Video: Elliott Abrams Explains How Juan Guaido Is President and Not Yet the President at the Very Same Time
He's the president but his term hasn't started yet -- “I think it’s logical,” Elliot Abrams
A press conference with U.S. special envoy to Venezuela Elliott Abrams, regarding Juan Guaido seems to have produced more questions than answers.
Elliot Abrams went on record to say the Venezuelan National Assembly passed a resolution that essentially goes against the country’s constitution. He says they voted for the 30-day term of the self-declared interim president, opposition lawmaker Juan Guaido, to start once President Nicolas Maduro steps down.
In a press conference that had reporters scratching their heads, Abrams, who is now United States special envoy to Venezuela, told journalists that Guaido’s 30-day interim presidency that was set to end by Feb. 23, hasn’t actually begun and won’t until President Nicolas Maduro is out of office.
“The 30-day end to his interim presidency starts counting, uhm, because he’s not in power, that’s the problem. Maduro is still there,” said Abrams to reporters at the White House, effectively admitting that the man has zero authority in Venezuela.
“He’s not in power. That’s the problem. Maduro is still there.”
The U.S.-backed Guiado declared himself interim president Jan. 23 with the expectation that he’d be able to call snap elections within 30 days, as permitted by invoking Article 233 of Venezuela’s constitution. However, the plan was foiled, as well as the U.S.-backed cyber attack on Venezuela’s electrical system that sent most of the country into darkness just under two weeks ago.
Guiado, not able to muster an overthrow of democratically elected Maduro, and now that the 30-day time frame is over, he and opposition allies in the National Assembly, in contempt of court for nearly two years, have passed a resolution saying that his interim status won’t start until Maduro is removed.
“The (Venezuelan) National Assembly has passed a resolution that states that the 30-day period of interim presidency will not start ending, or counting, until the day Maduro leaves power. So the 30 days doesn’t start now it starts after Maduro leaves. That’s a resolution of the Venezuelan assembly,” said Abrams to the gathered journalists.
According to Abrams, Maduro is "Schroedinger's President". Simultaneously never President and yet still President so that Guaidó's 30-day interim Presidency hasn't yet started.https://t.co/ES4qmTYUaJ
— Left 👁 on the News (@leftiblog) March 20, 2019
A reporter challenged Abrams and the National Assembly’s constitutional jurisdiction to change the rules of the game midway.
“When did they do that?” asked a journalist.
“Ahh about, they did that roughly a month ago,” responded Abrams, somewhat confounded.
“So when he was took the mantle of the presidency that (resolution) wasn’t there, so that’s post facto. … That’s like saying I was elected president for four years and two years into it you change the rules so that your term hasn’t even started yet,” said the same journalist.
Abrams retorted to the journalist that he didn’t get to vote “because you’re not in the national assembly.”
The U.S. official said that the assembly found the move “constitutional” and called the presidency “vacant” until “Maduro goes.”
This is great! I never laughed that much!!!!!
Elliot Abrams says that @jguaido is interim president but not yet because @maduro_en is still in power! Maybe he meant that @jguaido is not the president. Is he kidding me?#HandsOffVenezuela #sosvzla #SOSVenezuela https://t.co/Sxl8cNUD3f— Anna Maria (@AnnaMar58797496) March 19, 2019
A journalist continued to question Abrams, “so he (Guido) isn’t interim president?”
“He is interim president but he’s not able to exercise the powers of the office because Maduro is still there,” responded Abrams. “I think it’s logical.”
Abrams: Venezuelan Presidency is vacant, but Maduro is still in power (ie, it's not vacant) so Guaidó's 30-day interim Presidency hasn't started yet. By the way, at the end of that 30-days elections are supposed to be held; Guaidó talked about 6-9 months.https://t.co/ES4qmTYUaJ
— Left 👁 on the News (@leftiblog) March 20, 2019
Source: teleSUR