The Daily - Venezuela, After Maduro
Episode Date: January 6, 2026On Monday, President Trump picked Vice President Delcy Rodríguez of Venezuela, now the interim leader, to continue to preside over the country instead of María Corina Machado, the opposition leader....Anatoly Kurmanaev, who reports on Venezuela, explains why Mr. Trump chose a Maduro loyalist to run the country. And Venezuelan citizens reflect on the realities of a post-Maduro era.Guest: Anatoly Kurmanaev, a reporter for The New York Times who covers Venezuela.Background reading: How Mr. Trump fixed on a Maduro loyalist as Venezuela’s new leader.Why he refused to back Ms. Machado.Photo: From left, Gaby Oraa/Reuters; Leonhard Foeger, via ReutersFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
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Discussion (0)
My point is Venezuela and my name is John Rodriguez.
My name is Juan and I'm in Caracas in the capital.
My name is Carolina Hill.
I live near the most important military complex here in Venezuela.
Early January 3rd, it was like 157 a.m.
and I was watching a movie with my sister
and everything went completely dark
and five seconds later, we heard the first explosion.
I ran to the window to take a look at what was going on.
My hands were shaking.
I could only see the light of the moon.
And we could hear the airplanes
and we could hear the helicopters,
but we couldn't see them.
And the walls of my building and the windows were shaking.
I thought now the Ringoes are here.
They are attacking Caracas.
Everybody in the city heard the noises.
I think we were nervous, but at the same time excited,
because we thought they were overthrowing the government.
They were freeing us from the dictatorship.
Like my girlfriend and I were crying and screaming.
I called my mom.
I called my brothers.
Like, I called all my family.
We were waiting for that.
that for years. When Donald Trump put up the picture with Maduro
captured, I am so happy in that moment. Oh my God, man. Honestly, I
cried for that picture. It's finished that. This hell. This felt like a real
victory, like someone in this government that has done so much damage to
my country is going to finally face real justice.
After this attack, we were like, okay, they did it, but what's the meaning of that?
What will come for us?
I mean, what's the next step?
Because, okay, they took Maduro out, but we have Delci, we have Padino Lopez, we have Jorge Rodriguez.
I mean, they are still here.
Other people, government is free.
I am confused the future in Venezuela, really, really is unsentined.
And the people don't know what would happen.
The people are so scared.
It's so scared.
From the New York Times, I'm Natalie Kittrow-F.
This is the Daily.
On Monday, as Nicholas Maduro and his wife, Celia, pleaded not guilty in a Manhattan courtroom,
the nearly 30 million people of Venezuela struggled to absorb the reality of a post-Moduro era.
An era in which the United States appears to be the dominant force reshaping their once firmly anti-American government.
Today, my colleague Anatoly Kermanayev explains why President Trump chose to be
back a Maduro loyalist to run the country?
And what Venezuelans think of it all?
It's Tuesday, January 6th.
Hi, Anatoly, welcome.
It's good to have you here.
Thanks for having me, Natalie.
So in the last couple of days, we at the show have talked about how this operation to capture Nicholas Maduro went down.
we've talked about the legality of it.
What we haven't talked about as much
is who is running Venezuela right now
and how is all of that going to play out?
Because that feels very uncertain in this moment.
You've been in the country,
as this all has been going on,
through the mission itself.
You're in Caracas right now.
So just to start,
how does it feel there?
It feels surreal.
The city is still coming out of Christmas holidays
It's a metropolis of more than four million people, and it's full of lights and decorations.
And I was driving through the city last night, and the city was completely deserted.
You know, there was not a single soul on the streets, no sounds to be made.
It felt like I was in a zombie movie.
And I think it just sums up this atmosphere of expectation, of fear, of concern.
It's just tense.
We have not seen mass signs of jubilation at the fall of Nicholas Maduro.
At the same time, we had not seen any.
genuine mass outpourings of grieving for him and his wife. And this atmosphere of quiet
tension is taking place amid growing signs of repression, of people being detained, of journalists
being harassed, which shows to me that even though this government has a new face, the brutal
repressive apparatus that has kept it in power for decades remains in place and is cracking down
again. It sounds like everyone in Venezuela is just kind of
waiting with bated breath for what's to come.
