
MarĂa Corina Machado, Venezuelaâs far-right opposition politician, has been in hiding since July and Venezuelan authorities claim she has left the country. Photo: Adriana Loureiro Fernandez/ The New York Times.
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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
MarĂa Corina Machado, Venezuelaâs far-right opposition politician, has been in hiding since July and Venezuelan authorities claim she has left the country. Photo: Adriana Loureiro Fernandez/ The New York Times.
By Roger D. Harris – Nov 21, 2024
âOn the campaign trail, she [MarĂa Corina Machado] was received almost as a religious figure, often wearing white, promising to restore democracy and reunite families torn apart by an economic crisis and mass migration. âMarĂa!â her followers shouted, before falling into her arms,â the New York Times reverently reported.Â
Indeed, Machadoâs personally chosen surrogate to contend in last Julyâs Venezuelan presidential election, Edmundo GonzĂĄlez, did fall into her arms. But that was because her infirm disciple had trouble, both literally and figuratively, standing on his own two feet.Â
Machado was the main Venezuelan opposition figure backed by the US. Her platform of extreme neoliberal shock therapy was rejected by the electorate. Most Venezuelans oppose her call to privatize nearly all state institutions serving the people â schools, hospitals, public housing, food assistance, and the state oil company, which funds social programs. Nor is there any popular appetite for Machadoâs plan to radically reorient foreign policy to subordination to Washington and support of US imperial wars in Ukraine and Palestine.
A hagiography, such as this one by the Times, includes an investigation into the life and miracles attributed to the would-be saint. The article on Machado, penned by one Julie Turkewitz, does just that and more. The article also unintentionally reveals that the far-right opposition advocates foreign intervention to overthrow the democratic will of the Venezuelan people. Its title clearly states: âTrump to Save Her Country.â
It took the US until November 19, nearly four months, to declare GonzĂĄlez as the legitimate president-elect of Venezuela. The recognition likely signals a shift in the lame-duck Biden administrationâs policy from negotiation to all-out hostility towards Venezuela, paving the way for a smooth handover to the new Trump team. Previously, Washington simply called for a âpeaceful transition.âÂ
The miraculous opposition primary
Turkewitz reported that Machado won âan overwhelming victory in a primary race.â She uses the weasel-construction âa primaryâ rather than âthe primary,â because Machadoâs âprimaryâ was not one conducted by the official Venezuelan electoral authority, the CNE. Rather, it was a private affair administered by the NGO SĂşmate. That NGO, as the article admits, is funded by the US.Â
Machado prevailed in a crowded field of 13 candidates with a miraculous 92% of the vote. When some of the other candidates called fraud, Machado had the ballots destroyed. She could do so because SĂşmate is her personal organization.Â
The Times intimates that Machado âgalvanized a nationâ around an opposition agenda. That is something Uncle Sam has so far failed to achieve despite a quarter of a century of meddling in Venezuelaâs internal affairs.
The empireâs newspaper of record reports that Machado is âwildly popular.â But thatâs in the halls of the US Congress, where she was vetted and then anointed âleader of the oppositionâ even before the so-called primary in Venezuela. Unfortunately for Machado, that popularity with the Yankee politicos did not travel as well back home. In Venezuela, even within her corner of the far-right, Machado is resented. Far from unified, the opposition in Venezuela is today ever more divided.Â
Contested election results
The official Venezuelan electoral authority (CNE) declared incumbent President NicolĂĄs Maduro the winner with 52% of the vote. That outcome was subsequently audited and confirmed by the Venezuelan supreme court (TSJ).
GonzĂĄlez, the person whom the Times declared the winner, came in second with 43% of the vote, according to the official count. GonzĂĄlez claimed that he had evidence that proved he won the presidency, but he refused to show it to the TSJ, even when he was summoned to do so.Â
Moreover, the Times reports that the US-backed opposition has tallies from some 80% of the precincts, which were published on a private blog site. Sources supporting the Venezuelan government then published analyses showing that evidence to be bogus, while counter claims from those favoring regime change purport to confirm their validity.Â
The problem of privately posting evidence, while refusing to submit it to official channels, is that it leaves the Venezuelan authorities no constitutional path for accepting it even if it were valid. The question ignored by the article is: If âtheir team collected and published vote-tally receiptsâ proving its victory, why did they not settle the matter by submitting them?
