The political crisis in Venezuela
In December 2015, the results of elections to the Venezuelan National Assembly saw the Democratic Unity Roundtable coalition (MUD) prevail by a wide majority over the ruling Socialist Unified Party of Venezuela (PSUV) of President Nicolás Maduro. Since then, Venezuela has faced increasing political crisis. Initiatives by the duly elected Parliament have been systematically blocked, first by the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) and the National Electoral Council, and since August 2017 by the new National Constituent Assembly, which has taken over most of the Parliament's legislative powers. Two attempts at dialogue between the Venezuelan government and the opposition, promoted by international mediators, have so far failed to break the deadlock. The economic and social situation in the country is far from improving, and the number of Venezuelan asylum-seekers abroad has risen exponentially. Nevertheless, regional elections were finally held on 15 October 2017 – with a PSUV victory in 17 of the 23 Venezuelan states, amid accusations of fraud from the opposition – and the government has promised to go ahead with the presidential elections due in 2018. This is an update of a briefing published in October 2017.
Briefing
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Tipo de publicación
Autor
Ámbito político
Palabra clave
- América
- ASUNTOS FINANCIEROS
- ASUNTOS SOCIALES
- ciudadano de la UE
- construcción europea
- crisis política
- DERECHO
- Derecho internacional
- derechos y libertades
- ECONOMÍA
- economía monetaria
- escasez de alimentos
- GEOGRAFÍA
- geografía económica
- geografía política
- libertad de opinión
- marco social
- oposición política
- papel internacional de la UE
- Parlamento
- Parlamento nacional
- sanidad
- situación económica
- situación económica
- situación política
- situación social
- sociedad civil (movimientos de opinión)
- tipo de cambio
- UNIÓN EUROPEA
- Venezuela
- VIDA POLÍTICA
- vida política y seguridad pública