Saturday, April 19, 2025

 

Ecuador enters ‘Trump mode’ with Noboa victory



Published 

Incumbent President Daniel Noboa won Ecuador’s Presidential runoff vote on Sunday, defeating his opponent Luisa González of the Citizens’ Revolution party. (Flickr/Casa de América/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

First published at NACLA.

On Sunday, Ecuador’s National Electoral Council announced the results of the runoff election for the 2025 to 2029 presidential term. Incumbent President Daniel Noboa emerged victorious, earning 55 percent of the vote, while his opponent, Luisa González, trailed behind with 44 percent of the vote. González immediately declared electoral fraud, citing a series of irregularities including Noboa’s declaration of a “state of exception” in seven strategic provinces two days before the elections. Now the world is asking: What scenarios are emerging in Ecuador given the country’s deepening political polarization?

Two weeks ago, during the final stretch of the runoff campaign, U.S. President Donald Trump privately received Noboa at Mar-a-Lago. While the details of that meeting have not been made public, Noboa appears to have received the “green light” to accelerate the country’s authoritarian drift. Following this meeting, a series of actions by the Noboa government evidenced this turn. Although Trump stopped short of endorsing Noboa explicitly, the mysterious meeting symbolized Noboa’s adoption of the “Trump Way”: a “right-wing populist” style that relies on blackmail as its central tool. Noboa left the meeting promising that the United States would exclude Ecuadorians from mass deportation lists — something Washington never confirmed — a critical issue for a country in which a significant percentage of the population receives remittances from abroad, especially from the United States.

The threat of mass deportations was instrumentalized to influence the vote. Noboa exploited the fear that Ecuadorian migrants would end up in detention centers like Guantánamo or prisons in El Salvador — thus jeopardizing the crucial flow of remittances. This blackmail, although subtle, struck a sensitive nerve: Ecuador has been a producer of migrants for decades, and the United States has long been the most sought-after destination.

In the first round of voting on February 9, Noboa was surprised by a “technical tie” with González, the candidate from the Citizens’ Revolution (CR) party. In the following weeks, González gained unprecedented backing from the Pachakutik Indigenous movement, which garnered five percent of the vote in the first round and has historically clashed with the RC. Facing mounting pressure, Noboa needed to turn the campaign around. To do so, he had to put more “meat on the fire,” which meant offering spectacular responses to Ecuadorians’ foremost concern: criminal violence.

After winning fewer votes than González in the first round, the first thing Noboa did was hire Erik Prince, founder of the controversial mercenary company Blackwater. Prince, who arrived in Ecuador in early April, interfered directly in the electoral campaign, unleashing a media offensive against González.

Then, two days before the Sunday’s runoff vote, Noboa decreed a 60-day “state of exception” in seven of the country's 24 provinces, as well as in the metropolitan district of Quito. All of these territories are strategic in the electoral arena, including districts that support the RC. The decree grants enhanced military powers, suspends the right to free assembly, and authorizes warrantless searches. Furthermore, Noboa withdrew González’s public security detail the day before the runoff election, a move widely interpreted as a political intimidation tactic in a country where violence against political figures has surged. In 2023, presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was assassinated just two weeks before the election, and dozens of mayors and congressmembers have been killed over the last five years.

A conservative project with long-term ambitions

The son of Ecuador’s richest man, Noboa was unexpectedly chosen by conservative sectors in the first round of elections in 2023, after former President Guillermo Lasso triggered snap elections through a constitutional mechanism called the “muerte cruzada” or “mutual death,” Now, Noboa has positioned himself to serve until 2033 if he’s able to secure reelection in 2029.

Noboa represents an opportunity for stability for a right wing that, until now, has failed to consolidate its position. This follows the short-lived administrations of Lenín Moreno (2017-2021), who broke with former president Rafael Correa's party but governed weakly, and Lasso (2021-2023), who was forced to call early elections following protests and threats of impeachment. Noboa is now completing Lasso’s term.

According to a 2010 constitutional ruling, when a head of state completes their predecessor’s term following the application of a muerte cruzada, that period does not count towards constitutional term limits. That means Noboa will be eligible for reelection in 2029.

To this end, Noboa is courting Washington’s support by offering two strategically located military bases: in Manta and the Galápagos Islands. The proposal to reopen the Manta base revives a long-standing dispute between the United States and the Correa administration, which expelled the U.S. military from the area in 2009. Meanwhile the Galápagos Islands, situated offshore in the Pacific Ocean, lie near the China-Peru trade route — boosted by the Chinese megaport in Chancay, north of Lima, inaugurated by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2024.

Amid a climate of widespread violence, and under the pretext of combating drug gangs — which have turned Ecuador, a country that had remained relatively immune to the ravages of drug trafficking, unlike its neighbors Colombia and Peru, into a site of unprecedented violence — Noboa is promoting exceptional measures that also aim to neutralize his political rivals. One only needs to recall the Noboa administration’s raid on the Mexican embassy in Quito in 2024 to arrest the former Correa-era Vice President Jorge Glass, which triggered a diplomatic rupture with Mexico that remains unresolved. Noboa strategically blurs the line between the fight against drug trafficking and targeting his political opponents — a tactic he may pursue with even greater vigor now that the official results have been announced. Given the RC party’s refusal to acknowledge the results, a further escalation of political conflict appears likely.

RC rejects the results

On Monday, González claimed fraud, refused to recognize the result, called for a recount, and called the president a “dictator.” The RC is the majority party in the National Assembly and has a significant number of governorships (9 of 23) and mayoralties (50 of 221). González’s biggest challenge now is to maintain party, as several RC leaders who recognize her as their candidate have chosen to accept the results.

Ahead of the vote, González established an unprecedented alliance with an old adversary: the powerful Indigenous movement, a ley political force whose mass mobilizations have overthrown governments in the past (such as Jamil Mahuad in 2000 and Lucio Gutiérrez in 2005) and brought others like Lenín Moreno (2017-2021) to the brink of collapse. In October 2019, Moreno was forced to relocate government headquarters amid massive protests. The same occurred with Lasso's government, which ultimately called early elections due to conditions of ungovernability.

For Ecuador’s right, these episodes represented failed attempts to consolidate long-term rule. Now, they look to Noboa to deliver a durable conservative project capable of resisting the inevitable waves of protest that will emerge from progressive sectors in response to his neoliberal and repressive agenda. Social movements, especially the Confederation of Indigenous Nations of Ecuador (CONAIE), denounced in a statement released Wednesday Noboa’s’ plans for harsh economic adjustment and the expansion of large-scale mining projects.

This coalition between Correísmo and the Indigenous movement could ignite a major political crisis if it decides to openly challenge the government, as González has indicated since the night of the runoff. All of this points to a new, volatile chapter in Ecuadorian politics, just as Noboa seeks to impose contested economic and geopolitical measures, including the construction of foreign military bases, the expanded mining concessions, and partnerships with mercenary companies.

