The tragic toll in deaths, injuries, and destruction from Venezuela’s massive earthquakes is not fully known, but it certainly can only increase. The death count rises daily. Initial estimates put the destruction at $6.7 billion, affecting nearly 7 million people, including 2 million in Caracas, the capital city.As rescue efforts continue, and relief and reconstruction get underway, this disaster will unquestionably have political consequences. If there is any silver lining for Venezuela’s people, it is the widespread proof that, in a time of crisis, their corrupt, authoritarian leaders are failing in their most basic duties. Flagrant graft is and has been endemic under the Chavez-Maduro-Rodriguez regime, one of many factors limiting foreign investment for almost three decades. Natural disasters have felled governments throughout history, often in dramatic fashion. Years of bad weather and poor crops so devastated French agriculture that widespread famine was a principal cause of the 1789 French Revolution. In Nicaragua, a catastrophic earthquake in 1972, followed by widespread corruption in relief efforts by Anastasio Somoza’s corrupt government, undermined his authority and led to its 1979 overthrow by Sandinista rebels. While it’s too soon to conclude that the same outcome will occur in Venezuela, the signs are ominous. Ironically, the biggest obstacle to the dictatorship’s fall may well be the Trump administration.
Trump should support Venezuela’s opposition in earthquake aftermath
Following the earthquake, President Donald Trump should support Venezuela’s opposition movement, not the government of Delcy Rodriguez.








