Machado vows to be Venezuela president 'when the right time comes'
Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado waves to supporters as she leaves the White House following a meeting with US President Donald Trump in Washington, DC, on January 15, 2026. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP)
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Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has
insisted she will be elected president "when the right time comes"
despite the United States sidelining her after overthrowing Nicolas Maduro.
President Donald Trump has backed Maduro's former vice
president Delcy Rodriguez as interim leader of the oil-rich country following
the January 3 US military operation to seize Maduro.
"I believe I will be elected when the right time comes
as president of Venezuela, the first woman president," Machado told Fox
News's Fox & Friends show broadcast Friday after she met with Trump in
Washington.
Machado's party has presented evidence that Maduro stole the
2024 election -- claims supported by Washington and much of the international
community.
But Trump has said that Machado does not have enough support
among Venezuelans, and opted to stick with Rodriguez, so long as she toes the
line on US access to Venezuela's vast oil reserves.
"I want to serve my country where I am more useful. I
got a mandate, and I have that mandate," Machado told Fox.
Machado, 58, on Thursday presented her Nobel Peace Prize
medal to Trump in a bid to win over the US president.
"He deserves it," she said. "And it was a
very emotional moment, I decided to present the Nobel Peace Prize medal on
behalf of the people of Venezuela."
It was not immediately clear if Trump kept the award
following their White House lunch. The Norwegian Nobel committee says its
prizes cannot be transferred.
Trump had campaigned hard to win last year's Nobel Peace
Prize for what he says are his efforts to stop eight wars.
Instead it went to Machado, who appeared in Oslo last month
to collect her prize -- following a daring escape from Venezuela by boat.
Trump and Rodriguez had their first telephone call on
Wednesday and the White House said he "likes what he's seeing" from
her.
Rodriguez said however that her government will stand up to
Washington.
"We know they are very powerful... we are not afraid to
confront them diplomatically, through political dialogue," she said
Thursday.
Rodriguez was delivering Maduro's state of the nation
address to parliament while the long-time authoritarian leader is in a New York
jail facing drug trafficking charges.
By contrast Machado, who campaigned for years to end leftist
Maduro's rule, was greeted by jubilant supporters in Washington.
The New York Times reported that CIA director John Ratcliffe
met with Rodriguez on Thursday, a further sign that Washington sees her as its
favored leader in the short-term.

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