National Post (National Edition)

Maduro consolidat­es power in Venezuela

Guaidó vows heightened resistance

- ALEX VASQUEZ

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro installed a new national assembly filled with regime loyalists, consolidat­ing his power over key institutio­ns in the crisis-torn nation despite mounting U.S. sanctions.

Carrying pictures of the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, lawmakers on Tuesday elected former informatio­n minister Jorge Rodriguez as the new president of the legislativ­e body. Maduro's son Nicolas Maduro Guerra and his wife Cilia Flores were among the 277 representa­tives who took their seats — in their vast majority supporters of the ruling socialist party, following December elections the opposition has denounced as fraudulent.

“Sanctions are useless, because the people have shown that not even the worst sanctions will be able to break them,” Rodriguez said after being sworn in, assuring that the assembly will promote dialogue with all political groups, including those that boycotted the election.

Since taking over for Chavez in 2013, Maduro has resisted efforts to force him out, presiding over a precipitou­s deteriorat­ion of the oil-rich country. The U.S. and more than 50 countries recognized the opposition's Juan Guaidó as interim leader in early 2019, when he took the helm of the previous national assembly controlled by Maduro opponents. His claim was based on alleged vacancy in the presidency due to elections deemed fraudulent in 2018.

While Guaidó retains internatio­nal support publicly, his stance has gradually weakened as the showdown with Maduro drags on and as more opposition politician­s are forced into exile, jailed or legally sidelined. In a sign of just how limited his powers are, Paraguay said Tuesday that President Mario Abdo Benitez has rejected an offer made by a Guaidó envoy to settle debt with oil producer PDVSA at a deep discount because the country can't be sure it would be paying the “legitimate creditor.”

After boycotting the national assembly election in December, Guaidó insists that he is the democratic leader of Venezuela and installed a competing legislativ­e body Tuesday during a small ceremony, in an unknown location to avoid repression by police or Maduro supporters. It's unknown how many lawmakers participat­ed in the session that ratified him as head of parliament and “interim president” of the country. Most of them attended virtually.

“We are standing here because we are not going to succumb to the threats and terror of the dictatorsh­ip,” Guaidó said during the webcast ceremony. “Here is parliament defending Venezuelan­s, the constituti­on and the right to be free. The dictatorsh­ip intends to destroy the democratic alternativ­e.”

Yet Guaidó is facing a wave of high-profile defections from his group of allies, including the assembly's former vice-president Stalin Gonzalez, who characteri­zed his strategy as “foreign to the country's reality.”

In a televised speech last month, Maduro promised to respond “fiercely” and “according to justice” to the opposition's decision to continue meeting. On Monday, the U.S. Treasury granted a licence that recognized Guaidó's assembly and its decisions as legitimate.

With the new assembly, Maduro will try to attract foreign investment, something

NOT EVEN THE WORST SANCTIONS WILL BE ABLE TO BREAK

THEM.

the government has tried to do via its anti-blockade law, Eurasia Group analysts Risa Grais-Targow and Laura Duarte wrote in a note. “However, such proposals are unlikely to have meaningful impact given aggressive sanctions and a limited universe of firms willing to deepen ties with the government.”

Attention now turns to whether Guaidó's internatio­nal backers, from U.S. president-elect Joe Biden to European Union leaders, will continue to recognize him as Venezuela's interim president. The U.S. State Department said Maduro's new assembly is illegitima­te and that the U.S. recognizes Guaidó as the legitimate president of Venezuela.

“The government won this battle, Guaidó's internatio­nal support is not enough to overthrow Maduro. Venezuela is left with an authoritar­ian government and a fragmented opposition,” said political scientist Angel Alvarez.

 ?? YURI CORTEZ / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? An official carries a portrait of the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez as she arrives at parliament Tuesday.
YURI CORTEZ / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES An official carries a portrait of the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez as she arrives at parliament Tuesday.

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