So let's get into that.
And my first question is, is what we're seeing actually regime change?
Because now that the dust has settled a little bit, it seems as though the regime is actually
still in power in Venezuela.
That's right, Natalie.
The regime is in place.
The people who are no longer here is Maduro and his wife.
and around 80 people have died between his Cuban bodyguards
and Venezuelan civilians, Venezuelan security service members.
But beyond that, we have seen the same cast of characters.
Most of his inner circle is intact.
It is in power and is led by Delce Rodriguez,
known universally as Delci, who was Maduro's vice president,
who was the first in line to replace him under any circumstances.
So the same characters are ruling the country.
Okay. So Delci Rodriguez, the vice president now in power, is someone that Trump has endorsed. The administration says they're going to be working directly with her. And I want to talk about why. Why her? Because honestly, when you and I have talked about this, the most obvious choice for who was going to work with the Trump administration in the event that Maduro was no longer in power was someone else. It was Maria Carina Machado, this famous opposition leader. So explain for me, Anatole.
why it's not Machado and why it's Delci instead?
The short answer is continuity.
Trump wanted to stop the flood of drugs from Venezuela.
He wanted to start of migrants, but above all, he made it very clear he wanted Venezuelan oil.
And Delso Rodriguez has been able to sell herself as a reliable guardian of Venezuela's oil industry,
as a person who can manage Venezuela's resources and protect foreign interests, which in this case
will be American investor interests.
And Machado was not able to sell herself as that figure?
She was not.
And this is perhaps the biggest surprise of this theme.
Machado is by far the most popular politician in the country.
She has led an election campaign in 2024 that has led more than 70% of Venezuelans to vote for the opposition.
And she has won the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts.
She has global recognitions and global respect.
And she comes with impeccable conservative credentials.
She's a daughter of a wealthy industrialist.
She has an impeccable record of supporting free markets, of supporting personal freedom,
supporting Christian faith, all values at the heart of traditional Republican agenda.
But she's a product of a different period of American politics.
And Machado's grave's mistake was not being able to adapt to the transformation that Trump,
has brought to the American right.
What do you mean by that, exactly?
Well, the adjective defines much out or more than anything else is consistency.
She has been extremely consistent to her belief.
She has been extremely consistent in her political agenda.
And this consistency is what brought her to the cost of gaining power in Venezuela during the last elections.
This is the reasons why she has galvanized Venezuelan populations because people believed in her.
They believed in her values.
they believed in what she stood for and that she would defend them, that she would not negotiate
with Maduro, but she would not sell them out. This consistency was at its core. But in the current
transactional Washington of today, this has become a liability. She has not been able to adjust to
a very transactional approach to politics that we see in Washington, a ideologically agnostic approach
to Washington where beliefs and policies are aditched and sacrificed and, you know, and
and adjust it on daily basis to suit the whims of people taking power.
And this has gradually led her to lose allies
and make a growing number of enemies in the Trump administration,
which eventually has contributed to her being sidelined
at this crucial moments in Venezuelan history.
Okay, can you go a little deeper there?
Like, give me examples of how she wasn't able to adjust.
So, for example, when Trump returns to power,
his initial focus on Venezuela is getting,
Americans detained there, out of jail, and back into the United States.
And he sends his envoy.
He sends a man called Richard Grenel, a businessman and former ambassador to Germany, to Caracas,
to negotiate the deal.
And then Grinnell arrives in Caracas.
He reaches out to Machado because she's the representative of Venezuela in a position.
She's seen at the time as representative of American interest.
And he starts a dialogue, he starts a relationship that very quickly goes off the rails.
Because getting Americans out means talking to Maduro's government means negotiating.
Negotiating is an an effema for Maria Carina Machado.
She has argued for decades that freedom is not negotiable, that democracy is not negotiable,
that there can be no compromises.
And that set the stage for a train wreck between Richard Grinnell and Maria Carina Machado,
a clash that has repeated itself over and over throughout the Trump administration,
as she lost natural allies and created new enemies.
