The
dramatic events marked a sharp escalation in Maduro’s gambit to end
Guaidó’s quest to unseat him and sparked immediate condemnation by
Washington, which has strongly backed the 36-year-old opposition leader.
Opposition officials declared the move an effective “parliamentary
coup” meant to consolidate Maduro’s near-dictatorial powers.
“Today,
they dismantled the rule of law, assassinating the republic, with the
complicity of a group of traitor lawmakers,” Guaidó told reporters
outside the parliamentary building.
Later
Sunday, Guaidó sought to counter the move by gathering opposition
lawmakers at the headquarters of El Nacional, a local newspaper, to cast
an official vote. In a 100-to-0 tally — enough to put him over the top
in a full session of the 167-seat chamber — those present reelected
Guaidó as head of the legislature. Twenty-eight of the 100 were votes
from stand-ins of exiled lawmakers.
But Maduro, in an address to the nation, hailed what he called the National Assembly’s “new leadership.”
“A
very corrupt person leaves the presidency of the National Assembly
today, as a millionaire, a billionaire,” said Maduro, referring to
Guaidó. He added, “to justify their defeat, they say that a security
operation was launched” to stop them.
The
attempt to replace Guaidó — who declared himself interim president a
year ago and promised to oust Maduro for claiming reelection in a
tainted 2018 vote — appeared to be a carefully organized plan many weeks
in the making.
Opposition
officials have warned since last month that Maduro’s government was
handing out suitcases of cash to woo lawmakers. But they thought they
had successfully countered the operation, and on Sunday, Guaidó began
the day anticipating his reelection as head of the National Assembly,
viewed internationally as the last democratic institution in the
authoritarian South American state. Guaidó’s claim as the nation’s true
president — recognized by nearly 60 countries, including the United
States — has been based on his status as the assembly’s chief.
But
security forces loyal to Maduro formed a cordon early Sunday around the
assembly building in central Caracas, blocking some opposition
lawmakers from entering. Lawmakers who back Maduro — including several
allegedly involved in a government plot to buy votes — were allowed to
pass. At one point, Guaidó sought to scale the spiked wrought-iron fence
surrounding the assembly and force his way in, according to a video
issued by the opposition.
At
the same time, Luis Parra — a former opposition politician who was one
of several lawmakers accused last month of accepting government bribes —
announced his surprise candidacy against Guaidó via Twitter on Sunday
morning. Hours later, his swearing-in was shown on state television.
Security
forces loyal to the Maduro government stand guard outside the National
Assembly on Sunday. (Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images)
Parra
is thought to have had the support of at least 40 lawmakers from
Maduro’s party and an unknown number of others who the opposition claims
have been bribed. But there was no evidence that an actual vote had
taken place. The opposition also insisted that there had been no legal
quorum because Guaidó, the chamber’s leader, had not been present to
validate the session.
Sedition
within the opposition, however, appeared to run deeper than some had
feared. For instance, Luis Stefanelli, an opposition lawmaker who fled
the country after claiming to reject a government bribe, had appointed a
“loyal” stand-in to vote in favor of Guaidó on Sunday. But he said in a
tweet that his stand-in had “betrayed him” and had instead stood with
the government’s pick, Parra.
The
government’s action appeared designed to complicate Guaidó’s
international recognition and provide some nations that might be
considering pulling their support for him additional legal cover to do
so.
But
the move also creates new logistical and technical hurdles for an
already beleaguered opposition, including how and where to continue
meeting and passing legislation.
Guaidó’s
strongest backers — particularly in Washington — disregarded Sunday’s
maneuvers in the National Assembly as dictatorial theatrics. The move
comes as the United States — which has slapped tough sanctions on
Maduro’s government, including an oil embargo — is weighing more
confrontational steps, such as a possible naval blockade of Venezuelan
oil being shipped to Cuba, the Maduro government’s chief regional ally.
In
a statement, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo congratulated Guaidó on his
“re-election” and condemned the “failed efforts” by Maduro to “negate
the will of the democratically elected National Assembly.”
He
charged Maduro’s government with seeking to “forcibly” deny access to
Guaidó and other lawmakers after realizing its campaign of “bribery and
intimidation” had failed to secure enough votes to oust him.
“Juan
Guaido personifies the Venezuelan people’s struggle to reclaim the
prosperity and democracy they once enjoyed,” Pompeo said in the
statement. “No regime thugs, no jail cells, and no bribery or
intimidation can subvert the will of the Venezuelan people.”
Few
immediately saw Maduro as gaining international support from the move. A
host of nations, including Brazil, Canada and Chile, quickly rejected
Sunday’s attempt to install Parra. In a statement, the European Union
said Sunday’s “serious irregularities” constituted “a new step in the
deterioration of the Venezuelan crisis. As a consequence, the E.U.
continues to recognize Juan Guaidó as the legitimate President of the
National Assembly until the conditions for a proper voting session can
be assured.”
The
Maduro government has made attempts to declaw the National Assembly
since the opposition won a sweeping majority in 2015. In 2016, the
pro-Maduro Supreme Court officially stripped it of its legislative
authority. A year later, the court announced it would dissolve the
institution, a threat it never followed through on after the ruling
generated internal controversy and street protests. In 2017, Maduro’s
government created a “Constituent Assembly,” made up exclusively of its
own backers, which sought to supplant the National Assembly’s authority.
But
the opposition has managed to keep the institution at the center of its
fight to oust Maduro, holding sessions weekly and using it as a legal
backup to Guaidó’s claim to the presidency. It has given Guaidó
constitutional legitimacy in the eyes of foreign powers, based on the
fact that he and his supporters were elected by a majority in 2015 — the
last time a vote here was seen as generally democratic.
The
government’s bold move on Sunday comes at a dangerous time for the
opposition. After a year in which many Venezuelans believe he
overpromised how quickly Maduro could be forced from office, Guaidó has
seen his popularity sharply slip. Attempts to turn the nation’s top
military brass against Maduro have failed, and the opposition is reeling
from accusations of turncoats and festering corruption within its own
ranks.
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