Who is Delcy RodrĂguez, Venezuelaâs leader after Maduroâs capture?
- - Who is Delcy RodrĂguez, Venezuelaâs leader after Maduroâs capture?
Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español, and Christian Edwards, CNNJanuary 5, 2026 at 9:19 PM
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Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez issues statement saying the country reaffirms its commitment to peace and peaceful coexistence. - delcyrodriguezv/Instagram
When Delcy RodrĂguez chaired her first council of ministers meeting as the acting president of Venezuela on Sunday, the portraits of the two leaders who preceded her loomed on the wall behind her.
These were Hugo ChĂĄvez, who transformed Venezuela into a socialist state, and NicolĂĄs Maduro, who continued Chavezâs legacy and drove the country deeper into autocracy before his capture by US forces on Saturday.
RodrĂguez, 56, is a stalwart of both the ChĂĄvez and Maduro governments, having served as Maduroâs oil minister and vice president. The daughter of a Marxist revolutionary, RodrĂguez relentlessly defended the Maduro regime against accusations of drug-trafficking and election-stealing. She will be answerable to Venezuelaâs socialist movement, chavismo, which is reeling from the toppling of its leader.
But another person will also be watching over her actions as the countryâs interim leader: US President Donald Trump.
Despite RodrĂguezâs chavismo credentials, Trump said he believes she is âessentially willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again.â
But Trumpâs praise has come laced with threats. âIf she doesnât do whatâs right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,â Trump told The Atlantic.
RodrĂguez, who was formally sworn in as acting president on Monday, is now walking a political tightrope as she tries to defend Venezuelaâs shaken sovereignty without angering Washington.
Already, those tensions are becoming clear. At first, RodrĂguez condemned the US capture of Maduro as a âbarbarityâ and a blatant violation of Venezuelaâs sovereignty. The next day, she struck a more conciliatory tone, offering an âagenda of cooperationâ with the United States.
An official with Maduroâs âfull trustâ
RodrĂguez was born in Caracas and studied law at the Central University of Venezuela. Her father, Jorge Antonio RodrĂguez, was arrested in 1976 for his alleged involvement in the abduction of William Niehous, an American businessman. He died in police custody.
Delcy RodrĂguez has spent more than two decades as one of the leading figures of chavismo, the political movement founded by ChĂĄvez and led by Maduro since ChĂĄvezâs death in 2013.
Alongside her brother Jorge RodrĂguez, the current president of the National Assembly, she has held various positions of power since the ChĂĄvez 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 Maduroâs government against international criticism, including allegations of democratic backsliding and human rights abuses in the country.
As foreign minister, RodrĂguez represented Venezuela at forums such as the United Nations, where she accused other governments of seeking to undermine her country.
In 2017, RodrĂguez became president of the Constituent National Assembly that expanded the governmentâs 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 presidentâs capture, she served as Venezuelaâs chief economic authority and minister of petroleum.
Venezuelaâs opposition maintains that the 2024 elections were fraudulent and that Maduro was not a legitimately elected president. They insist that the true winner was former ambassador Edmundo GonzĂĄlez Urrutia, a position supported by some governments in the region.
JosĂ© Manuel Romano, a constitutional lawyer and political analyst, told CNN that the positions RodrĂguez has held show she is a âvery prominentâ figure within the Venezuelan government and someone who enjoyed Maduroâs âfull trust.â
RodrĂguez âis a highly effective operator, a woman with strong leadership skills for managing teams,â Romano said.
âShe 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,â he added.
On the path to an understanding with the US?
Hours after Maduroâs capture, and before RodrĂguez addressed the National Defense Council, Trump said at a press conference that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had spoken with her. According to Trump, she appeared willing to work with Washington on a new phase for Venezuela.
âShe had a conversation with Marco. She said, âWeâre going to do whatever you need.â I think she was quite courteous. Weâre going to do this right,â Trump said.
Trumpâs remarks, however, surprised some analysts, who believe RodrĂguez is unlikely to make concessions to the United States.
âShe is not a moderate alternative to Maduro. She has been one of the most powerful and hard-line figures in the entire system,â Imdat Oner, a policy analyst at the Jack D. Gordon Institute and a former Turkish diplomat based in Venezuela, told CNN.
âHer 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,â the analyst added.
CNN has previously reported that US officials have zeroed in on RodrĂguez since they believe she can provide a stable transition, offer a more professional relationship than Maduro â and, perhaps most importantly, ensure that future American energy investments are protected.
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Source: âAOL Breakingâ