Machado Says Venezuela Transition After U.S. Maduro Raid Is 'Unstoppable' and Credits U.S. Pressure on Rodríguez Government
María Corina Machado told reporters the political transition set in motion after the U.S. operation that captured Nicolás Maduro is “unstoppable,” crediting U.S. military and economic pressure — including sanctions moves and seizures of Venezuelan tankers — with pushing acting president Delcy Rodríguez to loosen control, release some political prisoners and put forward a broad amnesty. Machado, who presented her Nobel Peace Prize medal to President Trump during a White House meeting, said her movement is not negotiating with Rodríguez and warned the changes so far lack legal legitimacy even as hundreds of detainees remain behind bars.
📌 Key Facts
- A U.S. military operation (Operation Absolute Resolve), planned over months and involving more than 150 aircraft, captured Nicolás Maduro in early January and brought him to the United States for trial; the Trump administration says it is temporarily overseeing Venezuela’s transition of power.
- President Trump has publicly praised and engaged with acting President Delcy Rodríguez — calling her 'terrific' — even as his administration has hosted opposition leader María Corina Machado at the White House; Trump has signaled willingness to work with Rodríguez while stopping short of endorsing Machado as Venezuela’s next leader.
- María Corina Machado met with President Trump on Jan. 15, presented her Nobel Peace Prize medal to him as a symbolic gesture of gratitude, told supporters the transition is 'unstoppable,' and credited U.S. military and economic pressure for recent changes in Venezuela.
- The Venezuelan government, led by Rodríguez and National Assembly head Jorge Rodríguez, has announced prisoner releases and a formal 'general amnesty' bill and says it has freed more than 100 detainees; rights groups put the number of political prisoners freed at much lower and varying counts (dozens to a few hundred) while more than 700 people remain jailed for political reasons.
- Rights groups and lawyers warn many releases carry conditions — charges remain in place, freed detainees face gag orders or restrictions, and human‑rights advocates continue to document torture, cruel treatment and some deaths in custody, motivating calls for a true, broad amnesty and independent rule‑of‑law guarantees.
- Rodríguez announced the planned shutdown and conversion of El Helicoide (a prison long accused as a torture site) into a sports and cultural center and said the National Assembly would urgently take up an amnesty bill; critics say these moves appear responsive to U.S. pressure rather than voluntary reform and may be used to delay deeper political change.
- Several high‑profile detainees and foreign nationals were among those freed: reports identify opposition figures Enrique Márquez and Biagio Pilieri, at least five Spanish citizens including human‑rights lawyer Rocío San Miguel, and multiple U.S. citizens; some releases were publicized with on‑camera reunions or statements but many freed remain subject to legal restrictions.
- Alongside political moves, the U.S. has seized multiple Venezuela‑linked oil tankers, completed sales of seized Venezuelan oil (including a reported $500 million sale), signaled plans to relax sanctions to supervise Venezuelan oil sales, and taken diplomatic steps (including sending chargé d’affaires Laura Dogu to Caracas and notifying Congress about reopening the U.S. embassy), while U.S. intelligence and officials (including a reported meeting by CIA Director John Ratcliffe with Rodríguez) have been active in building ties with the interim government.
📰 Source Timeline (27)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
February 01, 2026
3:30 PM
Venezuela's Machado says transition of power post-Maduro is "unstoppable"
New information:
- María Corina Machado, whose party claims victory in the 2024 election, told CBS that a political transition away from Maduro’s remnants is 'unstoppable' and that Delcy Rodríguez is 'complying with instructions' from the United States.
- Machado argued that recent 'reforms' by the Rodríguez interim government, including loosening state control over Venezuela’s oil industry, are positive in direction but may lack legal legitimacy without a true democratic transition and rule of law.
- She said neither she nor her movement are in contact with Rodríguez’s government because they view it as an extension of the Maduro regime that has refused to negotiate a transition.
- Machado linked Venezuelan interim government actions directly to U.S. military and economic leverage, saying the U.S. operation to capture Maduro 'sent a clear message' and that current changes are attributable to Trump administration pressure.
