Whitney Eulich, Christian Science Monitor: Venezuela knocks over its democracy. The region pushes back.
For years, Venezuela has flirted with authoritarianism. This week, it bid goodbye to any pretense that it remained a democratic country.
The nation’s Supreme Court announced Wednesday it would take over legislative powers and essentially dissolve the National Assembly, the only government pillar controlled by the political opposition. President Nicolás Maduro “is now the National Assembly,” the body’s president, Julio Borges, told the Associated Press after the decision was announced. “It’s one thing to try and build a dictatorship and another to complete the circuit.”
But the crumbling of Venezuela’s democracy isn’t a challenge confined to those living there. Problems caused by drug-trafficking and Venezuela’s increasingly dysfunctional economy are beginning to spill over into neighboring countries. And despite the region’s sensitivity to foreign meddling, given its rich history of US-backed coups, those countries are beginning to speak up.
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Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- March 31, 2017
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Why Is Alexei Navalny Still Free in Putin's Russia? -- Frida Ghitis, World Politics Review
How a 40-year-old lawyer could help reset U.S.-Russia relations -- John Lloyd, Reuters
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Is the Russia Investigation Turning the Left Into Conspiracy Theorists? -- Jeet Heer, New Republic
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