President Nicolas Maduro looks on during a press conference after testifying before the electoral chamber at main headquarters of the Supreme Court of Justice on Aug. 2, 2024, at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela.
Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado confirmed on Wednesday that she and Edmundo González, recognized as the elected president by several countries including the United States, had a conversation with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
While thousands of Venezuelans face mass deportations and precarious conditions in the United States, extremist opposition leader Maria Corina Machado evades the debate on the structural causes of migration.
Edmundo González, recognized by the United States as Venezuela’s president-elect, is cautioning the Trump administration against carrying out a deportation deal with the country’s authoritarian
Putting the cart before the horse is an apt expression for the tendency to stick to strictly circumstantial analyses of reality. The smoke left behind by the polarisation between Nicolás Maduro and María Corina Machado has distracted from a much-needed analysis of the real dynamics of power and social agreements within Venezuelan society today.
Venezuela said it will hold regional and parliamentary elections in April, potentially splitting the opposition over whether to boycott the vote.Most Read from BloombergWhat Happened to Hanging Out on the Street?
In her latest VA column, Jessica Dos Santos takes stock of the hardline opposition's all-or-nothing antics and their consequences.
Days after his swearing-in for a third term in office amid allegations of electoral fraud, President Nicolás Maduro pledges to "integrate the popular power" into Venezuela's constitution.
The new US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, spoke on Wednesday with Venezuelan opposition leaders Edmundo González Urrutia and María Corina Machado to reaffirm Washington’s […]
Maduro was sworn in for a highly contested third term on January 10 after claiming victory in the July vote, which the opposition says its candidate Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia won.
The first thing greeting me as I disembarked from my flight in Caracas was a wanted poster for one Edmundo González Urrutia. The reward was $100,000. Not
The director of WOLA’s Venezuela Program, Laura Dib, joins the podcast to discuss the political, human rights, and diplomatic reality following Nicolás Maduro’s January 10 inauguration. Maduro’s new term begins amid severe tensions,