- The piece reiterates that the Trump administration is working with Rodríguez on oil and governance but has explicitly not diplomatically or legally recognized her government’s legitimacy, and notes the arrival of U.S. chargé d’affaires Laura Dogu in Caracas to work with the opposition, civil society and the interim government.
January 31, 2026
10:38 PM
Proposed Venezuelan bill could lead to release of hundreds of political prisoners
New information:
- CBS specifies that the proposed amnesty bill is framed as covering 'hundreds of prisoners, including opposition leaders, journalists and human rights activists detained for political reasons,' language that clarifies its intended scope.
- The U.S. Embassy for Venezuela publicly announced that 'all known U.S. citizens held in Venezuela' have been released, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio amplifying the statement on X; earlier coverage had focused more generally on political‑prisoner releases.
- The article notes that the Trump administration has formally notified Congress it will begin steps to eventually reopen the U.S. embassy in Caracas, and that chief U.S. diplomat Laura Dogu has already traveled there to meet Foreign Minister Yvan Gil about a bilateral 'roadmap.'
- CBS adds live reaction from relatives of detainees gathered outside Helicoide during Rodríguez’s speech — including real‑time livestreams, chants of 'Freedom!' and quotes like Johana Chirinos saying, 'God is good. God heard us.'
- Opposition leader and Nobel laureate María Corina Machado is quoted stressing that the moves were not voluntary but made 'in response to pressure from the U.S. government,' sharpening the attribution of motive.
1:43 PM
Hundreds of political prisoners in Venezuela could be released under new amnesty bill
New information:
- Rodríguez publicly announced a formal general amnesty bill that the ruling‑party‑controlled National Assembly will 'promptly' take up, covering the 'entire period of political violence from 1999 to the present' but excluding those convicted of murder, drug trafficking, corruption or human‑rights violations.
- She simultaneously announced the shutdown of Caracas’s notorious El Helicoide prison, long documented as a torture site, to be converted into a sports, social and cultural center.
- Foro Penal now estimates 711 political prisoners are held in Venezuela, 183 already sentenced, and its director Alfredo Romero cautiously welcomed the amnesty while warning it must not become a 'blanket of impunity.'
- Opposition leader and Nobel laureate María Corina Machado publicly argued the amnesty and Helicoide closure were not voluntary but made 'in response to pressure from the US government,' and noted some detainees have been held up to 23 years.
1:00 PM
Venezuela’s New Leader Is Trying to Run Out the Clock on Trump
New information:
- Human‑rights group figure that 303 political prisoners have been released since the U.S. pressed Rodríguez after the Maduro raid, with more than 700 still jailed.
- Rodríguez has now publicly pledged a 'general amnesty' for political prisoners, but without specifying who will be freed or on what timetable.
- Current and former U.S. officials and Venezuelan opposition figures tell the WSJ they believe Rodríguez’s broader strategy is to give ground on things that benefit her (like opening oil to foreign investment) while stalling on deeper political change in hopes U.S. focus fades.
6:55 AM
Venezuela announces amnesty bill that could lead to release of political prisoners
New information:
- Acting President Delcy Rodríguez announced a 'general amnesty law' that could free hundreds of political prisoners, including opposition leaders, journalists and human‑rights activists.
- Rodríguez said the ruling‑party‑controlled National Assembly will urgently take up the bill but did not release its text or spell out eligibility criteria.
- She also announced the shutdown of the Helicoide prison in Caracas – long documented by NGOs as a torture site – and its conversion into a sports and cultural center for police and local neighborhoods.
- Foro Penal estimates 711 people are jailed for political reasons, 183 already sentenced, including figures like Freddy Superlano, Juan Pablo Guanipa and Machado’s lawyer Perkins Rocha.
- Machado publicly framed the amnesty and Helicoide closure as responses to U.S. government pressure after Maduro’s capture, not voluntary reform, and warned that the regime’s repressive apparatus remains intact.
January 27, 2026
January 19, 2026
3:41 PM
Post Trump meeting, Venezuelan opposition leader says country will hold 'free and fair' elections 'eventually'
New information:
- After a private meeting with President Trump in Washington, María Corina Machado said Venezuela will hold 'free and fair' elections 'eventually' and 'as soon as possible,' but refused to give any timeline.