What's next in Ecuador?

Sunday's result entrenches Noboa’s conservative and authoritarian project, offering the right a rare opportunity for stability after decades of struggling to maintain power beyond isolated, crisis-ridden terms.

Regardless of whether fraud allegations gain traction, what is clear is that Ecuador has become the first domino to fall in the region under the renewed influence of Trumpism in Latin America. Trump’s return to the White House has emboldened repressive tactics, legitimized political blackmail, and is likely to impact upcoming elections across the region.

Ecuador is now emerging as a regional laboratory for rapprochement with Trump’s political style: the politics of spectacle (exemplified by the May 2024 “mano dura” referendum) and alliances with controversial actors like Erik Prince. Although there is no evidence of massive fraud, the election results reveal how Trumpism can influence democratic processes.

According to his campaign promises, Noboa’s next step will likely be to reform the 2008 constitution, drafted during the Correa administration, which will surely provoke confrontation. Already, the president has articulated plans to authorize foreign military bases, in the country — expressly prohibited under the current constitution — and to toughen criminal penalties.

But resistance is already coalescing. At the end of March, the RC and CONAIE declared their opposition to constitutional changes that would “restrict the rights of nature or violate the social achievements gained by Indigenous, Black, Cholo, and Montubio peoples.” The movements are concerned that the plurinational and intercultural nature of the current Constitution will be eradicated.

The looming question is whether these forces will clash violently or force a tense coexistence. Meanwhile, Ecuador navigates turbulent waters: between the shadow of a new authoritarianism and the memory of its powerful social movement.

Ociel Alí López is a sociologist and winner of the Clacso-Sida award for young researchers and the Caracas municipal literature award. He is a professor at the Central University of Venezuela and writes about Latin America.

Ecuador: How militarization and fear politics secured the right’s victory


First published in Spanish at Nueva Sociedad. Translation by Adam Novak for Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières.

Daniel Noboa, 37-year-old son of banana magnate Álvaro Noboa, won the second round of elections on 13 April with 55.6% of votes against Luisa González’s 44%. It was a peculiar election in which the Correísta candidate [supporter of former president Rafael Correa] barely gained any additional votes in the second round, which fuelled suspicions about the election. While González alleged fraud, figures from her own political group accepted the electoral result.

Noboa came to power in November 2023 for a year and a half to complete Guillermo Lasso’s term, who had to leave office early. Lasso activated the so-called “crossed death” mechanism to dissolve Parliament and call elections — both legislative and presidential — to avoid an impending impeachment process. Noboa, amid uncontrolled growth of organised crime, encroached upon the rule of law and resorted to a “firm hand” approach and militarisation, in a situation marked by an energy crisis and governmental inefficiency.

Nueva Sociedad asked three prominent analysts for their opinions on the elections and what the results portend for the political future and the fate of democracy. Franklin Ramírez Gallegos is a sociologist and professor-researcher at the Department of Political Studies at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO)-Ecuador; Augusto Barrera Guarderas holds a doctorate in Political Science, Administration and International Relations from the Complutense University of Madrid. He was mayor of the Metropolitan District of Quito between 2009 and 2014 and currently serves as a professor at the Pontifical Catholic University of Ecuador (PUCE). Pablo Ospina Peralta is a lecturer at Simón Bolívar Andean University, researcher at the Ecuadorian Institute of Studies and activist with the Experience, Faith and Politics Commission.

How do you explain the surprising margin in favour of Daniel Noboa in the second round?

Augusto Barrera Guarderas: The overall electoral process, beyond the voting exercise and vote counting, was marked by a series of irregularities. The electoral observers’ report itself highlights the lack of clarity in the president-candidate roles that blurred “the boundaries between the roles and created an imbalance in the competitive conditions”. To reach this legal ambiguity, Daniel Noboa confronted his own vice president, Verónica Abad, preventing her from occupying the presidency during the electoral campaign, as established by the Constitution. At the same time, he openly used public resources through a last-minute bonanza of subsidies that will cost the treasury nearly 600 million dollars and, in the final days, had state officials wear his party colours in an enormous territorial mobilisation effort. Given this and more, the process occurred on an uneven playing field made possible by the permissiveness and complicity of the media and institutional apparatus.

Having acknowledged this, it is unlikely that electoral fraud with manipulation of votes, tallies and ballot boxes was executed. While this has been Luisa González and Rafael Correa’s position so far, many local authorities from Revolución Ciudadana, such as Quito Mayor Pabel Muñoz and Pichincha Prefect Paola Pabón, have already distanced themselves from this accusation, which will have little traction. To date (16 April), there is no formal challenge to the National Electoral Council (CNE).

This means that this surprising result of an 11-point difference (55.6% to 44.4%) does indeed reflect the population’s decision. To understand the electoral evolution, from the virtual technical tie at 44% in the first round, Noboa gained 1,283,433 votes, almost everything that was in dispute, while González only added about 158,000, almost ten times less. This difference of nearly one million votes comes from an increase in Quito and Guayaquil (half a million votes), followed by growth in the central-southern highlands (Cotopaxi, Chimborazo, Tungurahua and Azuay).

None of the polling companies or exit polls showed a difference of this magnitude, but a detailed analysis reveals that while Luisa González’s vote reached its ceiling in the first round, capitalising on the terrible government management, Noboa’s political, media and institutional operation was more efficient in capturing almost everything still up for grabs.

Franklin Ramírez Gallegos: The final picture of the 2025 runoff was unexpected and implausible. It is still necessary to study in depth, with a focus on each territory, what reconfigurations of preferences and vote transfers occurred in the last weeks and days. This is particularly important because all public opinion research agencies — and even the two exit polls on election Sunday — gave a distance of 1 or 2 points in favour of one candidate or the other (with even greater options for Luisa González throughout the campaign and even hours before the election). None anticipated the final margin favouring Daniel Noboa.

The elections began, in late 2024, with the disqualification of Jan Topić, a right-wing pre-candidate whose agenda monotonously focused on security. Topić was one of the most threatening rivals to Noboa’s candidacy, and his presence on the ballot would probably have changed the story we know today. The entire electoral institutional framework is co-opted by the executive power. The Electoral Disputes Tribunal, which resolved this disqualification (as also happened with Pachakutik’s list of assembly members), also intervened to suspend the political rights of Vice President Verónica Abad (who should have substituted Noboa if he had requested a campaign leave of absence) and ignored complaints against the president and leaders of his movement for using public resources in the campaign and for campaigning whilst being public officials. It has also enabled proceedings against opposition politicians. The most emblematic case, still ongoing, is the initiative to try to revoke the mayor of Quito, Pabel Muñoz, from Revolución Ciudadana, accused of campaigning in 2023 whilst performing his duties. Just as Noboa does now. The president has placed himself above all electoral regulations and various constitutional principles (for example, he should have requested leave and did not do so) throughout the campaign.

