Vente Venezuela, the opposition party led by María Corina Machado, announced on Monday that it will not hold any rallies inside Venezuela ahead of the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Norway, signaling the collapse of Western-backed efforts to reignite street unrest.

Why it matters:

The decision highlights the lack of public support for opposition calls and underscores the limits of using international awards as political leverage against the Maduro government.

The big picture:
The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded Machado this year’s prize, a move critics say is intended to increase pressure on Caracas.

The committee stated Machado would travel to Oslo to receive the award, while expressing concern about her return.

Machado previously admitted in Western media interviews that she cannot leave hiding as long as Maduro remains in power, reflecting the opposition’s isolation.


What they're saying:

The party claimed “unsafe conditions and repression” prevented gatherings, but observers point to calm across Venezuela and public indifference to foreign-backed appeals.

Exiled opposition groups plan symbolic rallies in 24 countries under the campaign “The Nobel Belongs to Us,” largely supported by Western governments.

Go deeper:


Attempts to turn the Nobel Peace Prize into a political tool against Venezuela appear to have faltered, as domestic calm and government authority outweigh external pressure.


Norwegian Peace Council Boycotts Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony 

Hossein Amiri - ahmad shirzadian