We Are Not Stupid
The democratic leadership can’t make the mistake of dismissing the common sense of the millions of Venezuelans who voted for the man that left the country. What’s happening is troubling and the people deserve answers
It’s been an extraordinary year with a dubious balance. Here’s our top 10 most read pieces of 2024.
The democratic leadership can’t make the mistake of dismissing the common sense of the millions of Venezuelans who voted for the man that left the country. What’s happening is troubling and the people deserve answers
Different studies and scientific exercises prove the validity of the voting tallies held by the Venezuelan opposition. Hard evidence of the win by Edmundo González Urrutia
Chavismo easily blinded some progressives and made them accomplices of its propaganda wars, thanks to shallow perspectives inherited from Cold War fanaticism
The government called the presidential election for Maduro. Many question the results
The Bolivarian revolution, in all effect, is a revolution. The almost unnoticed passing of Gustavo Cisneros and the erasure of cultural products of the Chataing Era show the extent of Chavismo’s impact in our collective memory.
After a quarter on a century of rule, the party that snatched the Venezuelan state faces an existential crossroads without the only man capable of imposing discipline over contrasting opinions and interests
The electoral playing field for July 28 remains full of obstacles that Maduro could use to his favor, even if PSUV’s grassroots structure is considerably weaker than during the Chávez era
We’ve already looked at Venezuela within the U.S. presidential election campaign political discourse. Let’s now see what may be in store for la patria depending on who wins
In response to the CNE’s delay, accusations have emerged that the Venezuelan government is fabricating counterfeit vote tallies (actas). But that would be next to impossible
Edmundo left Venezuela. The man who beat Nicolás Maduro in the presidential elections sought asylum in Spain