Venezuela’s Rodriguez blames ‘propaganda’ for quake response backlash
Venezuela’s Rodriguez blames ‘propaganda’ for quake response backlash Venezuela’s acting president Delcy Rodriguez, whose 180-day mandate ends Friday, dismissed criticism of the government’s earthquak
Venezuela’s Rodriguez blames ‘propaganda’ for quake response backlash Venezuela’s acting president Delcy Rodriguez, whose 180-day mandate ends Friday,
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →Why This Matters
The episode underscores the erosion of public trust in Venezuela’s crisis governance, where natural disasters now double as political flashpoints. It reveals how regime messaging—even in moments of urgent relief—can backfire when citizens directly witness systemic failures, making propaganda a liability rather than a tool.
Background Context
Under Nicolás Maduro’s shadow administration, acting president Delcy Rodríguez has overseen a parallel system of parallel state media and grassroots militias, blurring lines between governance and propaganda. The recent earthquake struck regions already reeling from hyperinflation and collapsed infrastructure, where international aid is often weaponized as leverage by Caracas.
What Happens Next
Rodríguez’s tenure ends this week, but the criticism may follow her into a post-Maduro transition—or intensify if she seeks a formal role. Watch for whether the regime doubles down on narrative control or quietly adjusts disaster response protocols ahead of regional elections, where opposition gains could hinge on crisis management.
Bigger Picture
Venezuela’s pattern of blaming external narratives mirrors tactics seen in Syria’s Assad era and Nicaragua’s Ortega regime, where natural crises become proxy wars for legitimacy. The episode fits a broader trend of authoritarian governments using propaganda to offset legitimacy gaps, even as real-time citizen journalism and diaspora networks erode their monopoly on narrative.

