Machado: ‘I will be president when the time comes’
Venezuelan opposition figure Maria Corina Machado,a Nobel Peace Prize winner,spoke in Washington about venezuela’s political future,insisting that she will be president when the time comes but that the leadership should be decided through free elections by the Venezuelan people. She discussed the country’s electoral outlook after the capture of Nicolás Maduro following a large-scale strike. Machado was barred from running in the July 28, 2024 election by Venezuela’s courts and endorsed Edmundo González Urrutia as her chosen successor; Maduro won about 51.2% amid international concerns over the fairness of the vote. After the election, Machado went into hiding to avoid arrest, while González fled to Spain, where he received political asylum. Machado stressed that her role should be determined by free elections and described the struggle as a spiritual and existential fight for Venezuela’s freedom.
OAN Staff Sophia Flores and Noah Secades
6:42 PM – Monday, February 2, 2026
Maria Corina Machado says she will be president of Venezuela when the time comes.
While on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, Machado discussed plans for Venezuela’s electoral future following the capture of Nicholas Maduro.
Venezuela’s most recent presidential election took place on July 28, 2024. Former opposition primary winner Machado was barred from running by Venezuela’s highest courts, and she subsequently threw her support behind opposition candidate Edmundo González Urrutia as her endorsed successor on the ballot.
The results of the election were immediately disputed after Nicolás Maduro was declared the winner with roughly 51.2 % of the vote, raising widespread international concerns over transparency and fairness. Machado went into hiding to avoid arrest while continuing to denounce the government’s actions, and González fled to Spain, where he was granted political asylum.
Machado says that, for now, her role in leading Venezuela should be determined by a free election decided by Venezuelan voters.
“I will be president when the time comes. But it doesn’t matter. That should be decided in elections by the Venezuelan people,” Machado stated.
“I wasn’t allowed to run in the last election as we mentioned before because Maduro was afraid to run against me and he thought Edmundo was not a threat because nobody knew who he was and in less than three months we managed to put the whole country supporting him because this is this is matter of freedom,” she continued. “I mean, this is an spiritual fight, an existential fight for Venezuela.”
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