Venezuela government to launch formal talks with opposition members

The opposition says the aim of the talks is to strengthen the democratic institutions and the electoral system.

2 hours agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleVanessa BuschschlüterLatin America online editor

REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria Jorge Rodríguez, wearing a dark suit and a white shirt and glasses, looks at Dinorah Figuera, who is wearing a navy suit, as they sit on white couches. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria
Jorge Rodríguez, who is representing the government, has already held a meeting with opposition ex-lawmaker Dinorah Figuera

Venezuela’s interim government says it will start holding formal talks with some members of the opposition from 1 August.

The announcement comes just over six months after US troops seized Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan leader at the time, in a dawn raid on the capital, Caracas, and took him to New York to face drug-trafficking charges.

Former Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez, a Maduro loyalist, has been in power since then with the backing of the Trump administration, much to the frustration of the opposition, which had hoped Maduro’s ouster would be followed by a change of government.

An opposition statement said the talks would lay down “a route map towards democracy”.

The plan for formal talks was announced almost simultaneously by a group of opposition politicians on the one hand, and Jorge Rodríguez, who heads the government-controlled National Assembly, on the other.

Jorge Rodríguez, who is the brother of interim president Delcy Rodríguez, cited the devastation created by the recent twin earthquakes which struck the north of Venezuela on 24 June as the reason behind the talks.

At least 4,734 people are already confirmed to have died but the death toll keeps on rising as more bodies are found beneath the rubble.

“Only through unity can we move forward with reconstruction and maintain peace,” Jorge Rodríguez’s brief statement said.

The opposition statement was more detailed and expressly referred to the support the United States has lent since the quakes, which it said showed that “Venezuela is not alone”.

MIGUEL GUTIERREZ/EPA/Shutterstock A person on a motorbike looks at buildings destroyed by earthquakes in Catia La Mar on 14 July 2026. Part of a building lies toppled on the remains of another. Rubble is piling up in the street. MIGUEL GUTIERREZ/EPA/Shutterstock
Many buildings toppled and crumbled under the force of the twin quakes

The opposition group is made up of former lawmakers who were elected to the National Assembly in 2015, the last time opposition parties won a majority in the legislative body.

National Assembly elections held since then have either been boycotted by the opposition or widely dismissed as neither free nor fair, as Maduro and his PSUV party tightened their grip on all branches of government.

The opposition team will be led by Dinorah Figuera, who returned to Venezuela in June after almost eight years in exile.

Upon landing in Caracas, she told reporters that she had travelled to her home country “on invitation from the [US] State Department” with the aim of pushing for the renewal of the National Electoral Council (CNE).

The CNE has been dominated by staunch loyalists of the Maduro government for years.

It was CNE which declared Maduro the winner of the 2024 presidential election even though voting tallies gathered by electoral observers and verified independently showed an overwhelming victory for the opposition candidate, Edmundo González.

In its statement, released on Tuesday, the opposition group said that the priority of the talks would be the strengthening of the democratic institutions and the electoral system, as well as providing guarantees for political participation.

Opposition politicians and those who have expressed criticism of the Maduro government have for years faced persecution.

Many have been jailed and many others have fled into exile.

Despite the release of scores of political prisoners following the ouster of Maduro, 372 remain behind bars, according to a tally by prisoners’ rights group, Foro Penal.

The best-known opposition leader, María Corina Machado, has not yet been able to return to Venezuela after slipping out of the country secretly in November to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for her work promoting democracy.

Despite dedicating her Nobel Prize to US President Donald Trump, his administration now seems to favour Dinorah Figuera over Machado as the person to negotiate a democratic transition in Venezuela.

Machado tried to return to Venezuela shortly after the twin earthquakes but failed to make it into the country.

And while President Trump has denied that his administration blocked her efforts to enter Venezuela, US media had earlier quoted unnamed officials as describing her attempts to return as “potentially disruptive” to the post-earthquake rescue and reconstruction efforts.

Machado has not yet commented on the announcement of the talks but called on the coalition of opposition parties she leads to meet later on Wednesday to discuss it.

Venezuela

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