Marin Independent Journal

Socialists take control of once-defiant congress

- By Jorge Rueda and Joshua Goodman

CARACAS, VENEZUELA » Parading giant portraits of Hugo Chavez and independen­ce hero Simon Bolivar, allies of President Nicolas Maduro retook control of Venezuela’s congress Tuesday, the last institutio­n in the country it didn’t already control.

The symbolic restoring of the images to Venezuela’s parliament capped a celebrator­y day for the ruling socialist party in which they claimed to have avenged the humiliatin­g defeat five 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 incoming assembly president, vowed to “exorcise” from the legislativ­e palace all

vestiges of its previous occupants, who he accused of plotting from its neo- classical 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 was previously led internatio­nally sponsored talks with the opposition as well as met 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 U.S., the European Union and several other foreign government­s. While the vote was marred by anemically low turnout, it nonetheles­s seemed to relegate into irrelevanc­y 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 parliament’s inaugural session, which according to the constituti­on must be held every year on Jan. 5.

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

 ?? MATIAS DELACROIX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A government supporter known as “Caperucita,” or Little Red Riding Hood, holds a photo of the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as she looks for something in her purse in Plaza Bolivar, near the National Assembly, where newly elected National Assembly lawmakers will be sworn-in and hold their first session of the year in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday.
MATIAS DELACROIX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A government supporter known as “Caperucita,” or Little Red Riding Hood, holds a photo of the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as she looks for something in her purse in Plaza Bolivar, near the National Assembly, where newly elected National Assembly lawmakers will be sworn-in and hold their first session of the year in Caracas, Venezuela, Tuesday.

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