
The opposition leader María Corina Machado recently presented her strategy on Venezuela before more than 40 international delegations. The meeting, held in Washington, marks a milestone by presenting a roadmap technique and policy that seeks transform the reality of the country in the short term.
According to reports from the ABC newspaper of Spain, Machado’s relevance grew until it became “a point an almost obligatory step for any international actor who wants to understand where Venezuela is going in Trump’s plans.
This strategic position allowed representatives from Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East know first-hand a plan that is no longer limited to theoretical projections, but rather it is defined as an ongoing project.
According to the information detailed by ABC de España, Machado’s proposal establishes an electoral process with full guarantees and international supervision It can be organized over a period of nine to ten months.
In addition, the plan is committed to the immediate activation of a manual voting system to ensure transparency. According to Machado, Venezuela could hold democratic elections in less than a year if the necessary reforms are implemented.
He also emphasized that this schedule is based on a real possibility and not a simple aspiration. He maintains that There are fundamental consensuses on the need to rebuild the system electoral, guarantee legal security, facilitate the return of exiles and achieve the release of political prisoners.
Transitional cohesion
The proposal presented by the leader not only focuses on the polls, but on subsequent institutional stability. Machado conveyed the idea that there is “an agreed minimum architecture for the transitional period” designed to return sovereignty tol citizen in the shortest possible time.
This diplomatic deployment has generated an unprecedented feeling of unity. The ambassadors highlighted that the Venezuelan opposition now appears before the world with one voice cohesive and a consistent story.
Meanwhile, figures aligned with Chavismo, such as former president José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, have mobilized their agendas towards Caracas in an attempt to counter the advances made by Machado in the US capital.
With information from ABC of Spain
