VENEZUELA’S “Bolivarian” regime is lurching
from authoritarianism to dictatorship. On February 19th it arrested the elected
mayor of metropolitan Caracas, Antonio Ledezma. Then it moved to expel Julio
Borges, a moderate opposition leader, from the National Assembly—a fate already
suffered by his colleague, María Corina Machado, ejected last year. Leopoldo
López, another opposition leader, has been in jail for a year and is now on
trial. Almost half the opposition’s mayors now face legal action. The regime’s
favourite charge to level at hostile politicians is plotting to overthrow the
government, often in conspiracy with the United States. But it is the
president, Nicolás Maduro, who is staging a coup against the last vestiges of
democracy. Venezuelans call it an autogolpe, or “self-coup”. More… Friday, February 27, 2015
A slow-motion coup
VENEZUELA’S “Bolivarian” regime is lurching
from authoritarianism to dictatorship. On February 19th it arrested the elected
mayor of metropolitan Caracas, Antonio Ledezma. Then it moved to expel Julio
Borges, a moderate opposition leader, from the National Assembly—a fate already
suffered by his colleague, María Corina Machado, ejected last year. Leopoldo
López, another opposition leader, has been in jail for a year and is now on
trial. Almost half the opposition’s mayors now face legal action. The regime’s
favourite charge to level at hostile politicians is plotting to overthrow the
government, often in conspiracy with the United States. But it is the
president, Nicolás Maduro, who is staging a coup against the last vestiges of
democracy. Venezuelans call it an autogolpe, or “self-coup”. More…
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