The electoral institutions did not place any limits on him. Rather, they restricted rights — use of mobile phones for electoral monitoring on election day — and supported arbitrary last-minute decisions (state of exception, prohibition of entry to foreigners, change of polling station locations, unusual presence of the armed forces in the process, cancellation of the vote for Ecuadorians residing in Venezuela, among others). The implementation of seven social subsidies (for 560 million dollars) in the last two months, as a clientelist lever, has not even been observed by the electoral authorities.

In short, the 2025 elections were the most unequal and opaque since the return to democracy and disproportionately favoured the president-candidate. Doubts about the results must be understood in light of the fraudulent nature of the entire process. It is clear that Luisa González — whom Revolución Ciudadana itself has been leaving alone in the denunciation of fraud — requires a more consistent “theory of fraud” for her demand for a vote recount to carry weight, but it is also clear that the competition did not take place with minimal conditions of fairness and transparency. Rigged elections do not give democratic legitimacy to those who win. They only affirm abusive power.

Pablo Ospina Peralta: It is very unusual that in a second round, with 1,200,000 votes in play, 1,100,000 would opt for one candidate and only 100,000 for the other. It’s odd. But, at the same time, there is no material evidence of fraud. González’s party deployed more than 40,000 observers to polling stations across the country, and only a few questionable tallies have been presented. Under these conditions, fraud of such magnitude is only conceivable through manipulation of the computer system when aggregating the tallies and adding up their results. Revolución Ciudadana has a councillor on the National Electoral Council, who has not made any complaint or statement in support of the fraud allegations. It seems difficult to accept the fraud thesis solely because the results are surprising, without any direct evidence.

What do Daniel Noboa and Luisa González’s campaigns tell us about the political-ideological confrontation in the country?

Augusto Barrera Guarderas: Electoral campaigns have undergone a radical transformation. Far from being spaces for debate about national projects, they have adopted commercial marketing logic. This trend manifests in the personalisation of leadership, the “emotionalisation” of discourse, the digital segmentation of messages, and the disappearance of programmatic platforms. Ecuador’s last electoral campaign does not escape this global trend.

After the impact of the first security measures (declaration of “internal armed conflict”) that raised government approval, in the months immediately preceding the election, Noboa’s popularity was declining. The lack of results in security, the handling of the energy crisis — with recurrent power cuts — poor governmental performance and some arbitrary actions foresaw the possibility of a victory for Luisa González.

But this perception was transformed during the runoff campaign. On one hand, the omnipresence of security in public debate almost immediately led to legitimising proposals for a heavy hand and penal populism, while invisibilising any other programmatic aspect or even a different approach to insecurity. At the same time, several weak points in Luisa González’s campaign were amplified: the spectre of abandoning dollarisation (which Ecuador adopted 25 years ago), the proposal of “peace managers” in neighbourhoods — which the government compared to Chavista collectives — or the contradictory position of recognising Nicolás Maduro while threatening to expel Venezuelan immigrants, to which was added doubt about Rafael Correa’s guardianship over her presidency. The social debate was shifting from the deficiencies of Noboa’s government to a new version of the Correísmo-anti-Correísmo divide.

While Noboa increasingly clearly expressed an organic agreement of all power sectors to prevent the arrival of Correísmo, the main initiative of Revolución Ciudadana was to sign an agreement for the unity of the left. Although this is undoubtedly an important step that hopefully will have continuity, the unity was processed with and by the leaderships in dubiously participatory situations and with the opposition of several of its members. It is very difficult to think that the distrust and resentment accumulated and amplified over years will disappear without sincere and clear pedagogy from the main leaders, who were conspicuously absent at decisive moments, and without a truly shared horizon. Without these attributes that require time and will, unity did not have a positive electoral effect. Rather than adhesions, it produced reactions fuelled by fear of chaos and violence, enhanced by a long campaign of stigmatisation against indigenous and social leaders that has penetrated the imagination of urban sectors, including middle and popular classes.

It should also be noted that there was a significant difference in the territorial depth of the campaigns. While Noboa mobilised the entire state apparatus in an activism never seen in his administration and achieved alliances with local authorities, leaders and strongmen, Revolución Ciudadana could not build a territorial expansion strategy. The results show the scarce increase in voting across practically the entire country.

The highly conservative and “securitised” context in which society operates imposes limits on the ability to formulate and think of solutions. The presidential debate and social climate was one of attacks, disqualifications, extreme polarisation, and fake news. And thus, with fear installed, the dichotomy of good versus evil, order versus chaos, freedom versus oppression was constructed.

Franklin Ramírez Gallegos: More than the campaigns themselves — which generally moved along the coordinates of the “anti” (anti-Noboism / anti-Correísmo) — the way in which political blocs and alliances were configured relatively clearly delineated the terrain of ideological combat. In particular, the way Leonidas Iza and the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE) approached the construction of a collective position of support for Luisa González as a unitary dynamic of the left against Noboa’s “neofascist right” was key — which, nevertheless, did not eliminate mutual distrust. In doing so, Iza highlighted the difference between the indigenous movement and Correísmo, but radically distanced his supporters from any support for Noboa. “Not a single vote for the right”, “the null vote is not viable”. The resolution, constructed in successive Plurinational Assemblies of the movement, brought forces such as the Socialist Party and social organisations (peasants, anti-mining, environmentalists, communal, Afro-descendants, feminists, neighbourhood, trade unions, etc.) closer to the thesis of support for Luisa González.

Such convergence establishes a turning point in the trenches that have bifurcated Correísmo from the rest of the left. González’s direct involvement in the “unity” seems to have been decisive in its more or less well-achieved final staging—criticism of Iza from various indigenous organisations was not scarce for his support of the Correísta candidate.

Iza’s allusion to the “neofascist moment” of the right is linked to the “internal war” that Noboa declared in January 2024 amid the growing wave of national violence. Since then, cases of forced disappearance, false positives, extrajudicial executions, forced displacements, etc., have multiplied, not only as an effect of gang violence but of the militarisation of public security itself. The issue of human rights is again placed at the centre of the dispute. The case of the murders of the “four [Afro-descendant adolescents] of Las Malvinas”, after being detained by a military patrol, had a long impact on the popular field. Thus, it is not just about confronting the “neoliberal oligarchic right” of always. The overflow of state violence requires — that was the interpretation — the broadest political unity. Noboa did not make the slightest gesture of disturbance at the complaints against his “internal war”. In the campaign, he exacerbated the war agenda by announcing contracts with foreign mercenaries, American military bases, and agreements with Trump in this regard. The support of the armed forces for the president throughout the campaign draws the axis of the power bloc in the years to come. The “war on narco-terrorism” is the great discursive innovation of the Ecuadorian right amid the inertia of its neoliberal and anti-leftist (or anti-Correísta) ideological platform. The majorities have made this framework their own and see no other way to address security problems than by redoubling cruelty and violence against “evil”. Human rights, in this logic, are part of the enemy to be overcome.

