CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro yesterday made major changes to his cabinet, including leadership of the oil and finance ministries and state oil company PDVSA, after a contested election both the ruling party and the opposition claim to have won.
The changes, which include a return to the cabinet by ruling party leader and famed hard-liner Diosdado Cabello and a change in duties for Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, who will add the oil ministry to her brief, came as Maduro shifted his rhetoric away from the election dispute and toward promised changes.
The disagreement over the July 28 election has sparked international calls for the release of full vote tallies, deadly protests and moves by the country’s prosecutor to investigate the opposition and arrest journalists, even as the opposition insists a change in government is still possible.
The cabinet changes are “a profound renovation of the national government and we are putting together a new team which will help us transition everything for this era, open new paths … speed the changes the people need,” Maduro said during an event broadcast live.
Cabello, a close ally of Maduro’s predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez, will be the new interior, justice and peace minister, after being second in command of ruling party PSUV and the host of a colourful weekly show on state television, where he inveighs against the opposition and Venezuela’s international critics.
“Today I think Venezuela is on the path of definitive peace, a peace with justice, a peace where the people feel that those who have acted against the constitution and the law have justice applied to them on time,” said Cabello, a former vice president and lawmaker who also served as interior and justice minister in the early 2000s.
Vice President Delcy Rodriguez will remain in her post, but add the oil ministry to her brief, Maduro added, while Anabel Pereira will replace Rodriguez as finance minister.
Rodriguez has built close relationships with business people as finance minister, connections that may help shore up PDVSA sales even despite U.S. sanctions, as the government grapples with high inflation and other economic woes.
Hector Obregon is the new president of PDVSA, replacing Pedro Tellechea, who will move to head the Industry Ministry, Maduro said on state television.
Yvan Gil and Vladimir Padrino will remain in their respective posts as foreign minister and defense minister, Maduro said.
Reuters reported earlier, citing three sources, that Maduro would name Obregon to PDVSA and designate a new oil minister.
Obregon is a lawyer who was added to PDVSA’s executive board last year as part of his government responsibilities, which also include positions at the finance ministry and Venezuela’s development bank.
Tellechea, appointed to both PDVSA and the oil ministry in 2023, promised to target endemic corruption at the financially troubled company while hoping to win over its thousands of workers, a move critical to securing much-needed cash for the country.
Peaceful street protests and international pressure still have the potential to unseat Maduro, opposition leader Maria Corina Machado told Reuters yesterday.
Dozens of employees at PDVSA, the oil ministry and other parts of the public sector have been forced to resign since the election over their political views, workers and unions have said.