You're saying basically Machado is such a purist
that she's totally opposed to any notion of negotiating with Maduro.
And this alienated Trump's lead negotiator in Venezuela
who's there to try to get a deal.
He was there to try to get a deal,
and he's there to get economic deals.
He started negotiating a deal with Maduro's officials
that would see Maduro hand over Venezuelan resources,
in return for him staying in power, at least for the time being.
Again, this goes completely against everything that Machado has stood for.
And over time, in Vermont since the election, as Venezuelan government stopped up a repression,
Machado's movement became increasingly marginalized in Venezuelan political life.
They increasingly had to flee in exile.
Machado herself had to go into hiding.
They have gradually lost touch with what is happening on the streets in Venezuela,
and their uncompromising position meant they have very few contacts inside Venezuela and government.
So then the Trump administration, they have gradually come to realize that the strategies that Machado and her aides were providing to Washington were outdated, were not accurate.
And the intelligence or the assumptions being made by the opposition have proved wrong time and again.
And this has angered officials in the Trump administration that were trying to work out a credible plan of getting Maduro.
out of power. So it sounds like they start to sour on her in part because they don't believe she's
giving valuable intel. And that's despite the fact that, as we know, in recent months, Machada
was really doing everything she could to kind of ingratiate herself with the Trump administration
as they began to dial up the pressure on Maduro. She even dedicated her Nobel Peace Prize to
Trump. I guess all that wasn't enough. All that wasn't enough. And to me, there's a certain tragic
elements of this because this is a politician with impeccable moral credentials.
Machado has built her presidential campaign on the focus on Venezuelan migrants, of reuniting
Venezuelan families, of returning the millions of Venezuelans that have fled the country
from Maduro, bringing them back home. And since Trump took power, she has stopped talking
about Venezuelan migrants because these are the people that Trump was arresting, Trump was
deporting, Trump was jailing in foreign jails where we were tortured. And Machado stayed silent.
As flights into the country were gradually cancelled under American pressure, she stayed silence.
As inflation rose under tightening American sanctions, complicating people's daily life,
she has stayed silent. And this has caused a political capital inside the country. She has sacrificed
a lot of political goodwill that she has built inside Venezuela to please
this one man. She has gone out of her way to praise him. She has published opads saying that Trump is
the greatest defender of freedom in the Western Hemisphere. It was very clear to everyone observing
Venezuela that Machado is speaking to the audience of one and her entire strategy has been on bringing
Trump to her side. And so far, she has failed. You know, Trump said in this big press conference
he gave over the weekend, that Machado just didn't have the support in Venezuela.
So was that actually true based on what you just said?
Credible polling in Venezuela is very limited, but the evidence we have shows that her popular
support has been gradually, very slowly, sipping away from a very high point.
Crucially for Trump, and he says that she doesn't have a respect, he is talking about
respects of the people that would make it possible for her to govern.
And Machado's inflexibility and focused on pressure rather than negotiation has meant that she has lost the support of Venezuela's economic elites that have traditionally supported their position.
And she has not been able to gain the support or the armed forces that she herself has constantly said are crucial to remove in Maduro.
She has, again, to please Trump, she has gone out of a way to mimic his talking point that Venezuela and government is a narco-cortel.
She has mimicked his language that Maduro is flooding United States with drugs and criminals.
And this has meant that for the officers watching her speeches, for the members of the governments, for the people that actually make the state tick and hold the guns, that she was painting them as members of an arco-cortel as part of the problem, as people that need to be eliminated from Venezuela's public life.
and the dissonance between her calls for the armed forces and government employees to rise up against Maduro
and the way she has branded them as members of an anarcho cartel ended up spelling her political downfall
inside the Venezuelan political system.
So, ironically, in order to align herself with Trump, Machado starts saying these things
that actually alienate all these elites within Venezuela that she actually needs to have on
board in order to persuade the Trump administration that she's a viable candidate to run the
country. Is that right? That's right. That's exactly what happened. These are people that have
been in charge for a very long time. And the Trump administration became convinced that to get the
country running quickly, to keep it stable, to keep it from collapsing and sending hundreds of
thousands of migrants to its borders, to keep the oil flowing to the United States to boost that
flow of oil. They needed to work with people who were already in charge.