In the advance of this frontier of power and war ideology, it can be seen that the results of 13 April concern not only a specific defeat of Revolución Ciudadana but are a blow to the whole of the left and the popular plurinational field that, in an unprecedented way, converged in these elections. At the forefront of denouncing the militarisation of the country have been Afro-Ecuadorian collectives, neighbourhood organisations, communal, human rights, and families and women of victims and prisoners. This organisational fabric also experiences the outcome of the runoff as a defeat. One arm of the government campaign explicitly proselytised by mocking human rights.

Pablo Ospina Peralta: In practice, both candidacies came very close in their specific programmatic proposals. Both promised a Constituent Assembly to ensure control of the rest of the state institutions and to reform the uncomfortable innovations of the Montecristi Constitution (2008). They competed to convince that their hand would be firmer and their trigger easier against crime. Noboa summoned a foreign mercenary, Erik Prince, to solve his credibility problems; González got the last-minute support of Jan Topić, a presidential candidate in 2023, whose letter of introduction was having been a mercenary in several wars. González promised greater social sensitivity and better professional competence in compensation and social containment policies, instead of de-institutionalised assistance deliveries of subsidies, medical aid and tariff reductions. González committed to reducing the Value Added Tax, raised by Noboa, from 15% to 12%. Both promised to continue promoting large-scale metal mining, which has generated so much opposition in communities harmed by extractivism. In international politics, one promised to recognise Nicolás Maduro’s regime, while the other to approach and beg for the leftovers of Donald Trump’s policy. The differences were magnified by each side as if Stalinism were facing Mussolinism.

Are we facing an authoritarian regime?

Augusto Barrera Guarderas: A trend towards a deteriorated form of democracy with authoritarian profiles is observed. There are several factors that push to exceed the tenuous line of the rule of law (states of exception, partisan use of justice institutions, including electoral ones, etc.).

These decisions are justified by the need to confront violence and insecurity; this social climate grants a carte blanche to push increasingly towards an authoritarian state. But at the same time, there is a certain media-institutional complicity to confront Correísmo and by extension any form of popular response or alternative. In this circle of terror, republican institutions are weakening.

We must not forget that Noboa’s re-election expresses the concentration of economic and political power with family overtones that announces a form of oligarchic regime. The campaign and the government’s own spokespersons have very few substantive contents that allow identifying the vision of the country proposed by the re-elected president. We will have to follow closely whether this authoritarian perspective will deepen or some form of management with institutional overtones will open up.

Franklin Ramírez Gallegos: Shortly before the second round, Noboa’s government made public its refusal to comply with a ruling from the Constitutional Court that ordered the formation of an “Interinstitutional Commission for coordination, planning and implementation of structural measures against violence and organised crime”. This is a technical mechanism to “overcome problems of violence through the ordinary constitutional regime”. The Court’s resolution, the highest instance in terms of interpretation of the Magna Carta, is of “obligatory and immediate” compliance and implies an open criticism of the government’s security policy while casting doubt on the arbitrary use of states of exception throughout the last year. But Noboa has completely ignored the Court. The country of militarisation and the permanent state of exception constitutes a propitious ground for violations of basic political freedoms and human rights and for directing a despotic relationship with society.

Just as in the contempt for the Constitutional Court, the configuration of an autocratic will that imposes itself on institutions has been constitutive of the government’s political game as its attachment to the “internal war” deepens. It has even come to order the issuance of previously vetoed and archived norms by the National Assembly.

The high courts, including the Constitutional one, have been collaborating with this democratic erosion by delaying the resolution of complex cases or pronouncing themselves ambivalently about decisions that violate rights. They have played power balances — with considerations and fears towards the president — and not the necessary respect for the constitutional order. Noboa’s wide electoral victory, still under discussion, could encourage the government’s greater authoritarian disposition. The democratic index recently published by The Economist already places 2023 and 2024 as the years of greatest deterioration of democracy in Ecuador since the measurement exists (2006).

Pablo Ospina Peralta: The entire global, regional and local environment pushes towards the demand for order at any price. Fear, uncertainty and, very especially, fear of rampant crime with figures of organised criminality unknown in Ecuadorian history, create a real danger. There is also in Ecuador a social and cultural conservatism, sensitive to religious propaganda, which takes up topics of daily life, such as abortion, adoption by homosexual couples or the corruption of traditional values, to use them politically. But Noboa has not emphasised this yet.

The centre of his authoritarianism lies in giving freedom and impunity to police and military forces against organised crime, regardless of the means or collateral victims. He even promised pardons to police for future operations. His contempt for liberal institutions and legality has not yet exceeded the limits of a country without respectable institutions respected by no one. This does not mean he cannot continue pushing the boundaries of what is acceptable. Now, recognising the danger, Daniel Noboa’s government has shown enough incompetence, indolence and lack of professionalism to doubt his political ability to forge a stable hegemony of the style and duration of Uribism in Colombia or Fujimorism in Peru.

What scenario opens up based on the electoral results?

Augusto Barrera Guarderas: The president has said that it is a triumph of good over evil, but at the same time his Government Minister, José de la Gasca, has called for unity and reconciliation. Despite these uncertainties, it is clear that Ecuador’s international alignment in the new axis of the global right will deepen and a security logic based on military and police deployment will be maintained.

In the first hours after Noboa’s electoral triumph, there is euphoria from business and financial groups that have positioned two demands: to resume the adjustment of the State and, especially, to convene a Constituent Assembly.

Although there are very serious institutional imbalances, such as the institutional chaos of the Council for Citizen Participation and Social Control (CPCCS), the idea espoused by these sectors is to transfer this political electoral triumph to the arena of constitutional rules in core aspects such as rights, labour flexibility, privatisations and the development regime. This will be one of the crucial battles amid the worsening bleeding of the country, unemployment, the increase in poverty.

For Revolución Ciudadana and for a good part of the left, it is a harsh political defeat. But there are still no indications of whether this will cause substantial reorientations. In any case, it is clear that a new period opens for which it will be necessary to rethink the forms of political and social action and articulation of the popular field and its political and social organisations. There is a weakening of the social fabric and the internal war deepens distrust in institutions and people. It seems essential to make a great effort to reconnect with society that oxygenates and renews the political capacity to face the complex path that the country will have to travel. In a way, a cycle also closes that could open opportunities to reconfigure in a broad and democratic way a field for the left.

