holy water,” joked Rodriguez, who previously led internatio­nally sponsored talks with the opposition as well as meeting with envoys from the Trump administra­tion.

Maduro’s allies swept legislativ­e elections last month boycotted by the opposition and denounced as a sham by the United States, the European Union and several other foreign government­s. While the vote was marred by anemically low turnout, it nonetheles­s seemed to relegate into irrelevanc­e the U. S.- backed opposition led by lawmaker Juan Guaidó.

Exactly a year ago, Guaidó, in a blue suit and tie, tried to scale a spiked iron fence to get past riot police blocking him from attending the assembly’s inaugural session, which according to the constituti­on must be held every year on Jan. 5.

In a far cry from that electric display of defiance, Guaidó held his own virtual legislativ­e session Tuesday, via Zoom, with a cohort of opposition leaders.

“They are trying to annihilate Venezuela’s democratic force,” Guaidó said in his online address, which was overshadow­ed by the government’s celebrator­y session in the legislatur­e downtown. “But we aren’t going to give up.”

Last month, antiMaduro lawmakers, several dozen of them in exile, also gathered online to vote to extend their mandate stemming from a landslide victory in 2015 for another 12 months, operating through an adjunct committee normally reserved for legislativ­e recesses.

Supreme Court justices loyal to Maduro immediatel­y struck down that measure as invalid. But that hasn’t stopped the Trump administra­tion from doubling down in its support of Guaidó.

“We consider this group to be illegitima­te and will not recognize it nor its pronouncem­ents,” Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo said Tuesday, referring to the pro- Maduro assembly. “President Guaidó and the National Assembly are the only democratic representa­tives of the Venezuelan people as recognized by the internatio­nal community, and they should be freed from Maduro’s harassment, threats, persecutio­n and other abuses.”

While Guaidó’s bravery hasn’t wavered, the opposition’s political fortunes have tanked as Venezuelan­s’ own hopes for change have collapsed. Recent opinion polls say support for Guaidó has fallen by more than half since he f irst rose to challenge Maduro two years ago.

Meanwhile, Maduro has managed to retain a solid grip on power and the military, the traditiona­l arbiter of political disputes in Venezuela.

Gaby Arellano, a lawmaker exiled in Colombia, said many in the opposition underestim­ated Maduro, thinking he stood no chance in a doomsday economic environmen­t marked by hyperinf lation, miles- long lines for gasoline and pulverized wages worth just a few pennies per month.

But Maduro has managed to outmaneuve­r his foes through a mix of repression and co- optation exacerbate­d by the opposition’s missteps, Arellano said. She expects a new round of repression now that Maduro has seized the Assembly.

On Tuesday, Guaidó criticized photos on Twitter showing what he said were security forces surroundin­g his apartment building in Caracas, the capital. The Associated Press was unable to confirm the report.

 ?? Matias Delacroix Associated Press ?? JORGE RODRIGUEZ, right, an ally of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, is the National Assembly president.
Matias Delacroix Associated Press JORGE RODRIGUEZ, right, an ally of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, is the National Assembly president.

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