venezuela opposition – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Tue, 02 Jun 2026 17:27:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png venezuela opposition – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Venezuela Opposition leader wants transition without ‘revenge’ https://artifex.news/article71054297-ece/ Tue, 02 Jun 2026 17:27:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71054297-ece/ Read More “Venezuela Opposition leader wants transition without ‘revenge’” »

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Venezuelan Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Exiled Venezuelan Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado said on Tuesday (June 2, 2026) that she wanted to negotiate a democratic transition in the South American nation without “surrender” or “revenge.”

Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year, Ms. Machado advocates for a democratic transition in Venezuela, now led by Delcy Rodriguez, who has been acting president since Nicolas Maduro was seized in a U.S. military raid in January.

“Those who now hold interim power have also had to recognise that Venezuela cannot be stabilised, recovered, or governed indefinitely without the democratic majority that expressed itself on July 28,” Ms. Machado said in a speech at the Oslo Freedom Forum.

Venezuela held a presidential election on July 28, 2024, in which Ms. Machado, having been declared ineligible, was unable to run.

Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia was a last-minute replacement for Ms. Machado, and the Opposition considers him the rightful winner. Mr. Maduro was declared the winner, but the Opposition says there was massive fraud.

In recent weeks, Ms. Machado has said she is determined to negotiate a transition with Rodriguez, who used to be Mr. Maduro’s Vice President.

“Negotiation is now necessary, not as surrender, not as revenge, but as a serious, firm, and responsible effort to transform a new political opening into a democratic solution,” she said.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has been content to let Rodriguez remain in power as she bends to their demands, and has opened oil and mining sectors to private capital.

According to observers, Washington is not keen on Ms. Machado’s rapid return to Venezuela, even as she keeps insisting that she wants to go back “very soon”.



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Venezuela’s Opposition cornered as Gonzales flees and Maduro digs in https://artifex.news/article68624866-ece/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 06:15:43 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68624866-ece/ Read More “Venezuela’s Opposition cornered as Gonzales flees and Maduro digs in” »

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Venezuela’s battered opposition is running out of options for challenging President Nicolas Maduro’s claim to have won re-election.

Opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia fled in exile to Spain over the weekend. The popular leader he stood in for at the polls, Maria Corina Machado, is in hiding. Other opposition figures have been arrested and Mr. Maduro is firmly in charge of the oil-rich nation – showing no sign of yielding.

Mr. Maduro’s disputed win in the July 28 election is challenged not just by the opposition or historic geopolitical rivals such as the United States, but also by leftist allies of Venezuela such as Brazil and Colombia.

The latter have come up empty-handed in their efforts to help find a peaceful solution to the crisis.

Inside the country, chatter abounds about what the opposition calls a stolen election – but people make their criticisms in whispers: no one wants to join the more than 2,400 people who have been arrested since the vote, including children, with some even accused of “terrorism.”

Mr. Maduro would be sworn in for a third term on January 10, and in the next four months, anything can happen.

But for now, Venezuela looks like this: Mr. Maduro and other heirs of the late iconic socialist leader Hugo Chaves are closing ranks, the opposition is trying to somehow reorganize itself and the outside world is assessing how to confront a Maduro whom international sanctions and pressure have long failed to shake.

Sweeping away everything

The National Electoral Council, loyal to Mr. Maduro, proclaimed him the winner of the election with 52 percent of the votes. That means another six-year term in power for the former bus driver handpicked by Chavez to succeed him.

The opposition published copies of voting records from polling stations, saying the data proves the claim of a Mr. Maduro win is bogus and that Gonzalez Urrutia won by a landslide.

That act of publishing the results online has triggered a probe by the government and charges that the opposition engaged in conspiracy, usurping functions and sabotage.

The government has meanwhile not released detailed voting records to back up its claim of victory – it says it cannot, because the election tally system was hacked.

Mr. Maduro insists he won and at least in public rules out any kind of negotiation with the opposition.

“It is clear that the government is not seeking to yield, and to the contrary it is digging in,” said Antulio Rosales, a political scientist and professor at York University in Canada.

“It is a strategy of domination, of sweeping away everything,” said Giulio Cellini, head of the LOG political consultancy.

The goal, he said, is “to keep Maduro in place no matter what the cost is, because the cost of giving up power is even greater.”

After Venezuela’s last election, in 2018, Mr. Maduro also claimed victory amid widespread accusations of fraud. With the support of the military and other institutions, he managed to cling to power despite international sanctions.

Mr. Maduro has led the oil-rich but cash-poor country since 2013.

His tenure, amid sanctions and domestic economic mismanagement, has seen GDP drop 80% in a decade, prompting more than seven million of the country’s 30 million citizens to flee.

Gonzalez Urrutia, a 75-year-old, little-known former diplomat – until now – said last week that he was not considering going into exile, as he has now done.

But for many Venezuelans, his flight came as no surprise. He was under tremendous pressure, not just from a legal standpoint – he defied three summonses to appear in court – but also due to a rain of daily insults from Mr. Maduro, who called him “filthy,” a coward and even a Nazi.

Machado, the very popular leader of the opposition who was barred by Maduro-loyal courts from running for president, is now living in hiding.

Many Venezuelans are now wondering if she too will flee into exile.

Protests erupted right after the Maduro win was announced and in clashes with security forces 27 people died and nearly 200 were hurt.

Experts say it is unlikely that the United States will react as firmly as Donald Trump did after Maduro’s disputed win in 2018. Then, the U.S. administration said it no longer considered Mr. Maduro to be president and recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido instead.

The most recent U.S. punishment came earlier this month, when it seized one of Mr. Maduro’s planes, in the Dominican Republic. The United States is now expected to impose sanctions on individual members of the Maduro government.

Pablo Quintero, also of the LOG consultancy, said that over the short and medium term, the Maduro government expects to govern in isolation.

“They have trained for these kinds of situations and are willing to endure them in order to stay in power,” he said.



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