News

Sworn in, but isolated

Nicolás Maduro invested for second term, but performs investiture before Supreme Court, not Congress, as the executive doesn’t recognise him

Wear­ing black jeans, a white shirt and a red tie, the uni­form of choice Hugo Chavez de­ployed at of­fi­cial cer­e­monies, Venezuela’s pres­i­dent, Nicolás Maduro, greeted Supreme Court judges one by one, as the Simón Bolívar Na­tional Sym­phonic Or­ches­tra rang out in the back­ground. There were bal­conies full of chil­dren dressed in iden­ti­cal out­fits dis­play­ing the na­tional colours. This en­vi­ron­ment was staged to kick off Maduro’s sec­ond term, which will last til 2025. It should have been held in Con­gress, but the ex­ec­u­tive is in the hands of the op­po­si­tion, who don’t see Maduro’s elec­tion as le­git­i­mate. The gov­ern­ment con­sid­ers con­gress to be “in con­tempt” and has nul­li­fied all of its ac­tions. At­ten­dance at the in­au­gu­ra­tion cer­e­mony made it ob­vi­ous that Latin Amer­ica has largely turned its back on Maduro: only the Bo­li­vian Evo Morales, Sal­vado­rian Sal­vador Ceren, Cuban Miguel Díaz-Canel, and Nicaraguan Daniel Or­tega trav­elled to Cara­cas, and the biggest news agen­cies pre­sent were Russ­ian and Chi­nese. Since yes­ter­day, Venezuela has no diplo­matic re­la­tions with the 13 coun­tries that make up the Lima Group, led by Ar­gentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colom­bia and Peru, who ad­vanced that they would not recog­nise Maduro, and is­sued a state­ment ban­ning ac­cess to their mem­ber states by high level mem­bers of his gov­ern­ment. The EU and the USA fol­lowed with sim­i­lar mea­sures. Venezuela is iso­lated, sub­merged in an un­prece­dented eco­nomic cri­sis, with a di­as­pora of 2.5 mil­lion. The shift to the right in the re­gion has re­duced the list of gov­ern­ments that once sup­ported Chavez and then re­fused to con­demn Maduro.

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