Regime Change or Bust
As per usual, the Economist has the most perceptive analysis around. Don’t they read the Economist at the NYT?! Mar 11th 2004 | CARACAS From The Economist print...
Quico Toro is the founder of Caracas Chronicles.
As per usual, the Economist has the most perceptive analysis around. Don’t they read the Economist at the NYT?! Mar 11th 2004 | CARACAS From The Economist print...
The “Tribunal de Substanciacion” has rejected requests to have the Electoral Chamber magistrates disqualify themselves from the Recall Referendum case. What are the implications? It’s not yet clear....
The “Tribunal de Substanciacion” has rejected requests to have the Electoral Chamber magistrates disqualify themselves from the Recall Referendum case. What are the implications? It’s not yet clear....
Sometimes, I like to clip the newspapers, cutting out references made by the President and his ministers against the opposition, the generalized attacks against the business sector, the...
…it was bound to happen. Eventually the constitutional injunctions started to fly, and by now it looks as though it will be the Supreme Tribunal who will decide...
Sometimes, I like to clip the newspapers, cutting out references made by the President and his ministers against the opposition, the generalized attacks against the business sector, the...
…it was bound to happen. Eventually the constitutional injunctions started to fly, and by now it looks as though it will be the Supreme Tribunal who will decide...
This Financial Times piece can’t get worked up over a revelation that, two weeks ago, would’ve caused an uproar. “Diplomats say that a sampling of the disputed signatures,...
This Financial Times piece can’t get worked up over a revelation that, two weeks ago, would’ve caused an uproar. “Diplomats say that a sampling of the disputed signatures,...
One of the most difficult points to put across to foreign readers, especially those who may be inclined to sympathize with a leftwing regime in a poor country,...
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