Venezuela Needs Real Reconciliation, Not Symbolic Gestures
The amnesty law though which Delcy and Jorge Rodríguez seek to simulate a political opening does more to shield repressors than to deliver justice
It’s been a month since the US bombed Caracas, captured the presidential couple, and began a remote supervision of Venezuela’s government. Below are a few pieces to help make sense of where this could go.
The longer Venezuelans wait for democratization under the Trump–Rodríguez equilibrium, the weaker the prospects for enforcing democratic demands
A possessed copying machine, the smell of microwaved fish at lunch, excel sheets, and the fate of the hemisphere. Just another day at The Branch
Trump forces her to comply, but Rodríguez cannot afford to lose the support of the regime she propped up. Can Venezuela’s interim leader avoid the fate of Maduro?
Venezuelan journalists have identified all the locations struck on January 3, all of which housed air defense systems, radars, or military communications infrastructure
The opposition leader must make herself indispensable to the transition by leveraging her ability to mobilize support and the organizational legacy of July 28, 2024
Chavismo would dismantle its main weapons by releasing all political prisoners and shutting down the sites where they’re held. Let’s see how that goes
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While support for the Venezuelan opposition remains strong among governments abroad, there are hints of cautious engagement with the siblings’ regime
The new energy law opens the sector to foreign investment in unprecedented ways since the 1990s. It might also spark a relationship with transnational companies that is positive for society
Students, press workers, and families of detainees are reemerging after being silenced under Maduro. Such sustained pressure from below can make the system crack
El Helicoide, a symbol of chavista violence, was designed as the triumph of progress and prosperity. A metaphor in concrete
The discussion of the Amnesty Law takes place while Venezuelans still have an open wound. Rodríguez brings old scars into the discussion