January 7, 2020
By Mayela Armas and Brian Ellsworth
CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuelan security forces let U.S.-backed
opposition leader Juan Guaido enter the legislative palace on Tuesday
amid a showdown for control of parliament after the ruling socialist
party installed its own rival congressional chief.
Guaido, who was re-elected on Sunday to a second one-year term as
head of the opposition-held congress, had pledged to preside over
Tuesday’s opening session after security forces blocked him from the
building over the weekend to allow socialist legislators to swear in
their own speaker.
Local television images early Tuesday showed Guaido arguing for half
an hour with troops wielding riot shields who again blocked the entrance
to the legislative building, but eventually allowed him to push past
them.
“This is not a barracks. This is the house of laws,” Guaido told the
soldiers blocking his entrance. “The military does not get to decide who
can enter the house of laws.”
But inside, a brief session led by Luis Parra – who was sworn in by
allies of President Nicolas Maduro as parliament chief Sunday – had
already ended, according to Reuters witnesses.
Parra’s swearing in on Sunday gave Maduro sway over the last major
state institution that had remained outside his control and appeared to
mark a setback to Washington’s efforts to unseat him.
The gambit marked an escalation in Maduro’s crackdown on the
opposition, whose key international ally – the Trump administration –
has so far been unsuccessful in its year-long attempt to oust Maduro
through economic sanctions and diplomatic pressure.
U.S. special envoy for Venezuela Elliott Abrams on Monday said
Washington was preparing new sanctions to step up pressure on Caracas.
But Maduro’s move suggests he does not expect major consequences from
the United States, though the government has steered clear of actions –
like arresting Guaido – that could provoke a harsher response.
“We once again handed imperialism a defeat,” socialist party Vice President Diosdado Cabello said on his talk show Monday night.
Parra, who was elected to congress in 2015, had been expelled from
the First Justice opposition party in late 2019 due to corruption
allegations, which he has denied.
Dozens of countries, including the United States, denounced Parra’s
appointment as illegitimate, and said they continued to recognize Guaido
as the parliament’s head and as Venezuela’s rightful president.
On Sunday, after soldiers prevented Guaido from entering parliament,
he held a separate session elsewhere in which 100 lawmakers backed his
bid despite the earlier swearing-in of Parra. The legislature has 167
seats.
‘THE PEOPLE ARE IN CHARGE’
Guaido had vowed to preside over Tuesday’s legislative session
despite what he called Parra’s “parliamentary coup.” Parra has rejected
that description, while saying he wants to end confrontations with
Maduro’s government. “We came to save parliament from destruction,” he
said on Twitter.
After security forces opened the gates to allow him to pass, Guaido
stood in the leadership post and sang the Venezuelan national anthem
with allies. Electricity swiftly went out in the chamber, and state
television – which had broadcast footage of Parra’s session – cut away
from the congress.
“In here, the people are in charge,” lawmakers chanted as Guaido entered.
Guaido was elected head of the congress in January 2019 and invoked
Venezuela’s constitution to assume an interim presidency, denouncing
Maduro as a usurper who had secured re-election in a 2018 vote widely
considered fraudulent.
So far, Maduro has fended off Guaido’s challenge, retaining control
of the armed forces and tightening the noose around opposition
lawmakers. More than 30 of Guaido’s congressional allies are in hiding,
in prison, or in exile.
Guaido has also been losing support as Venezuelans tired with Maduro
lose patience with his floundering movement. It remains to be seen
whether his defiant response to Maduro’s move could galvanize his
supporters, who turned out by the hundreds of thousands to protest
Maduro early last year.
Parra’s new policy agenda focuses on reducing conflict with the
government. Maduro was quick to celebrate his swearing-in, highlighting a
“rebellion” among opposition lawmakers.
Parra said Monday his priority was to set up a new electoral council to preside over free and fair elections.
His brief session included a debate over proposals to tackle
widespread shortages of gasoline. The session began around 10 a.m. and
ended in under an hour.
https://www.oann.com/venezuelas-guaido-readies-for-congress-showdown-after-socialist-takeover/