Franklin Ramírez Gallegos: We can expect a deepening of the coordinates of the “internal war” as the main axis of state action against the advance of drug trafficking and the power of criminal gangs in the territory. Violence will continue to operate as the main social regulator (with fear as a political resource) and lever for sustaining the paths of accumulation and control of resistance. The maintenance of this strategy will restrict the rest of state action both in terms of promoting national development and sustainable social protection policies. The budgetary imbalances are serious—even more so after the millionaire official campaign with treasury resources — and the dynamics of indebtedness and austerity will be reactivated. In short, internal war, financialisation — the monitoring and surveillance mechanisms of the colossal money laundering in the national banking and tax havens will continue to be relaxed — and the relaunching of the neoliberal package (privatisations, labour flexibility, investment treaties), all in conditions of greater democratic erosion (or open autocratisation), reinforcement of the civic-military axis and expansion of the precariousness and sacrifice zones of the poor and racialised.

A good part of the pending structural reforms may be resolved in a Constituent Assembly that the government plans to convene in the coming months. That was one of its campaign promises, although its roadmap and the place it may have in Noboa’s project are not very clear. The reinforcement of power obtained from his recent re-election could ensure the necessary institutional coverage to process the reforms he arranges — the only point of institutional counter-power would reside, eventually, in the National Assembly if the Revolución Ciudadana-Pachakutik agreement is maintained — without going through a process of constitutional replacement. The installation of an Assembly can be very costly for a government with no talent for deliberation and political negotiation.

It is likely, in any case, that a Constituent Assembly will end up serving as a mechanism of political endorsement that allows Noboa to gain time to configure something like a national project — a concept historically elusive for the country’s oligarchic right—which he now completely lacks. Said project, however, would continue along the lines of the state counter-reform that anti-Correísmo has pushed since 2018 under three different governments. To be brief, it would be the inverse mirror of the Constitution approved in 2008 during the beginning of the Revolución Ciudadana government. Particular bitterness would be situated towards guaranteeism, plurinationality, the active role of the State in development planning and market control, the locks on privatisations in strategic sectors and the possibility of locating military bases on national soil, social rights, the rights of nature and the participatory mechanisms contemplated therein. Both in the face of the acceleration of the war policy and a possible constituent assembly, it seems fundamental that the still incipient and fragile bet on the unity of the popular field can mature and take more robust forms going forward. The social, communal, territorial fabric requires minimal political-democratic safeguards to sustain its dynamics of resistance, care and reproduction amidst violence and state desertion. All this demands reflection, self-criticism and capacity for political innovation in the space of the left.

Pablo Ospina Peralta: The impression that the electoral result gives is that the Ecuadorian people may be aware of the government’s blunders and errors, but still consider it “new”, “young” and that “it can learn”. A year and a half was deemed too little for a definitive judgment. The electorate decided to extend the trial period for four more years. Above all, this leniency was possible because the Correísta alternative was unable either to differentiate itself sufficiently or to shake off its dead weights from the past. Anti-Correísmo is still very much alive, especially in the Sierra and the Amazon, traditional bastions of the Ecuadorian left and centre-left. The possible scenarios seem to be two. Leveraged in the search for order at any price, Noboa seeks to build a popularity similar to that of Nayib Bukele, which allows him to implement an agenda of economic liberalisation and reduction of the size of the State to its most minuscule and welfare forms. The path of Fujimori. The second scenario is the gradual and irremediable wear and tear of a useless government, which despite its stagings is failing in a war against drug trafficking that no one has ever won anywhere, and which takes advantage of what time it has left for the looting of public goods.

The nightmare will end in four years, giving way to a new uncertainty, similar to the uncertainties of the Peruvian political system, without parties worthy of the name, with a political letterhead that replaces the next one without trajectory or future. On the opposition side, Correísmo is mired in paralysis: this result has convinced friends and enemies that it cannot exceed its ceiling, neither against organic representatives of the business community, like Guillermo Lasso, nor against inept governments, like Noboa’s. The burden of Rafael Correa’s living heritage is genuinely paralysing: without him, Revolución Ciudadana is nothing; with him, it cannot win a second round. Besides any right-wing formula or new outsiders, only the structure of the indigenous movement remains, as refuge and expectation. Beyond all its limitations, it preserves a structure, prestige and moral reserve. It is an authentic social movement. It had an opportunity between 2021 and 2023. It wasted it. Perhaps it is not too naive to dream that it might have another.

 

Capitalism and authoritarianism in Maduro’s Venezuela


Published 

President of Venezuela Nicolás Maduro during a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on September 25, 2019.

First published at New Labor Forum.

On January 10, 2025, Nicolás Maduro began his third six-year presidential term in Venezuela, proclaiming during his inauguration, “I have never been, nor will I ever be, president of the oligarchies, of the richest families, of supremacists, or of imperialists. I have one ruler: the common people.”1 Maduro’s rhetoric, alongside his ability to withstand years of U.S. attempts to overthrow him, has garnered him significant support from the global left. First elected in 2013 after his predecessor Hugo Chavez died in office, Maduro also benefits from his association with Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution, which at its height (2003-2011) facilitated a 30 percent reduction in poverty, a 71 percent decline in extreme poverty, a steep drop in inequality (with Venezuela’s Gini coefficient [a statistical measure of inequality within a population] falling from 0.5 to 0.4), and an impressive if contradictory process of popular empowerment.2 Noted leftists like Vijay Prashad, Manolo De Los Santos, and Podemos co-founder Juan Carlos Monedero defend Maduro as democratic, revolutionary, and anti-imperialist.3 Other leftists, such as Steve Ellner, have similarly defended Maduro, albeit with caveats.4 Is such a defense merited? Is Maduro an anti-imperialist revolutionary with democratic legitimacy?

Close analysis of Maduro’s actions shows there is no warrant for this view. In fact, Maduro’s rule has been characterized by the consolidation of an increasingly repressive form of authoritarianism and predatory capitalism. Maduro’s authoritarianism has garnered significant attention, as has the humanitarian crisis that he has presided over for the last decade. There has been less notice of the transformation in Maduro’s class base, away from workers and popular sectors and toward capital. Maduro’s foreign policy continues to exhibit traces of anti-imperialism, but even this is highly limited. This has caused much, but not all, of the left to distance itself from Maduro in the Global North, Latin America, and in Venezuela. 

This article proceeds in three parts. Part 1 examines Maduro’s consolidation of authoritarian rule, aspects of which have been justified as necessary to defend the gains of the Bolivarian Revolution. Part 2 shows the shortcomings of this position by delineating the rise of predatory capitalism under Maduro. Part 3 reflects on the broader lessons of this case. 

