Miami Herald

Guaido’s reign in danger as Venezuelan opposition making moves to ditch him

- BY FABIOLA ZERPA, ANDREINA ITRIAGO ACOSTA AND EZRA FIESER

Three years after Venezuela’s fractured opposition united around Juan Guaido with strong U.S. backing, several of those same political parties are ready to defy Washington and ditch him as the face of their movement.

A group of government­s, led by the U.S., is pressing the parties to extend Guaido’s mandate as National Assembly president and head of the opposition’s interim government after it expires in January, according to eight people with direct knowledge of the situation. Three of the four principal opposition parties oppose the idea and even some members of Guaido’s own Popular Will party haven’t signed on, according to the people.

“There is an attempt to continue extending the Guaido government, but that does not help the Venezuelan people, and I’m not going to support it,” said Henrique Capriles, a former presidenti­al candidate from the Justice First party whose support for Guaido, which was key in 2019, has cooled as the interim government has stumbled recently.

The dissent stems from the Guaido government’s failure to oust President Nicolas Maduro and discrepanc­ies over handling of assets abroad, the people said. The split appears likely to strengthen Maduro’s hand ahead of a Nov. 21 election for mayors and governors, the first in three years in which the opposition plans to participat­e. It has yet to unify around candidates in the few races where it has a chance, and the dispute over Guaido is adding to the disarray.

It also comes after Maduro pulled out of negotiatio­ns with the opposition last month in Mexico, a result he said of the U.S.’s extraditio­n of a key aide.

Representa­tives for Guaido declined to comment. In a recent tweet, Guaido said support from U.S. representa­tives such as Senator Dick Durbin is key in the fight to “defeat the tragedy that the dictatorsh­ip represents.”

Justice First party leader Julio Borges, who has served as a foreign relations delegate and ambassador to the United Nations under Guaido, opposes extending his mandate, as do leaders from the New Era and Democratic Action parties, the people said. A coalition of more than two dozen small political parties — which controls a minority voting bloc in the assembly — plans to back Guaido, according to one of the people. The assembly already voted once to extend Guaido’s mandate, but it is unclear if they will attempt a similar vote before the January deadline.

When Guaido, then 35 years old, thrust himself upon the scene nearly three years ago, it was as a constituti­onal alternativ­e to Maduro, widely seen as having won a rigged reelection. Many Venezuelan­s embraced the hope that the combinatio­n of opposition unity, internatio­nal backing and U.S. sanctions would drive Maduro out and create the conditions for new elections. Arguing that Maduro’s presidency had no legal basis, Guaido set up a shadow government, including parallel diplomatic missions.

But Maduro held firm and Guaido’s standing has dwindled in a once-rich nation slowly unraveling. Many of those seeking a post-Maduro Venezuela are now looking to regroup and focus on winning a presidenti­al election in 2024. They call for getting the government back to the negotiatin­g table, the people said.

U.S. officials, led by Ambassador James “Jimmy” Story, have held meetings with two key opposition leaders: Borges and Leopoldo Lopez, an exiled politician who is the founder and leader of Guaido’s party and one of the forces behind the plan to extend the mandate, the people said.

The State Department does not comment on the content or existence of private diplomatic conversati­ons, a spokesman said in an email response to questions.

Although Guaido has virtually no political authority in the country, his recognitio­n as interim leader by other government­s has given him control over billions of dollars of assets Venezuela owns in those countries, including the parent company of oil refiner and gas distributo­r Citgo Holding Inc.

The question now is what happens once the assembly’s mandate — which gives Guaido his claim to power — expires in January.

Some of his supporters say that sticking with Guaido is vital because it is fundamenta­lly about keeping attention focused on the unlawful nature of Maduro’s government, not whether everyone loves Guaido.

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