- Machado stated that dismantling Venezuela’s 'repression apparatus'—restoring security, rule of law and freeing political prisoners—must come before any credible vote, and she rejected applying the country’s normal constitutional election calendar immediately.
- She publicly tried to tamp down perceptions of competition with interim leader Delcy Rodríguez for Trump’s favor, saying the real issue is dismantling a 'criminal structure,' even as Trump continues to speak positively about Rodríguez and signals openness to meeting her.
January 17, 2026
2:38 PM
Details from Trump's meeting with Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado
New information:
- Confirms that María Corina Machado met President Trump at the White House on Thursday as previously reported in broader form.
- Adds the specific detail that Machado physically presented Trump with her Nobel Peace Prize medal during the Oval Office/White House visit.
- Clarifies that, in this particular meeting, Trump praised Machado personally but explicitly stopped short of endorsing her as Venezuela’s next leader.
January 16, 2026
9:13 PM
Machado praises Trump, condemns Delcy Rodríguez
New information:
- At a Jan. 16 Washington news conference at the Heritage Foundation, María Corina Machado said Venezuela is in the 'first steps of a true transition to democracy' and vowed the 'criminal regime' will be dismantled.
- Machado publicly praised Trump’s role in Maduro’s ouster, saying Venezuelans are 'absolutely grateful' and that it 'took a lot of courage' to do what he did.
- She sharply criticized interim president Delcy Rodríguez as a 'communist' and 'main ally and representation of the Russian regime, the Chinese and Iranians,' while insisting that label does not reflect the Venezuelan people or armed forces.
- Machado said she was 'very impressed' by Trump’s level of information on Venezuela but declined to detail whether she asked him to avoid meeting Rodríguez or to seek the arrest of Maduro ally Diosdado Cabello.
- A U.S. official confirmed that CIA Director John Ratcliffe met Rodríguez in Caracas on Thursday at Trump’s direction to build trust and lay groundwork for continued collaboration with Venezuela’s interim government.
3:31 PM
WATCH LIVE: Maria Corina Machado holds news conference after gifting Nobel Peace Prize medal to Trump
New information:
- AP/PBS piece confirms Trump publicly claimed on social media that Machado 'presented me with her Nobel Peace Prize' and that she 'left the medal for him to keep.'
- The White House released a new Oval Office photo showing Trump holding the medal in a large frame whose inscription thanks him for 'principled and decisive action to secure a free Venezuela.'
- Machado told reporters she presented the medal 'as a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom' but indicated Trump gave few specifics on any timetable or path for elections in Venezuela.
- The article reiterates that despite this public gesture, Trump has effectively sidelined Machado and is signaling a willingness to work with acting President Delcy Rodríguez, Maduro’s former No. 2.
- The AP reiterates the Nobel Institute’s position that Machado cannot legally give or transfer the prize to Trump, underscoring that the act is symbolic.
6:12 AM
Venezuela's Machado says she presented her Nobel Peace Prize to Trump during their meeting
New information:
- NPR confirms the presentation took place during a Jan. 15 Oval Office meeting and describes Trump holding the medal in a framed display the White House later photographed.
- Machado quotes herself as telling reporters she presented the medal "as a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom" and told supporters afterward, "We can count on President Trump."
- The framed inscription, as described by NPR, reads that the medal is a "personal symbol of gratitude on behalf of the Venezuelan people" recognizing Trump’s "principled and decisive action to secure a free Venezuela."
- NPR adds that Trump has "effectively sidelined" Machado by signaling a willingness to work with acting president Delcy Rodríguez, and that Machado conceded Trump gave few specifics on elections or a democratic timetable.
January 15, 2026
11:40 PM
Machado presents Trump her Nobel Prize as uncertainty surrounds Venezuela's leadership
New information:
- On‑camera, María Corina Machado says she 'presented the president of the United States the medal of the Nobel Peace Prize' as recognition of his 'unique commitment' to Venezuela’s freedom.
- Machado explicitly tells reporters that whether she ever becomes Venezuela’s leader is 'up to President Trump' and that the opposition 'counts on President Trump for the freedom of Venezuela.'