And that's why we picked Delsey over Maria Karina Machado.
That's the great irony of the current political drama that Delci, despite of her Marxist
roots, despite being the handpick protégé of a person labeled as a narcoterrorist by the United
States, despite playing a crucial part in a repressive machine, the White House has decided that
She is the most likely candidate among the available options to bring Venezuela into the American sphere of influence.
We'll be right back.
Okay, let's talk about Venezuela's new leader, who, as you said, everyone calls Delcy.
She sounds like an unlikely choice for the Trump administration in many ways to support.
Explain who she is and what the Trump administration sees in her.
First and foremost, they see Dalsy as a capable economic manager,
and that reputation that she has earned has come at the end of a very unexpected journey.
She is a daughter of a Marxist gorilla who was torture,
by the security forces
over previous pro-American governments
during the Cold War.
So she comes from a background
of impeccable socialist credentials,
but they also come from money.
And she enjoyed quite a privileged upbringing.
She went to university in France,
and she joined the government,
the current regime under the wings of her older brother
going up in the ranks of the Chavismo government.
And that rise really,
accelerated around 2019, then Venezuela is facing tremendous economic pressure from United States
that had just sanctions its oil industry. The revenues have collapsed. The Maduro government
has struggled to just keep the lights on in the country. And Maduro turns to Delci and basically
tells her to fix it. And what does she do? Does she fix it? She completely re-engineers Venezuela
an economy. She and a group of technocrats allied to her began a process that in a very short
period discarded the socialist tropes that the government had based its legitimacy on for many
years. Price control, currency controls, focus on the needs of Venezuelan poor and turned it
into a free-for-all market economy where money ruled and investment was beyond merit.
It's so interesting that the daughter of a Marxist became this trusted steward of something approaching capitalist reform.
Well, in many ways, Venezuela is an extremely corrupt country, and it is as corrupt today as it was under the nominally socialist principles.
But in terms of actual policies, Delci has turned Venezuela into a radically capital society that there's practically no regulation, that there's practically no regulation,
that there are practically no rules that money is the only variable that governs society
and governs the interaction between the states and the citizens.
But did it work, though?
Like, did it stabilize the economy, which is what Maduro was originally asking for?
It did work and led to a period of moderate growth.
Starting in 2021, the inflation subsided.
People started to open up businesses.
People started to travel more.
the oil production began to gradually edge up.
And remember Natalie that this has all started from a very low base.
We're not talking about Dubai of Latin America.
But we're talking about a country that had suffered a tremendous economic collapse
where millions of lead that people have suffered from malnutrition.
And it gave them a modicum of economic stability.
Okay.
So it sounds like the reforms that Delsey helped engineer,
they didn't bring wealth back on mass.
to Venezuelans, but they did write the economic ship.
They helped stanch the bleeding.
Did that do anything to help the regime standing with Venezuelans?
I mean, obviously, they still voted for the opposition in the last election,
so I would imagine the answer is no, right?
The answer is no, and the elections of 2024 have proven that the government had gone out
of its way to sell itself to Venezuela, and as we as stability, the opposition is
chaos, stick with us, you can live with us, you can breathe with us, and still more than 70%
of Venezuela, including massive proportions of public sector workers, and the poor voted for
the opposition, voted for the candidate of Maria Carina Machado, showing just the scale of exhaustion
and repulsion that this population has against President Maduro.
And what about the elites that we talked about earlier? How do they see Delci in all of this?
Delta's reforms gave them space to grow, gave them space to invest. Again, not talking about massive investments. We're not talking about tremendous growth. We're talking about a climate where people that have money can start making more money. And Machado's message is overhauling this completely. Scrap in this whole system is starting from scratch. And business wants stability and return against Machado's message of radical change.
