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J6 meets J10: Maybe Venezuelans should expect a Trump-Maduro deal

Deal Duo? President-elect Donald Trump (left) at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., in 2023; Venezuelan dictator-president Nicol谩s Maduro in Caracas in 2021.
Evan Vucci (left), Matias Delacroix (right)
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AP
Deal Duo? President-elect Donald Trump (left) at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., in 2023; Venezuelan dictator-president Nicol谩s Maduro in Caracas in 2021.

COMMENTARY Venezuelans shouldn't be surprised if Trump sees more political dividends in cutting an oil-and-deportees deal with Maduro instead of tightening the regime-change screws.

Every Venezuelan, there and here, knows what鈥檚 going to happen on Friday, Jan. 10.

Dictator Nicol谩s Maduro will swear himself in as president after brazenly and brutally stealing a July 28 election that he lost to opposition candidate Edmundo Gonz谩lez by a landslide. Gonz谩lez, currently in forced exile, plans to return to Venezuela on Friday to conduct his own inauguration 鈥 but Maduro鈥檚 regime is poised to arrest him.

In other words, Jan. 10 promises to be every bit the ghastly, 19th-century tinpot-palooza the civilized world鈥檚 expecting it to be.

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But I'd ask Venezuelans here, in their ever-burgeoning South Florida diaspora, to consider what would have happened this past Monday 鈥 Jan. 6, the U.S. Congress鈥 election certification day 鈥 if their favorite guy, President-elect Donald Trump, had lost instead of won the Nov. 5 vote.

The day would almost certainly have been a repeat of Jan. 6, 2021 鈥 when Trump, after losing the 2020 election, unleashed his own ghastly tinpot effort to stop certification of that result. He would again have cried 鈥渇raud鈥 and sent his furious MAGA mob to Capitol Hill to avenge him.

In other words, on J6 Trump would have displayed the brutish, egomaniacal contempt for constitutional rule of law that Maduro will disgorge on J10.

It鈥檚 a reminder that at the end of the day, Trump and Maduro are cut from much the same sociopathic cloth.

MAGAzuelans can have the migrant deportations they鈥檝e been braying for. Or they can have harsher sanctions on Maduro. But they can鈥檛 have both.

So perhaps Venezuelans shouldn鈥檛 be surprised by that Trump, when he takes office again this month, may not bring the hammer down on Maduro as hard as they hope.

He's perhaps thinking instead of cutting the same sort of deal Republicans once criticized President Biden for seeking 鈥 namely, that the U.S. will loosen oil-export sanctions on the Caracas regime if Maduro accepts the tens of thousands of migrants Trump wants to deport back to Venezuela.

Before MAGAzuelans (as Venezuelan Trump voters are widely known) choke on their guayoyos, they should remember some basics about the demagogue they supported in November.

Trump Inc. dividends

First and most important: Trump rarely if ever does anything that doesn鈥檛 benefit Trump. Right now, tightening the screws on Maduro doesn鈥檛 pay dividends for Trump Inc. as much as expelling migrants and getting more fossil fuel onto the global market do. Those are promises he made to his MAGA base 鈥 whom he holds dearer than Venezuelan expats.

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado (left) and opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez (right) at a Caracas campaign rally on July 25, 2024.
Cristian Hernandez
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AP
Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado (left) and opposition presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez (right) at a Caracas campaign rally on July 25, 2024.

In a Zoom press conference this week, Venezuelan opposition leader Mar铆a Corina Machado 鈥 who said she鈥檒l risk her own freedom and come out of hiding on Thursday to lead protests against Maduro鈥檚 inauguration 鈥 pushed back against the idea of a Trump-Maduro negotiation:

鈥淭hose who have concerns about the effect of migration,鈥 Machado said, 鈥渟hould know that the only way we鈥檒l stop those flows 鈥 and even have hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans coming back voluntarily 鈥 is with a democratic transition that brings hope for our future.鈥

She may be right. Sanctions opponents insist revived oil commerce will improve Venezuelans' lives. But if Maduro remains in power, Venezuelans 鈥 millions of whom have fled his political-economic horror show in the past decade 鈥 will keep heading for the U.S.

Still, Trump鈥檚 calculus may well be: if Maduro takes back the ones I kick out, who cares?

Trump's also aware that many Venezuelan exile voters themselves have been urging the U.S. to evict more recently arrived Venezuelans 鈥 who are often poorer, less educated and, especially in the case of migrants belonging to the criminal gang Tren de Aragua, make more established expats like the Brahmins in South Florida look bad.

MAGAzuelans may learn a hard lesson when Trump鈥檚 back in the White House:

They can have all those Venezuelan migrant deportations they鈥檝e been braying for on Spanish-language radio. Or they can have harsher oil sanctions levied on Maduro.

But they can鈥檛 have both.

Besides, the bottom line is that Trump鈥檚 been around this block with Maduro before.

Six years ago, during his first presidency, Trump declared then opposition leader Juan Guaid贸 to be Venezuela鈥檚 legitimate president and slapped a de facto oil embargo on the regime. But Trump got bored and annoyed with the project when it didn鈥檛 topple Maduro overnight.

Meaning, when Trump saw there was no payoff for Trump. That鈥檚 the J6 way 鈥 and the J10 way.

Tim Padgett is the Americas Editor for SA国际传谋, covering Latin America, the Caribbean and their key relationship with South Florida. Contact Tim at tpadgett@wlrnnews.org
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