- PBS recaps that two years ago she was banned from running, that her hand‑picked candidate Edmundo González was recognized by Secretary of State Marco Rubio as Venezuela’s 'rightful president,' and that González’s recognition was effectively sidelined after the U.S. physically captured Nicolás Maduro.
- The segment juxtaposes Trump’s new public line that Machado 'doesn't have the support within or the respect within the country' with his warm praise for Delcy Rodríguez as a 'terrific person' the U.S. has 'worked with very well.'
- PBS summarizes Rodríguez’s background as Maduro’s hand‑picked deputy, accused by activists of handing Venezuela’s security and economy to Cuba and Iran, while also noting she has released about 70 political prisoners (including five Americans) and opened oil to U.S. investment but is still not seen by rights advocates as capable of delivering rule of law.
11:32 PM
WATCH: Machado tells reporters why she presented her Nobel Peace Prize to Trump
New information:
- Confirms on camera that Machado presented her physical Nobel Peace Prize medal to President Trump during their Jan. 15 White House meeting.
- Quotes Machado saying she gave Trump the medal 'as a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom,' explicitly framing the gesture as crediting his role in Venezuela.
- Reiterates the Norwegian Nobel Committee’s clarification that the prize 'cannot be revoked, shared, or transferred to others' and that its decision 'stands for all time,' while noting it is unclear whether Trump physically retains the medal.
6:52 PM
María Machado visiting Trump after offering to share Nobel with him
New information:
- Confirms that President Trump is hosting María Corina Machado for lunch at the White House on Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026, rather than merely planning to meet her later.
- Reports White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s on‑record statement that Trump “was looking forward” to a “good and positive discussion” with Machado but that his view has not changed that it would be “tough” for her to lead because she lacks sufficient support and respect inside Venezuela.
- Details Machado’s Fox News remark that she wants to “give” and “share” her Nobel Prize with Trump for the “historic” removal of Nicolás Maduro, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee chair’s clarification that Nobel Prizes cannot be shared or transferred.
- Adds Pentagon confirmation of the seizure of yet another Venezuela‑linked oil tanker in the Caribbean — at least the sixth — and notes that the U.S. has completed its first sale of Venezuelan oil for $500 million, with Trump saying the U.S. aims to sell up to 50 million barrels or more.
4:54 PM
Trump set to meet Venezuelan opposition leader Machado
New information:
- Confirms the Machado–Trump meeting is set for Thursday at the White House and that she will also meet in the U.S. Senate that afternoon.
- Adds Trump’s new public quote to Reuters describing Machado as a "very nice woman" and saying "we're just going to talk basics."
- Reports that Trump told reporters he had a 'great' and 'long' first call with acting President Delcy Rodríguez since Maduro’s ouster and that he thinks they are 'getting along very well with Venezuela.'
- Details that Venezuela has released several Americans this week and that Rodríguez is signaling a less strident posture toward Trump while continuing prisoner releases allegedly at U.S. urging.
- Reiterates and elaborates Trump’s earlier dismissal of Machado’s viability, saying it would be 'very tough' for her to be leader because she lacks support and respect in the country, despite her Nobel Prize and years as the face of resistance.
3:25 PM
Trump to meet with Venezuela’s opposition leader after praising ‘terrific’ Maduro loyalist
New information:
- Fox article spells out that a classified CIA assessment, requested by senior policymakers and presented to Trump, concluded Maduro’s vice president Delcy Rodríguez was best positioned to lead an interim Venezuelan government, and that this intelligence drove the White House decision not to back Machado.
- Provides on‑the‑record explanation from Secretary of State Marco Rubio that the administration avoided endorsing Machado to prevent repeating perceived 'mistakes' from Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan, emphasizing this is a different 'mission' in the Western Hemisphere.
- Quotes Trump calling Rodríguez 'terrific' after their call and detailing that they discussed oil, minerals and national security, and reiterates that Venezuela will provide the U.S. with 50 million barrels of oil to be sold 'immediately.'
- Adds reporting that Trump has questioned Machado’s domestic support and respect inside Venezuela, calling her 'a very nice woman' but saying it would be 'very tough' for her to be leader, even as she publicly praises Trump for ousting Maduro.