Consolidating authoritarianism 

While Maduro continues to be seen as democratically legitimate by a surprisingly large contingent of the Global Left, the evidence of Venezuela’s authoritarian turn under Maduro is overwhelming. This turn largely followed 2015 parliamentary elections, in which the opposition to the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela won a two-thirds supermajority. Rather than dealing with Venezuela’s deepening economic crisis (which commenced in 2013 and was marked by years of negative growth, widespread shortages, and increasing immiseration of the population), the opposition-controlled National Assembly, Venezuela’s sole legislative body, focused its efforts on removing Maduro from office, including through a recall referendum. The National Electoral Council, which oversees elections, suspended the drive to hold the referendum in October 2016 and shortly thereafter postponed gubernatorial elections scheduled for December until 2017. In March 2017, Venezuela’s Supreme Court — which like the electoral council is beholden to Maduro — dissolved the National Assembly, prompting months of often-violent protests, which left dozens of protesters and state security forces dead. The three leading opposition candidates were banned from running in the 2018 presidential election, with the U.S. sanctioning the remaining leading opposition candidate, Henri Falcon, a former Chavista whom many felt could have defeated Maduro had the opposition united behind his candidacy instead of largely boycotting the election. Maduro prevailed but in conditions that were clearly far from being “free and fair” due to Maduro’s and U.S. actions, for example, imposing punishing sanctions on Venezuela’s international financial transactions in August 2017, marking the beginning of President Donald Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign to remove Maduro. 

Maduro faced and overcame a new set of challenges beginning in 2019, when U.S.-backed opposition leader Juan Guaidó declared himself president in a move closely coordinated with the U.S. government, which recognized Guaidó immediately and imposed sanctions on oil (with the intent of pressuring Maduro to resign). Guaidó, a member of his mentor Leopoldo López’s far-right opposition party Voluntad Popular, initially enjoyed the support of over 60 percent of Venezuelans,5 but this faded as Guaidó tried a series of increasingly desperate moves, including a failed attempt to incite a military coup in April 2019, and supporting and partially funding a comically ineffective maritime invasion of Venezuela by U.S. mercenaries in May 2020. During the period of Guaidó’s “interim government” Maduro faced even more debilitating sanctions, escalating an outmigration that, as of early 2025, has reached nearly eight million, a quarter of the population. 

Guaidó’s failure led the opposition to pursue a new strategy in the July 2024 presidential election. Biden eased U.S. sanctions in 2023 in exchange for Maduro’s promise to allow robust opposition participation in the 2024 election. Far-right politician María Corina Machado easily won an October 2023 primary but was banned from holding office (and thus from running in the election) due to her support of U.S. sanctions as well as allegations of corruption. Biden criticized the ban on Machado and reduced sanctions relief in April 2024. Machado threw her support behind Edmundo González, who became the unified opposition candidate. 

The July 2024 election was largely peaceful but problems emerged soon after polls closed. With just over 80 percent of the vote counted (allegedly), the National Electoral Council declared Maduro the winner, despite the fact that the number of outstanding votes, two million, far exceeded Maduro’s supposed margin of victory of 800,000 votes. The opposition cried foul and gathered evidence in the form of paper ballots seeking to show that González had secured a landslide victory. Maduro’s government claimed that a hacking incident prevented the customary release of voting booth level results and has defied repeated calls from Venezuelans, foreign governments, including the U.S. and former Maduro allies Colombia and Brazil, and innumerable grassroots community groups and human rights organizations, to release detailed electoral results.

The widespread sense that Maduro had stolen the election led to nearly 1,000 protests across the country, mostly in popular-sector barrios. The government responded to the largely peaceful protests with brutal repression, arresting around two thousand protesters (the exact number varies in different reports), particularly in poor barrios.6 This follows a larger pattern of state security forces targeting Venezuela’s barrios, especially men of color living there; this has been interpreted as a form of social control designed to limit popular sector dissent, which tarnishes the government’s image with leftist supporters abroad and because such dissent is threatening, since opposition to Chávez and Maduro had been largely middle class and upper class until recently.

In the weeks before Maduro’s 2025 inauguration, the government launched a new wave of repression, including arresting Enrique Márquez, former vice president of the National Electoral Council and one of the opposition candidates who ran against Maduro in the July 28, 2024 election. The Venezuelan Communist Party and many leftist organizations, including the Popular Democratic Front of which Márquez is a member, denounced his arrest and detention.7

Given its continuing use of leftist and revolutionary rhetoric, the Maduro administration’s actions against Venezuelan leftists are noteworthy. The administration intervened in the Venezuelan Communist Party and attacked other dissident leftist parties that long supported Chavismo (and for years formed part of the Chavista coalition) such as the Tupamaros, the Electoral Movement of the People, and the Fatherland for All party. After the July 2024 election, the Popular Democratic Front, a new formation comprising leftist and moderate parties, was formed. The Front joined the human rights organization Surgentes, the (non-intervened) Communist Party of Venezuela, the Citizens’ Platform in Defense of the Constitution, and the National Independent Autonomous Workers’ Coordinating Committee, in denouncing the wave of repression that often targeted leftist and working-class dissident organizations, unleashed by the Maduro regime in January 2025.8 Alongside the December 2024 formation of Comunes, which self-identifies as “a new political current of the popular left,” this is evidence of increasing left-wing dissent to Maduro’s authoritarianism.9

Leftist analysts like Steve Ellner have offered qualified support for some of Maduro’s repressive actions (particularly against the right), speaking of them in terms of “taking the gloves off.”10 The argument, which is implied in the writings of other pro-Maduro figures, is essentially that Maduro represents a bulwark against U.S. imperialism in Latin America, and offers the best hope for realizing progressive redistribution within Venezuela. Therefore, while it may be regrettable that Maduro has engaged in repression (“taking the gloves off”) this is more or less justified. But a close analysis of Maduro’s economic policy in recent years suggests that this position is without empirical support.

Maduro’s predatory capitalism 

In his 2025 inauguration, Maduro delivered a ninety-minute address to his guests. Notably, only two Latin American presidents, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega and Cuba’s Miguel DíazCanel, were present. Former Maduro allies (turned harsh critics) Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil and Colombia’s Gustavo Petro were notably absent. They strongly criticized the lack of transparency of the 2024 election, though for strategic reasons did not fully break relations with Maduro, unlike fellow leftist Gabriel Boric of Chile (who also denounced him as a dictator). An analysis of Maduro’s address is revealing of how his administration has changed since he first took office, when he spoke fervently of socialism and referenced Hugo Chávez constantly. During his most recent address, there was not a single mention of socialism. Maduro spoke of Chávez only a handful of times and referenced Simón Bolívar an equal and perhaps greater number of times. Maduro spoke of popular movements a few times and portrayed himself as “the worker president.” But one of the most notable and fervent lines of the speech was Maduro’s explicit invitation to the capitalist class to work with his administration: “I would like to send a very clear message to all the businessmen and businesswomen of Venezuela, to all the entrepreneurs, to all those dedicated to trade and economic activity: we have the plan, we’ve laid the foundations, we’ve had great successes in growth, and we should unify ourselves more and more, so that Venezuela continues its path of recovery and the construction of a new economic model. Count on me, entrepreneurs. I count on you.” Fervent applause followed.11

Maduro’s rhetorical shift, away from socialism and toward private business, is no accident but reflects the clear transformation of his class base and economic project over the last decade. When he took office in 2013, Maduro pledged to continue Chávez’s project of “socialism of the twenty-first century.” While vague and contradictory, this project was in essence a blend of social democracy and left populism in which the government made pro-poor spending a priority. Business was hardly sidelined during Chávez’s time in office, but his policies succeeded in making Venezuela the most equal country in Latin America by the time of his death.

