Venezuelan opposition leader, 2025 Nobel Peace Prize winner

For years, María Corina Machado was not expected to prevail—least of all under conditions designed to exclude her. Barred from the ballot and repeatedly targeted by the state, she was pushed to the margins of formal politics. Yet in the wake of Venezuela’s latest upheaval, she has re-emerged at the center of a moment that feels both historic and unresolved.

The shift followed a cascade of reports and claims involving Nicolás Maduro and heightened international pressure that unsettled Caracas. Details remain contested and difficult to verify, but the effect inside the country was unmistakable: power suddenly looked less fixed than it had in years. In that opening, attention moved toward new figures—and new images—of authority. Continue reading…

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