2:36 PM
Trump to meet with Venezuelan opposition leader Machado
New information:
- This MS Now piece appears to be a garbled or partial duplicate of the already‑documented development that Trump will meet with Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado at the White House.
- No discernible new quotes, dates, conditions, or policy details can be reliably extracted from the corrupted article text beyond the basic fact of the planned meeting, which is already captured in the existing story.
5:41 AM
Trump set to meet Venezuelan opposition leader after cozying up to Maduro’s successor
New information:
- Trump is scheduled to meet Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado at the White House on Thursday.
- Trump has recently told Reuters and other reporters that Machado is a "very nice woman" but reiterated that "it would be very tough for her to be the leader" because she allegedly lacks support and respect inside Venezuela.
- Trump said he had a "great" and "long" phone call with acting President Delcy Rodríguez and that they are "getting along very well," signaling ongoing U.S. willingness to work with Maduro’s former vice president.
- Rodríguez has indicated she will continue releasing prisoners detained under Maduro, reportedly at the Trump administration’s behest, and Venezuela has freed several Americans this week.
- The piece recaps Machado’s political trajectory, her brief recent reappearance in Oslo to accept the Nobel Peace Prize via her daughter, and her long history as a U.S.-aligned opposition figure dating back to her 2005 Oval Office meeting with George W. Bush.
January 14, 2026
11:11 PM
Venezuela's acting president vows to continue releasing prisoners detained under Maduro
New information:
- Delcy Rodríguez publicly credits Nicolás Maduro with having started the current round of prisoner releases, signaling continuity rather than rupture with the prior regime.
- She frames the process as opening a 'new political moment' that will permit 'political and ideological diversity,' despite continuing hard‑line rhetoric against 'messages of hatred, intolerance.'
- Cabello’s central role in managing releases suggests that core Maduro security figures remain firmly in charge of coercive levers.
- Trump has already spoken directly with Rodríguez and praised the interaction, even as he prepares to host opposition figure María Corina Machado at the White House.
January 12, 2026
9:17 PM
Venezuela Opposition Leader to Visit White House on Thursday
New information:
- President Trump will receive Venezuelan opposition activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado at the White House on Thursday.
- Machado has been politically sidelined since the Jan. 3 U.S. military operation that captured Nicolás Maduro and brought him to the U.S. for trial.
- Some of Machado’s aides fear the meeting could damage her movement’s political prospects if Trump undercuts her publicly or dismisses the need for a democratic transition.
9:43 AM
Venezuela begins releasing political prisoners, but hundreds remain behind bars
New information:
- Foro Penal places the current number of political prisoners freed at just 41 out of more than 800 as of Monday morning Jan. 12, 2026, underscoring the limited scope to date.
- The Venezuelan government says it has released 116 detainees in total, though it is unclear how many are political prisoners versus common inmates.
- Human‑rights lawyer Alfredo Romero of Foro Penal says most political prisoners are being tortured or subjected to cruel treatment, and notes some have died in custody, citing the recent death of detainee and police officer Edilson Torres after a reported heart attack.
- The release policy was formally announced Jan. 8 by National Assembly head Jorge Rodríguez, who framed it as a gesture of 'national unity'; he is the brother of interim President Delcy Rodríguez.
- Among the first freed is opposition figure Enrique Márquez, arrested after publicly challenging Maduro over the 2024 election; he and others remain under legal charges and are barred from speaking to the media.
- Rights advocates are now pushing for a broad amnesty law because current releases leave charges intact and impose gag rules on former prisoners.
- The story reiterates that the ICC’s 2021 crimes‑against‑humanity probe of the Maduro government is rooted in documented torture of political detainees, providing international legal context for the current releases.
January 11, 2026
8:54 PM
Venezuela slowly releases prisoners for 3rd day after goodwill effort announced
New information:
- Identifies individual prisoner Diógenes Angulo, detained at 17 for posting a video of an opposition demonstration, and details his release after a year and five months in custody.
- Reports that as of Saturday night, rights group Foro Penal counts only 16 people imprisoned for political reasons released, with 804 still behind bars, undercutting vague talk of a 'significant' release.