Maduro was hit with multiple crises after taking office, with the price of oil plunging in 2014 and opposition protests demanding his ouster taking place that year. Growth slowed markedly in 2013, and from 2014 to 2022, Venezuela experienced a profound economic crisis that destroyed over three-fourths of the economy. At least three factors contributed decisively to this crisis: the country’s continuing dependence on oil; the maintenance of a highly flawed currency policy, first established in 2003 by Chávez and only ended in 2019; and U.S. sanctions, particularly under Trump from 2017 on.

Maduro’s response to the crisis was an attempt to engineer what Luis Bonilla-Molina calls an “inter-bourgeois pact” bringing together the “old” and “new” bourgeoisie.12 The old bourgeoisie refers to businesses aligned with the opposition during the Chávez years, with the major business association, Fedecamaras, playing a leading role in the 2002 coup that briefly removed Chávez from office. This old bourgeoisie vociferously opposed Chávez’s populist redistribution and sought to roll back the clock to the pre-Chávez order. The new bourgeoisie refers to the state-aligned businesses (a mixture of private and state-owned enterprises), the so-called “Bolivarian bourgeoisie” that benefited from Chávez’s policies. Many of these businesses were linked to imports and the military and benefited from the aforementioned dysfunctional currency system, which allowed an estimated hundreds of billions of U.S. dollars to be siphoned from government coffers. In 2013, officials estimated up to 40 percent of funds (totaling 15 million USD) allocated through Venezuela’s currency system, known as CADIVI, went to shell companies. Former Chávez officials estimated that more than 300 billion USD was siphoned off through the currency system. Businesses favored by the state also benefited from the massive state spending, on infrastructure and domestic consumption of imported goods, facilitated by the 2003-2014 oil boom.13

The combination of the end of the oil boom and U.S. sanctions under Trump — which limited Venezuela’s ability to access finance and devasted oil production — pushed Maduro toward an inter-bourgeois pact. In August 2017, Trump issued an order prohibiting Venezuela from borrowing in U.S. financial markets. While this was part of a broad regime change effort, the official position was that it was done to pressure Venezuela to show greater respect for human rights.14 In January 2019, Trump sanctioned Venezuela’s oil industry directly in a blatant bid to push Maduro out.

Maduro’s efforts to engineer an inter-bourgeois pact appeared to have worked by the time of the 5 July 2024 presidential election. This can be seen by the fact that Fedecámaras has not supported Edmundo González since the stolen 2024 election — a notable contrast from its support for an unconstitutional coup against democratically elected Chávez in 2002.15 To address the country’s crisis, Maduro implemented an orthodox adjustment plan beginning in 2018. This plan led to huge cuts in public spending and the decimation of wages, and in recent years, the privatization of numerous state-owned enterprises.

This went hand in hand with a weakening of labor protections. In the Chávez and Maduro years, there have been three labor federations: the Workers’ Confederation of Venezuela, which is pro-opposition and supported the 2002 coup; the National Union of Workers, formed in 2003 to support the government and which was divided between more autonomist and more pro-government factions; and the explicitly pro-government Bolivarian Workers’ Central, which formed in 2011 and has consistently supported government policies.16 All three federations have lost mobilizational capacity over time. There have been various attempts at more autonomist labor organizing but none have overcome the polarization and party-driven nature of unions that have characterized Venezuela for decades. More autonomous unions have protested Maduro’s neoliberal turn, eliciting fierce repression, with the Venezuelan NGO Provea finding that Maduro has arrested 120 union leaders and threatened three thousand four hundred since coming to office in 2013.17

Maduro’s repression of labor has facilitated his alliance with capital. Following an order issued in 2018, the 

government has banned strikes, the presentation of demands, the right of the working class to mobilise, the organisation and legalisation of new unions, while prosecuting and sending to prison union leaders who question internal practices in companies, or simply ask for a pay rise and health insurance.18

In a statement in December 2024, Comunes wrote, 

The government’s authoritarianism goes hand-in-hand with its decision to hand Venezuela over to the interests of national and international capital. It no longer has the support of the people, but it does have the support of Fedecámaras, Chevron, the old and new bourgeoisie and numerous shady capitalists out to make a quick fortune in the country. The government needs to do away with democracy and silence protest and resistance in order to impose its ferocious neoliberal package. Amid this process, the social gains achieved under [former president Hugo] Chávez have disappeared.19

During his January 2025 inaugural address, Maduro spoke of a new constitutional reform. Critics see this as an effort to further weaken labor protections and consolidate the government’s alliance with the private sector. Are such moves justified by the desperate situation Venezuela has found itself in over the last decade? Might we think of Maduro’s strategy as a form of revolutionary retreat, as Steve Ellner has suggested, that will prime him to advance again when conditions are more propitious?

There are at least two reasons that this analysis is flawed. First, there is no evidence that Maduro’s strategy of uniting with business has helped the working class and the poor. Widespread protests after the July 2024 election in poor communities indicate Maduro has lost popular-sector Venezuelans’ support to a great extent (though precise details are challenging to collect in the absence of electoral results). Comunes and other grassroots organizations see Maduro and the right-wing opposition as “two sides of the same coin,” arguing that Maduro’s policies are similar to those the right-wing opposition proposes in that both aim to bolster profitability for capitalists but do nothing to address the crisis facing Venezuela’s majority.20 Second, there is a widespread sense that corrupt state officials and business leaders are enriching themselves in a manner that does not help ordinary Venezuelans or develop Venezuela. While a degree of economic growth has been restored in Venezuela, it does not appear to be reaching popular sectors in any real way, but is simply enriching well-connected elites. Maduro has used the alleged threat of fascism and right-wing reaction (that has been a problem in Venezuela for a significant time) to justify draconian policies and broad repression against workers and the left. This repression and his increasing support from business are key to Maduro’s staying power, besides support from Russia and China.

Maduro has clearly failed to bring about a socialist transformation of Venezuela. For this he is hardly responsible, as it would have been nearly impossible to do so under the adverse circumstances he has faced during most of his time in office. But he has not presided over developmentalism in any way. Instead, he has forged a transformation of Venezuela into a predatory state, in which state officials and corrupt business leaders enrich themselves at the expense of the majority.21 Venezuela’s profound economic crisis appears to have passed, aided by Maduro’s alliances with business and the easing of sanctions by Biden. But Maduro’s hardening authoritarianism means that the working class has few if any means of holding the government accountable. In conjunction with U.S. sanctions, Maduro has destroyed the essence of what Chavismo was: a flawed but largely democratic project of bottom-up redistribution and empowerment.