The answer, not one that the Times would admit to, is that the far-right opposition and its US handlers never made a good faith attempt to win the election.Â
MarĂa Corina Machado Applauds New US Sanction Act Against Venezuela
Washingtonâs strategy was to delegitimize the election, not to win it
The oppositionâs platform could never be a winning ticket, which they knew. The only way to achieve it would be an extra-legal regime-change operation predicated on delegitimizing the democratically-elected government. And that is precisely what is being played out today in Venezuela.Â
There were a number of more moderate opposition figures with experience and popular followings. Had the US been interested in simply an electoral defeat of the ruling Socialist Party, they could have backed a less extreme candidate and offered to ease their punishing âsanctionsâ on Venezuela. Instead, Washington backed the far right, which took the supremely unpopular position of advocating for yet more sanctions on their own country to precipitate regime-change.Â
With nine other contenders on the presidential ballot, name recognition was important. Literally nobody had heard of GonzĂĄlez until Machado personally chose him as her surrogate. She had been disqualified from running back in 2015 for constitutionally mandated offenses.Â
Machadoâs political party, Vente Venezuela, lacked ballot status because her party had boycotted recent Venezuelan elections in keeping with the far-rightâs stance that the Venezuelan state is not legitimate. Once the party decided to again participate in the electoral arena in 2024, she could have petitioned for recognition of her party. But she didnât bother.
GonzĂĄlez, who had been in retirement, had no political following or experience. He had been a Venezuelan diplomat to El Salvador back in the 1980s, where he had been implicated in supporting US-backed death squads.Â
Maduro crisscrossed the country in an all-out campaign effort, exhaustingly visiting over 300 municipalities. His ruling Socialist Party, in power since 1999, had cadre in every corner of the country who were mobilized. They didnât need to be told that an opposition victory could mean not only loss of a job, but they might face retribution from the far right.Â
In contrast to Maduroâs strong ground game, the US-backed opposition was weak in the streets. GonzĂĄlez himself sat out the campaign in Caracas, while Machado barnstormed the hinterlands with a paper poster bearing his visage. Indicative of popular following were the turnouts at political rallies, both during the campaign and after, where Maduro attracted many times more supporters than GonzĂĄlez.Â
Forecast
The Times not only maintains that GonzĂĄlez âwon the July vote by a wide marginâ but he âshould be taking office in January.â GonzĂĄlez, too, claims heâll be back in Caracas for the inauguration. After the election, he voluntarily left Venezuela for Spain in a transfer negotiated with Caracas and Madrid governments.Â
The Times further reports that Machado predicts Maduro will voluntarily ânegotiate his own exit.â Even more fantastic, the Times asserts GonzĂĄlez âgarnered almost 70 percent of the vote.âÂ
In a revealing lapse from her otherwise editorializing, Turkewitz correctly reported that Machado âhas spent roughly two decades trying to remove Mr. Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo ChĂĄvez, from power.â Conveniently omitted is that effort included a number of coup attempts, including the 2002 US-backed coup that temporarily deposed then President ChĂĄvez. Machado signed the infamous Carmona Decree then, which voided the constitution and disbanded the courts, the legislature, and executive.Â
That 2002 coup lasted less than 48 hours because the people of Venezuela spontaneously rose up and confronted the traitorous military. If Machado indeed had the backing of 7 in 10 Venezuelans, she too could have taken the presidential palace regardless of the official election report.Â
The Times calls her Venezuelaâs âIron Ladyâ for her âsteely resolve.â Meanwhile Hinterlaces, reporting from Venezuela, speculates Machado has fled the country:Â
âThe failure of the insurrectionary strategy in the absence of a social explosion or a rupture in the Bolivarian civic-military alliance, the lack of convincing evidence on Edmundo GonzĂĄlez’s alleged electoral victory, since they do not really have the minutes to demonstrate it, convinced Machado to leave the country.â
NicolĂĄs Maduro will be inaugurated on January 10. As confirmed by the Venezuelan Supreme Court, the majority voted for him to continue Venezuelaâs Bolivarian Revolution.
RDH/OT
Roger D. Harris lives in California and is with the anti-imperialist human rights organization Task Force on the Americas, the Venezuela Solidarity Network, the US Peace Council, and the Marxist Forum. He writes regularly on Latin American and the Caribbean with a special emphasis on Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua.