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Dictator Deposed, Fear Endures: The Rise of the Delcy Rodriguez Venezuela Interim President

2 min readSource

Following Nicolas Maduro's removal, Delcy Rodriguez is sworn in as Venezuela's interim president. Despite US support, the regime's repressive tactics and fear continue in Caracas.

They've shaken hands, but the fist remains clenched. While Nicolas Maduro sits in a New York courtroom after his removal by the Trump administration, a heavy silence has fallen over Caracas. Some 2,000 miles now separate Venezuelans from their abducted former leader, but for those on the ground, the apparatus of repression feels closer than ever.

Delcy Rodriguez Venezuela Interim President: A New Face for the Old Guard

On Monday, January 5, 2026, Vice President Delcy Rodriguez was formally sworn in as acting president with the explicit blessing of US President Donald Trump. However, the transition hasn't signaled a democratic spring. Instead, residents report a chilling effect characterized by deleted text messages, self-censorship on social media, and an avoidant public life. According to Al Jazeera, the security forces remain mostly intact, serving a government that many still equate with systemic abuse.

The crackdown is already visible. Police in Merida and Carabobo have announced the arrest of at least four citizens for merely celebrating Maduro's capture. A state of emergency decreed on Saturday has ordered security forces to capture anyone supporting the USA bombardment, fueling a wave of paranoia. "It’s terrifying that you can be arrested just for having a meme on your phone," one local vendor told reporters.

The Return of the Hardliners

The appointment of Gustavo Enrique Gonzalez Lopez as the new head of military counterintelligence (DGCIM) has sent shockwaves through human rights circles. Gonzalez Lopez, a former SEBIN director previously sanctioned by the US for torture and extrajudicial killings, is seen as a signal of continuity rather than reform. Laura Cristina Dib of the Washington Office on Latin America warns that while Rodriguez might appear pragmatic, she remains a central part of the repressive machine.

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