At the time of writing, it appears that President Trump will dramatically increase sanctions on Venezuela and its oil sector yet again, possibly even more than during his first administration. This will cause a severe deterioration of the already precarious living standards of ordinary Venezuelans, an increase in out-migration, including most likely to the United States, and a worsening of the already dire situation for labor and popular organizations in Venezuela. It will also likely lead to a hardening of the repressive nature of the Maduro administration, which has abandoned any real democratic accountability, in its representative and participatory forms, and consolidated a predatory regime that benefits a small elite at the expense of the vast majority.

Gabriel Hetland is associate professor of Latin American Studies and Sociology at SUNY Albany. He is the author of the award-winning book, Democracy on the Ground: Local Politics in Latin America’s Left Turn (Columbia University Press, 2023).

  • 1

    Manolo De Los Santos. “The US Once Again Fails to Impose Its Will on the Venezuelan People,” People’s Dispatch, January 11, 2025, available at https://peoplesdispatch. org/2025/01/11/the-us-once-again-fails-toimpose-its-will-on-the-venezuelan-people/

  • 2

    Gabriel Hetland. Democracy on the Ground: Local Politics in Latin America’s Left Turn. (New York: Columbia University Press 2023):52–53.

  • 3

    Vijay Prashad. 2024. “Venezuela Is a Marvellous Country in Motion: The Thirty Second Newsletter.” Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, August 8, 2024; De Los Santos, “The US Once Again Fails to Impose”; Juan Carlos Monedero, “De dictaduras y frivolidades: Maduro, Venezuela y un poco de purpurina,” Público, January 12, 2025, available at https:// www.publico.es/opinion/dictaduras-frivolidades-maduro-venezuela-poco-purpurina.html.

  • 4

    Steve Ellner and Federico Fuentes, “Prioritising the Struggle Against US Imperialism,” Green Left Weekly, November 7, 2024, available at https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/prioritizing-struggle-against-us-imperialism. [Editor's note: a longer version of this interview can be read at https://links.org.au/prioritising-anti-us-imperialism-maduros-venezuela-and-complexities-critical-solidarity-interview]

  • 5

    Per polling by the reputable Venezuelan firm Datanalisis. Andreina Itriago and Nicole Yapur, “Venezuelan Lawmakers Vote to Remove Juan Hetland 7 Guaidó as Head of Opposition,” Bloomberg. December 22, 2022, available at https://www. bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-22/venezuela-lawmakers-vote-to-remove-guaido-ashead-of-opposition.

  • 6

    According to the Observatorio Venezolano de Conflictividad Social, this repression was particularly concentrated against protests occurring in popular sectors; the Observatory’s report found 80 percent of arrests and state security violence took place in poor barrios. Observatorio Venezolano de Conflictividad Social. “Represion a los pobres en Venezuela,” Report, August 14, 2024, available at https://www. observatoriodeconflictos.org.ve/actualidad/ represion-a-los-pobres-en-venezuela.

  • 7

    The leftist human rights lawyer, María Alejandra Díaz, was also harassed by the government in the leadup to Maduro’s inauguration.

  • 8

    Various, “Statements from the Venezuelan left: End the detentions, forced disappearances and repression!” Links: International Journal of Socialist Renewal, January 9, 2025, available at https://links. org.au/statements-venezuelan-left-end-detentionsforced-disappearances-and-repression.

  • 9

    Comunes, “The Maduro Government and RightWing opposition Are Two Sides of the Same Coin,” Links: International Journal of Socialist Renewal, December 24, 2024, available at https:// links.org.au/comunes-venezuela-maduro-government-and-right-wing-opposition-are-two-sides-same-coin; Comunes issued a January 2025 statement, “Keys to Understanding What Is Happening in Venezuela (Plus Statement: ‘A de facto government is born, let’s organise the rebellion’),” Links: International Journal of Socialist Renewal, January 14, 2025, available at https://links.org.au/comunes-keys-understanding-what-happeningvenezuela-plus-statement-de-facto-government-born-lets. The Statement Notes, “Every left party that stood by Chávez is today under legal investigation or has been intervened, with their rightful political leaderships stripped of their party’s electoral registration. Handpicked impostors imposed by the organs of power are rewarded for taking control of political organisations [sic.] that have a decades-long tradition of struggle.”

  • 10

    Ellner and Fuentes, “Prioritising the Struggle Against US Imperialism.”

  • 11

    Maduro’s speech can be viewed here, available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PiO9xSoxiCs

  • 12

    Luis Bonilla-Molina, “La situación de la clase trabajadora en Venezuela (2013-2024),” 2024, available at https://luisbonillamolina.com/2024/09/22/la-situacion-de-la-clase-trabajadora-en-venezuela-2013-20241/. [Editor's part: Part I and Part IV of this article can be read in English at https://links.org.au/venezuelan-working-class-under-maduro-2013-24-part-i-introduction and  https://links.org.au/venezuelan-working-class-under-maduro-2013-24-part-iv-2024-presidential-elections-and-madurismos.

  • 13

    Alejandro Velasco, “The Many Faces of Chavismo,” NACLA Report on the Americas 2024: (54):1:20-73:62.

  • 14

    Mark Weisbrot and Jeffrey Sachs, Economic Sanctions as Collective Punishment: The Case of Venezuela (Washington, DC: Center for Economic and Policy Research, 2019), p. 7.

  • 15

    Salvador De León, “Maduro’s Constitutional Reform: ‘New Economy,’ Same Objectives,” Links: International Journal of Socialist Renewal, January 19, 2025, available at https:// links.org.au/venezuela-maduros-inaugurationushers-new-cycle-class-struggle-plus-constitutional-reform-new.

  • 16

    Iranzo, Consuelo, 2018. “La triste historia del sindicalismo venezolano en tiempos de revolución: Una aproximación sintética,” Nueva Sociedad 274 / Marzo—Abril.

  • 17

    Posado, Thomas, “Toma de posesión de Maduro: ¿cómo Venezuela se convirtió en un régimen autoritario?” El Grand Continent, January 8, 2025, available at https://legrandcontinent. eu/es/2025/01/08/toma-de-posesion-de-maduro-como-venezuela-se-convirtio-en-un-regimen-autoritario/.

  • 18

    Ana C. Carvalhaes and Luís Bonilla, “The ProMaduro Left Abandons the Workers and People of Venezuela,” International Viewpoint, August 20, 2024, available at https://internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article8641.

  • 19

    Comunes, “The Maduro Government and Right-Wing opposition.”

  • 20

    Comunes, “Comunes issued a January 2025 statement.”

  • 21

    Peter Evans, Embedded Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995).