‘No, the U.S. is not running Venezuela,’ new president Delcy Rodríguez says, demanding Maduro’s release
By Mauricio Torres
“No, the U.S. is not running Venezuela,” the country’s new leader Delcy Rodríguez said Sunday. The Venezuelan Supreme Court appointed Rodríguez interim president following Saturday morning’s capture of President Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces. The court said its decision was made to “ensure administrative continuity and national defense” in Maduro’s absence.

Venezuelan Interim-President Delcy Rodríguez
In press conferences Saturday and Sunday, Rodríguez demanded the “immediate release” of Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores while condemning the U.S. military operation that captured Maduro. Surrounded by government officials, she also refuted claims by U.S. President Donald Trump that the U.S. would “manage and control” Venezuela.
Standing before the Venezuelan flag, a defiant Rodríguez said the U.S. operation represents a blatant violation of international law and Venezuela’s sovereignty. She added that the action must be rejected by Venezuelans and condemned by governments across Latin America and the world.
“We call on the peoples of the great homeland to remain united, because what was done to Venezuela can be done to anyone,” she said on state television channel VTV. “Venezuela is and will remain a strong and independent country.”
Sunday night, Rodríguez softened her rhetoric, saying Venezuela was willing to work with the U.S. to “develop a cooperative agenda” but only if its sovereignty was respected.
An official with Maduro’s ‘full trust’
Rodríguez, 56, has spent more than two decades as one of the leading figures of chavismo, the political movement founded by President Hugo Chávez and led by Maduro since Chávez’s death in 2013. A Caracas native, she studied law at the Central University of Venezuela.

Venezuelan refugees in Ecuador celebrated news of Nicolas Maduro’s capture in Quito, Cuenca and Guayaquil on Saturday.
Alongside her brother Jorge Rodríguez, the current president of the National Assembly, she has held various positions of power since the Chávez era. She served as minister of communication and information from 2013 to 2014 and later became foreign minister from 2014 to 2017. In that role, she defended Maduro’s government against international criticism, including allegations of democratic backsliding and human rights abuses in the country.
As foreign minister, Rodríguez represented Venezuela at forums such as the United Nations, where she accused other governments of seeking to undermine her country.
In 2017, Rodríguez became president of the Constituent National Assembly that expanded the government’s powers after the opposition won the 2015 legislative elections. In 2018, Maduro appointed her vice president for his second term. She retained the post during his third presidential term, which began on January 10, 2025, following the controversial July 28, 2024, elections. Until the president’s capture, she served as Venezuela’s chief economic authority and minister of petroleum.
Venezuela’s opposition maintains that the 2024 elections were fraudulent and that Maduro is not a legitimately elected president. They insist that the true winner was former ambassador Edmundo González Urrutia, a position supported by some governments in the region.
José Manuel Romano, a constitutional lawyer and political analyst, told CNN that the positions Rodríguez has held show she is a “very prominent” figure within the Venezuelan government and someone who enjoys the president’s “full trust.”
“The executive vice president of the republic is a highly effective operator, a woman with strong leadership skills for managing teams,” Romano said.
“She is very results-oriented and has significant influence over the entire government apparatus, including the Ministry of Defense. That is very important to note in the current circumstances,” he added.
On the path to an understanding with the US?
Hours after Maduro’s capture, and before Rodríguez addressed the National Defense Council, US President Donald Trump said at a press conference that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had spoken with the vice president. According to Trump, she appeared willing to work with Washington on a new phase for Venezuela.
“She had a conversation with Marco. She said, ‘We’re going to do whatever you need.’ I think she was quite courteous. We’re going to do this right,” Trump said.
Trump’s remarks, however, surprised some analysts, who believe Rodríguez is unlikely to make concessions to the United States.
“She is not a moderate alternative to Maduro. She has been one of the most powerful and hard-line figures in the entire system,” Imdat Oner, a policy analyst at the Jack D. Gordon Institute and a former Turkish diplomat based in Venezuela, told CNN.
“Her rise to power appears to be the result of some kind of understanding between the United States and key actors preparing for a post-Maduro scenario. In that context, she would essentially serve as a caretaker until a democratically elected leader takes office,” the analyst added.
In her first messages following Maduro’s capture, Rodríguez showed no signs of backing down and, without referencing Trump’s statements, closed the door to any potential cooperation with the United States.
Earlier in the morning, during a phone interview with VTV, Rodríguez said the whereabouts of Maduro and Flores were unknown and demanded proof that they were alive. Later in the afternoon, during the National Defense Council session, she escalated her rhetoric, condemned the US operation and, despite the circumstances, insisted that Maduro remains in charge of Venezuela.
“There is only one president in this country, and his name is Nicolás Maduro Moros,” said Rodríguez — now, by force of events, the most visible face of the government.
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Credit: CNN