It's really interesting, right? Because Machado in many ways is a more natural ally of theirs too, right? She comes from this family they probably know this industrialist. She has these impeccable credentials as a free market capitalist. And yet here she's the one with the broad-based popular support who's lost the support of these elites. While Delsey doesn't have that popular support, it sounds like, but she has
one over this group of business titans that is still incredibly influential in this country.
This is a fundamental paradox, Natalie. I could not have summarized it better. And I think all it just
goes to show that economic freedoms do not always correlate with political freedoms. And the reality
is that for Trump, what matters to him is the deals and the investments of the elites. And that
has led him to gradually ally with Delci, the self-style technocrat who would bring him
Venezuelan riches over Marie Karin Machado, who was promising political liberation, but a very
volatile and unstable economic environment.
Okay, so now I think I get why Delci is preferable to Machado in the eyes of Trump.
What I still don't understand, though, is why Delci is preferable to Maduro.
Because you've told us, Anatoly, the few times that you've come on to talk about this,
that Maduro was actually happy to let the U.S. into Venezuela's oil fields,
to give up those natural resources as part of a potential deal with Trump.
Why did Trump reject that, only to go for what sounds like a very similar deal with Delci?
I don't think we have perfect clarity to that question at the moment, Natalie.
My hunch is that the campaign against Maduro, the campaign to brand them,
a narco-terrorist and the cartel chief, who is at war of the United States, has gone simply too
far for Trump to tolerate him and make a deal with him. I remember that while oil is the driving
force of Trump's policy towards Venezuela, it's not the only one. Right. And there are advisors
within his administration. There are people in his administration that are pushing towards our goals
with Stephen Miller with his focus on migration and illegal drugs. There's
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, who has been a declared anti-communist warrior, these people have
been sworn enemies of Maduro. And as Maduro repeatedly rebuffs Trump administration's attempts to
provide him a soft landing, to provide him a golden parachute, Trump's position hardens.
And by December, his patience finally snaps. Maduro's response to increasingly explicit ultimatums
for America
was to present himself
as a carefree potter.
He constantly
dances on television.
He sings
no crazy war.
You know, he's a good dancer.
You know, he puts up the moves
and, you know, he does on regular bases.
And at some point,
Trump snaps.
Wait, are you?
saying, Anatoly, that Maduro dancing on national television is an actual factor here in
everything that ends up happening? My understanding, it was the straw that broke the camel's back.
Meaning what exactly? That Trump saw Maduro dancing and said, this guy's not taking me
seriously? Or what? Meaning that Trump so ongoing dancing as a humiliation, as Maduro calling Trump's
bluff, as Maduro telling Trump, I'm here, and I'm here for as long as I want to be.
And Trump could not tolerate what he saw as a personal affront.
Wow. We are truly living in wild times.
Remember, I mean, naturally, history is often made by seemingly sort of small, banal circumstances, right?
It's an accumulation of major factors, major forces, like oil, migration, drugs, but, you know,
it can be something as sort of small
as a little techno dance on a public stage
that can tilt this cares
towards a momentous policy decision
that will change the history
of Western Hemisphere, perhaps forever.
Okay, we'll have plenty of time
to talk about that future.
But for now, the Trump administration
is counting on Delsey.
And this is someone who, in the last few days,
has come out very strongly against them.
It's worth saying.
She's said,
Maduro is the only president of Venezuela. She refers to herself as the vice president. And I'm
wondering what we should make of that. I know that there are a lot of people from the regime that are
still in power in the country. And I wonder if this is her playing to them, to that domestic
audience. She has to appease them, right? That's right. Remember that the attack was a major
humiliation to the armed forces and security officials that form the core of Maduro's regime.
It was an operation that caused the life of 80 people causing major destructions in capital Caracas.
Delci could not just sort of wave us off and open her arms to Americans.
You know, she has to satisfy the domestic audience.
