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MEXICO CITY – Amid growing instability in Venezuela, interim President Delcy Rodríguez has stepped into a pivotal role following the capture of President Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces during a covert nighttime operation.
Having served as Maduro’s vice president since 2018, Rodríguez has played a key role in managing Venezuela’s oil-reliant economy and overseeing its formidable intelligence agency. As the next in line for the presidency, she now leads the nation.
Rodríguez is part of a core group of senior officials within Maduro’s administration who currently hold sway over Venezuela. Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump, alongside other officials, has expressed intentions to push the Venezuelan government to align with their strategic interests for the country, rich in oil resources.
On Saturday, the Venezuelan Supreme Court mandated Rodríguez to take on the duties of interim president, a decision supported by the nation’s military. In a televised address, she made it clear that she would not yield to Trump’s administration, labeling them as “extremists.”
“The only president of Venezuela is President Nicolás Maduro,” Rodríguez asserted, flanked by top civilian and military leaders. “What is being inflicted upon Venezuela is a grave injustice that breaches international law.”
At odds with Trump
Rodríguez, a 56-year-old lawyer and politician has had a lengthy career representing the revolution started by the late Hugo Chávez on the world stage.
Her rise to become interim leader of the South American country came as a surprise on Saturday morning, when Trump announced that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had been in communication with Rodríguez and that the Venezuelan leader was “gracious” and would work with the American government. Rubio said Rodríguez was someone the administration could work with, unlike Maduro.
In doing so, observers said the government was effectively turning its back on the opposition movement it maintained was the winner of Venezuela’s 2024 elections just weeks before.
On Sunday, Trump’s tone shifted as Rodríguez and other Venezuelan officials continued to rail against the Trump administration and assert that they were in control of the country.
“If she doesn’t do what’s right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,” Trump said of Rodríguez in an interview with The Atlantic.
That same day, Rubio asserted that he didn’t see Rodríguez and her government as “legitimate” because he said the country never held free and fair elections.
Rise to interim president
A lawyer educated in Britain and France, the interim president and her brother, Jorge Rodríguez, head of the Maduro-controlled National Assembly, have sterling leftist credentials born from tragedy. Their father was a socialist leader who was arrested for his involvement in the kidnapping of American business owner William Niehous in 1976, and later died in police custody.
Unlike many in Maduro’s inner circle, the Rodríguez siblings have avoided criminal indictment in the U.S., though the interim president did face U.S. sanctions during Trump’s first term for her role in undermining Venezuelan democracy.
Rodríguez held a number of lower level positions under Chávez’s government, but gained prominence working under Maduro to the point of being seen as his successor. She served the economic minister, foreign affairs minister, petroleum minister and others help stabilize Venezuela’s endemically crisis-stricken economy after years of rampant inflation and turmoil.
Rodríguez developed strong ties with Republicans in the oil industry and on Wall Street who balked at the notion of U.S.-led regime change. The interim president also presided over an assembly promoted by Maduro in response to street protests in 2017 meant to neutralize the opposition-majority legislature.
She enjoys a close relationship with the military, which has long acted as the arbiter of political disputes in Venezuela, said Ronal Rodríguez, a spokesperson for the Venezuela Observatory of Rosario University in Bogota, Colombia.
“She has a very particular relationship with power,” he said. “She has developed very strong ties with elements of the armed forces and has managed to establish lines of dialogue with them, largely on a transactional basis.”
Future in power
It’s unclear how long Rodríguez will hold power, or how closely she will work with the Trump administration.
Geoff Ramsey, a senior nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council, a Washington research institute, said Rodríguez’s firm tone with the Trump administration may be an attempt to “save face.” Others have noted that Maduro’s capture required some level of collaboration within the Venezuelan government.
“She can’t exactly expect to score points with her revolutionary peers if she presents herself as a patsy for U.S. interests,” Ramsey said.
Venezuela’s constitution requires an election within 30 days whenever the president becomes “permanently unavailable” to serve. Reasons listed include death, resignation, removal from office or “abandonment” of duties as declared by the National Assembly.
That electoral timeline was rigorously followed when Maduro’s predecessor, Chavez, died of cancer in 2013. However, the loyalist Supreme Court, in its decision Saturday, cited another provision of the charter in declaring Maduro’s absence a “temporary” one.
In such a scenario, there is no election requirement. Instead, the vice president, an unelected position, takes over for up to 90 days — a period that can be extended to six months with a vote of the National Assembly.
In handing temporary power to Rodríguez, the Supreme Court made no mention of the 180-day time limit, leading some to speculate she could try to remain in power even longer as she seeks to unite the disparate factions of the ruling socialist party while shielding it from what would certainly be a stiff electoral challenge.
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Janetsky reported from Mexico City and Debre reported from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Associated Press writers Joshua Goodman in Miami and Jorge Rueda in Caracas, Venezuela contributed to this report.
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