So You’re Thinking of Investing in Venezuela
You wouldn’t be the only one. Many are trying to answer the same question: is Venezuela finally back on the map?
As the elections talk starts to heat up in Venezuela, María Corina Machado moves and meets Rubio in the US.
All of a sudden, opposition parties and some surprising figures are starting to behave as if presidential elections were on the horizon
“I like these calm little moments before the storm. It reminds me of Beethoven”
The Professional (1994)
“The end of the 90 day period of Delcy’s caretakership will be up next Friday 3rd of April, as per the interpretation of the Constitution made by the chavista controlled Supreme Court. We expect that the caretakership will be extended by the National Assembly for 90 days more. Delcy has 3 more months of smooth sailing before they’ll have to address the election issue. If we were to try to abide by the Constitution and Venezuelan laws as closely as possible, considering the unprecedented situation we’re in, once that second 90 day period expires, Maduro’s absence would be considered permanent and elections should be called to take place within 30 days. We say that the elections will need to be addressed because at that point we’ll learn whether Delcy will try to push for an indefinite rule or will she be abiding by the Constitution and calling for a new election—the latter is highly unlikely.”
If you want to read our take on the best case scenario go here.
I stood among the Venezuelans outside the Manhattan courthouse yesterday. This is what I saw
The government that demonized and expelled thousands of our migrants has captured the man responsible for our country’s collapse. A century of admiration faces a conundrum
Pro-Delcy content from “Hispan Online” generated over 47 million YouTube views and 11,391 articles in a single month. Traces point to an Argentine firm
Meet Gustavo González López, a four-star general tied to torture and deaths, brought in to cement the Rodríguez siblings’ grip on power
After lots of pressure and little debate, an insufficient Amnesty Law was approved unanimously by Delcy's National Assembly