She has to show to the ruling parties faithful who are not numerous in numbers, but who hold a lot of guns, that she's not an American
porn, that she's someone who will defend the country's sovereignty, someone who will defend the
country's standing. While at the same time, she has to satisfy American demands, you know, the Trump
administration and his officials have repeatedly stated that Delci must do their bidding or else
she will face the same fate as Maduro. So she's trying to play for both audiences. And as you
said, she started off making very sort of aggressive remarks towards America, but just in a matter of
days, in a matter of hours, her position has softened. She has issued a statement calling for
corporations with the United States, for peaceful coexistence, for working together, for
joint business ventures, and just let it sink for you, Natalie. This is a statement towards
the government that has just blown up your capital and killed 80 people living in the capital,
and you are basically opening your arms to their investments and to bilateral relations.
No, it's totally remarkable. And it makes me
want to ask you about what this means for the Chavista movement that has been in power now for almost
three decades in Venezuela. This is a movement that has staked its legacy on being an anti-American
bulwark. What happens to that legacy if Delci follows through and really does become a willing
partner of the Trump administration? To me, Natalie, the events of the past few days exposed to the
hollowness of the nationalist rhetoric behind the Chavisman movement. At the time when the country
came into the attack, no one was prepared to defend President Maduro. There was no notable
resistance from young forces. And to me, this peels another layer of mysticism and ideology
from the movements. That over the years, over the decades, this movement has gradually lost
the pillars of its ideology. First, it lost the popular support.
Then it lost the socialist credentials.
Now it loses nationalism.
And what is laugh, Natalie?
Survival.
Survival is the core aspects of Chevisbo movements
and the senior officials
who have been at Maduro's side for years
and have now closing ranks behind Elsie
are focused on survival at any cost.
And Atoli, I want to end
by just asking how the Venezuelans you're talking to
are perceiving all of this,
how they're feeling right now.
I have to imagine that the many people
who voted against Maduro
are happy that he's gone on the one hand.
And yet, the regime that he led
is still very much there.
And not only that,
now there's also this added element
of Trump having a potentially
very heavy hand in their country.
So how is that playing with people?
This is a country that has gotten used to disappointments,
but has gotten used to tragedy.
In the years that I have lived here, I have experienced time and again a moment of extreme
exaltation when it appeared that freedom and democracy were just within grasp.
I have witnessed millions of people come out on the streets in popular protest against the government
and every time that hope that democracy, that freedom was snatched from under their nose.
This is a country that has been burned many times and where people have learned to
temper their expectations. And I think most people in Venezuela, when they watched Elsie being sworn in
as the country's interim president, this is not the outcome they would have hoped for. This is not
the outcome they would have chosen. This is an outcome that is not just, that is not fair,
but is an outcome that just might make their difficult life just a little bit easier.
Well, Anatoly, I hope you get some rest in the coming days, and thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
On Monday, in her first interview since the capture of Maduro,
Maria Karina Machado told Fox's Sean Hannity
that she hadn't spoken with President Trump
since the U.S. deposed the Venezuelan leader.
But I do want to say today, on behalf of the Venezuelan people,
how grateful we are for his courageous...
She also thanked Trump for the, quote,
courageous actions that led to Maduro's remains.
It's a milestone, and it's not only huge for the Venezuelan people on our future,
I think it's a huge step for humanity, for freedom and human dignity.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegeseth said the military had begun
administrative actions against Mark Kelly, the Democratic Senator from Arizona, a move that could
end up reducing Kelly's rank and the military pension he receives as a retired Navy captain.
The review stems from a video that Kelly and five other Democratic lawmakers released in November
that reminded service members they were obligated to refuse illegal orders.
Hexeth called the video seditious and called Kelly reckless for trying to undermine discipline.
in the ranks.
Kelly and his lawyers have argued
the senator was simply articulating
a fundamental principle of military law.
They've also pointed out
that Hegeseth himself
has made similar comments in the past.
Today's episode was produced
by Olivia Nat, Rob Zipko,
Rochelle Bonja, and Claire Tennisketter
with help from Carlos Prieto.
It was edited by Paige Cowett and Lizzo
Balin. Contains music by Marion Lazzano, Pat McCusker, and Rowan Nemistow, and was engineered by
Chris Wood. Special thanks to Isayenne Herrera, Annie Correlle, and Maria Victoria Fermin.
That's it for the Daily. I'm Natalie Kittroweth. See you tomorrow.