- Clarifies that human-rights attorney Rocío San Miguel’s release is a precautionary measure with bans on speaking to the media and that her move to Spain is not formally defined as exile, according to her brother.
- Confirms that prominent opposition figures detained after the 2024 presidential elections — including Freddy Superlano, Perkins Rocha, Juan Pablo Guanipa and Rafael Tudares — remain imprisoned.
- Quotes Trump’s Truth Social post not only claiming U.S. pressure secured the releases but warning that if freed political prisoners 'forget' what the U.S. did for them 'it will not be good for them.'
2:56 AM
Trump says Venezuela has begun releasing political prisoners ‘in a BIG WAY’
New information:
- Trump posts on Truth Social that Venezuela has begun releasing political prisoners 'in a BIG WAY' and explicitly warns those freed that if they 'forget' U.S. help, 'it will not be good for them.'
- Fox reports, citing Reuters, that at least 18 political prisoners had been freed as of Saturday, though no comprehensive public list exists.
- The piece reiterates Pentagon details that Operation Absolute Resolve used more than 150 aircraft and took months of planning, underscoring the scale of U.S. involvement.
- Trump again frames the U.S. role as temporarily overseeing Venezuela’s transition of power and signals a willingness to escalate militarily if necessary.
January 09, 2026
6:06 PM
Venezuela releases imprisoned political figures and activists, which Trump says U.S. requested
New information:
- Article provides on-the-ground detail that relatives waited outside a prison in Guatire, Venezuela, chanting 'Libertad! Libertad!' as releases occurred.
- Specifies visual evidence of releases, including videos of Enrique Márquez and Biagio Pilieri embracing loved ones and Márquez video-calling family saying, 'Soon I will be with you all.'
- Adds scene-setting from Madrid, describing Rocío San Miguel and other freed Spanish citizens arriving at Madrid-Barajas Airport and being greeted by NGO representatives.
- Reiterates and contextualizes Trump’s Fox News comments in which he praised acting President Delcy Rodríguez’s government and said the releases came at U.S. request.
- Notes that Venezuelan National Assembly head Jorge Rodríguez announced a 'significant number' of people would be freed, while the exact total remained unclear late Thursday.
12:22 PM
Venezuela releases imprisoned opposition figures, which Trump says US requested
New information:
- Identifies specific high‑profile Venezuelan opposition figures released, including Biagio Pilieri, a leader involved in María Corina Machado’s 2024 campaign, and Enrique Márquez, a former electoral authority and 2024 presidential candidate.
- Confirms that prominent Venezuelan‑Spanish human‑rights lawyer Rocío San Miguel is among the five released Spanish citizens.
- Includes on‑camera reactions and quotes from released detainees, such as Márquez video‑calling family and saying, 'Soon I will be with you all.'
- Provides a direct quote from President Trump on Fox News asserting the releases came at U.S. request and praising Delcy Rodríguez’s government: 'Everything we've wanted, they've given us.'
- Clarifies that Jorge Rodríguez framed the releases as a Bolivarian government 'gesture' broadly intended 'to seek peace' and that the total number freed remained unclear as of late Thursday night.
- Notes that opposition leader María Corina Machado, now in exile and not backed by Trump, called the move 'an act of moral restitution' while stressing that 'nothing brings back the stolen years.'
January 08, 2026
7:17 PM
Venezuela releasing 'significant number' of prisoners as gesture to 'seek peace'
New information:
- Jorge Rodríguez said on national TV that a 'significant number' of citizens and foreigners are being released from Venezuelan prisons and that the releases are happening 'right now.'
- The Spanish government confirmed the release of five Spanish citizens in Caracas and is coordinating their return, though no departure date is set.
- Venezuelan NGO Penal Forum reported that as of Dec. 29, 2025 there were 863 people detained in Venezuela 'for political reasons,' and its director Alfredo Romero called the releases 'good news' while pledging to verify each case.
- The article reiterates that the Trump administration, the day before, seized two sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers and announced plans to relax some sanctions so the U.S. can oversee global sales of Venezuelan petroleum as part of its push to 'run' the country after Maduro’s capture.