The End of Chavismo - Part 8 - María Corina Machado and her History

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Many rumors are making the rounds regarding María Corina Machado, among the most obsessively repeated by regime bots and by people who oppose Trump and the U.S. foreign policy in general, is that she's a CIA puppet and that she's a far right-wing extremist, none of which fit her history or her political views. She may well be aligned with American interests right now, but there's a lot more to this woman and her strategy than meets the eye, especially if you're a foreigner with no experience with Venezuelan politics.

First off, María Corina Machado comes from a very wealthy family, her father Henrique Zuloaga was a successful businessman who funded the Electricidad de Caracas, the capital's electricity company before it was nationalized, and had two steel companies, Sivensa and Sidetur, which were later expropriated by Chávez and run to the ground. She studied Industrial Engineering in the Andrés Bello Catholic University and then obtained a Master's Degree in Finance from IESA (Institute of Advanced Studies in Administration). She was part of Yale's World Fellows Program and also of the Young Global Leaders program.


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Machado a U.S. President George Bush


Her career began as an electoral activist in 2001, when she founded Súmate along with Alejandro Plaz, a civil association for voter education and vote monitoring. She signed (although inadvertently, according to her) the decree issued by Pedro Carmona Estanga dissolving the Venezuelan government during the 2002 coup against Chávez, and Súmate was the main driver of the 2004 Recall Referendum to remove Chávez from office, which was unsuccessful. Both of these circumstances earned her an accusation for treason, her organization was investigated for receiving U.S. funding but no illegal activity was found, and the judicial proceedings were suspended indefinitely in 2006. In 2005 she also met U.S. President George W. Bush at the Oval Office.

In 2010, she ran for a seat at the National Assembly and got the most votes of any candidate to this body ever. Then, in 2011, she launched her bid for the 2012 Presidential Election, but was beaten in primaries by Henrique Capriles (who, as I've said in a previous post, was always a chavista operative). In 2012, in Chávez's last address to the National Assembly and after 8 hours of hearing him speak, Machado shocked everyone by demanding that the President engage in political debate and calling him out for stealing companies through expropriations, such as the one owned by her family. Chávez played her down with the famous phrase "Águila no caza moscas" (An eagle doesn't hunt flies), but having been the only opposition leader to ever stand up to him publicly, she gained tremendous prominence afterwards. You can see the short clash in the video below.



After Maduro came to power, in a serious incident of assault, she was dragged by the hair through the Naational Assembly's floor, then kicked repeatedly in the face. She was then banned from Parliament and from leaving the country, and put in a no-fly list. In 2014, she was one of the drivers behind "La Salida", the anti-regime protest cycle that left hundreds killed and thousands imprisoned, but she distanced herself quickly after Leopoldo López, the main instigator, handed himself to the regime in a political play that's still incomprehensible to us, although she accompanied the families of those imprisoned by regime repression several times in their vigils to demand news of their loved ones. In 2015, she campaigned for the opposition coalition that regained control of the National Assembly, and then between 2016 and 2018, she was also one of the leaders of another round of protests which were even more brutally repressed. During Juan Guaidó's strange tender as "interim president" in 2019, she remained on the sidelines. It was only in 2023, in the primary to elect the candidate that would run against Nicolás Maduro in 2024, that she once again emerged, this time with substantial public support. The regime banned her from running herself, so she had to find a replacement, Corina Yoris, who was unable to even register as a candidate, and then Edmundo González, a diplomat from the Chávez years whom Maduro and Co. were somehow forced to accept. He won, but the real leader was always Machado, and anticipating that Maduro would cling to power, she labored along with a team of experts and thousands of grassroots volunteers, as well as insiders within the regime structure, to gather the electoral ballots as evidence of fraud, which helped shift the discourse of all other governments, beginning with the United States and European nations, who had been generally hesitant to call for Maduro's ouster.

In 2025, she lived in concealment as the regime ramped up persecution and repression, but was interviewed by many outlets and influencers, and even participated digitally in many international business forums to talk about what Venezuela would look like after the transition. Then, she became the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, one of the most controversial developments of her career, the Peace Prize being largely a very expensive propaganda gimmick, and considering that she's always been a hardliner calling for foreign intervention against the regime, which has finally materialized through the Trump administration. In two moves that many have misread, she first dedicated the award to Trump, then suggested the possibility of giving it to him, which the Nobel Foundation denied, as she most definitely knew they would; these were just meaningless gestures to appease a volatile, dangerous man-child with a massive ego. She's meeting her this Thursday to discuss Venezuela's situation, the second time she'd be in the Oval Office. She's already met the Pope at the Vatican and is likely to meet with other heads of state while she prepares for her return.


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Machado and Pope Leo XIV


I met María Corina Machado briefly many years ago and have had access to people who knew her personally as well. My personal opinion of her isn't particularly flattering, I'll always be skeptical of her human quality and her politics, something I apply to everyone with a political career, but I still support her bid, because she's been quite coherent in her stance against the regime from the get-go and her strategy, however opaque, has been yielding some fruits. As a spiritual servant, I've paid attention to the phenomenon of her presidential campaign and to her words before and after the 2024 election, and she's offered consistent messages that have resonated with my own work for the country, I think that's encouraging. I also find her to be in an ideal position for us Venezuelans, because she's had to call in many favors with many people both inside the country and abroad to be where she is, and when she returns to public office, she'll be constrained by those debts, as will other political actors who had to leave the country and were protected by other governments. That'll make them a bit easier to manage and oversee.

In summary, no, this woman isn't a CIA operative nor a right-wing a U.S. puppet, she's a seasoned politician with a basic liberal mindset, with no known ties to the regime and indeed a fierce attitude against them. She's been attacked and persecuted, her social standing has been used by chavistas to damage her reputation, and she's set to become the first democratic leader of the country since Chávez came to power 26 years ago, once this regime collapses completely. I'll keep an eye on her as the months and years elapse, and I don't have a mind to defend her, but I can tell you, drop any conspiracy theories that you've heard or read about her, the facts are very different and they should be enough.



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IMO she play the cards that she have the best that she can for the return to democracy of Venezuela. It is the only face that can lead the first democratic period after chavista regime be deposed.
I hope principal chavista leaders get political invalidation for life.

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Yeap, I agree that she's the only one. As for the main chavistas, they're going to flee the country if they're able, to avoid any repercussions from their actions.

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