The End of the Chavista Charade: Venezuela’s Constitutional Deadline Exposes the Regime’s Enduring Contempt for the Rule of Law

The expiration of Delcy Rodríguez’s unconstitutional 180-day stint as Venezuela’s acting president lays bare the Chavista regime’s deep-seated contempt for its own laws and the Venezuelan people’s aspirations for freedom. This moment follows President Trump’s decisive action to remove Nicolás Maduro, the narco-dictator long sheltered by leftist enablers across the globe.

With Maduro now facing justice in the United States, Article 233 of Venezuela’s constitution stands as a clear mandate: the National Assembly must immediately call free and fair elections within 30 days. This provision offers the Venezuelan people their first authentic chance in decades to liberate themselves from the socialist tyranny that has produced nothing but economic collapse, mass exodus, repression, and despair.

For years, conservatives have warned that socialism is not a path to equality but a guaranteed highway to authoritarianism, lawlessness, and human suffering. Venezuela proves the point with tragic clarity. What began under Hugo Chávez as grandiose promises of “21st-century socialism”—oil-funded handouts, nationalized industries, and fiery anti-American rhetoric—descended into the predictable misery: hyperinflation that wiped out savings, widespread hunger, crumbling infrastructure, and a ruling class that looted the nation while ordinary citizens fled by the millions. Maduro only intensified the disaster, turning Venezuela into a haven for drug cartels, a client state for Cuba and Iran, and a cautionary tale of unchecked leftist governance.

President Trump’s bold intervention cut through years of diplomatic dithering and half-measures. By extracting Maduro and holding him accountable, the United States demonstrated that it will no longer tolerate narco-socialist threats in our hemisphere that destabilize the region, fuel migration crises, and endanger American interests. This was leadership rooted in strength and realism, not the appeasement that allowed the regime to entrench itself.

Yet the true test now lies with Venezuela’s own institutions. The constitutional clock on Rodríguez’s temporary role has run out. Continued delay or evasion of the 30-day election requirement will confirm what skeptics have always known: the Chavistas prioritize power over principle, regime survival over national renewal. Excuses about “stability” or “transition” ring hollow when the very constitution they claim to uphold demands action. True democratic forces, long suppressed and persecuted, deserve the opportunity to compete in transparent, internationally monitored elections free from the fraud, intimidation, and vote-rigging that defined the Maduro era.

America’s continued resolve should remain principled and focused. We support the Venezuelan people’s right to self-determination—not through open-ended entanglement, but through firm pressure for verifiable democratic progress, targeted incentives tied to real reforms, and unyielding opposition to any return of authoritarian socialism. Conservatives understand that prosperity flows from liberty, property rights, free enterprise, and the rule of law—not central planning, expropriation, or class warfare.

The Venezuelan people have suffered enough under the weight of failed ideology. They have voted with their feet, their empty pantries, and their silenced voices. This constitutional deadline represents a pivotal fork in the road: either genuine elections that honor Article 233 and deliver accountability, or further proof that the regime’s criminal nature persists beneath new branding.

Socialism’s verdict is in—authoritarianism and ruin. The path forward demands rejecting it outright. Failure to seize this moment will only prolong the agony, but success could restore Venezuela as a prosperous, sovereign nation once again. Conservatives will stand with those fighting for that outcome, because freedom’s cause in our hemisphere is America’s cause as well. The Chavistas’ endless excuses end here. The time for real change is now.

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