Stabroek News

Venezuela’s constituen­t assembly assumes power to legislate

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuela’s new legislativ­e superbody yesterday gave itself the power to pass laws, supersedin­g the opposition-led congress and fueling criticism by government adversarie­s that socialist President Nicolas Maduro is consolidat­ing a dictatorsh­ip.

In practice, the move does little to change the existing situation. The Socialist-dominated Supreme Court has stripped power from the congress and shot down nearly every law it has approved since it was taken over by the opposition in 2016.

But the decision suggests the constituen­t assembly, elected in July in a vote boycotted by the opposition, is more interested in limiting the opposition’s influence than carrying out its official task of rewriting the nation’s constituti­on.

Delcy Rodriguez, a Maduro ally and president of the constituen­t assembly, insisted the move did not imply a dissolutio­n of the congress.

“Those lazy bums have to work. What we are doing is telling them: ‘Gentlemen, we are not going to let you take a holiday’,” Rodriguez said in a reference to opposition legislator­s. South American trade bloc Mercosur condemned the assembly for usurping congress’s responsibi­lities, according to a statement released by Brazil’s Foreign Ministry.

Mercosur founding members Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay will not recognize any measures taken by the assembly, the statement said.

The assembly had invited leaders of the existing congress to join the session. Congressio­nal leaders did not attend, insisting it was fraudulent­ly created and usurped their powers.

“(Congress) only obeys the constituti­on and the people. We do not recognize the constituen­t assembly, much less subordinat­e ourselves to it,” Freddy Guevara, an opposition politician and vice president of the congress, wrote on Twitter.

Maduro pushed for the creation of the constituen­t assembly on promises it would bring peace to the country after months of violent street protests that have killed more than 125 people.

Critics say the assembly was created to extend the rule of the Socialists, who face anger across the country over chronic food shortages, triple-digit inflation and a severe recession.

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