

Cilia Flores, the power behind the Venezuelan throne. The spectacular capture of Venezuelan leader and strongman Nicolás Maduro by the United States has somewhat overshadowed the impact of the arrest of his wife, Cilia Flores, the nation’s first lady, or “first combatant,” according to the official narrative from Miraflores Palace.Flores has been one of the most powerful and influential figures within Venezuelan power circles, wielding fundamental influence over the decisions of the Chavista government. She was also responsible for some of the most important measures taken by the revolutionary command in power, both to confront the opposition and to run the country. During Maduro’s 12 years in office, Flores abandoned the public profile she had maintained during Hugo Chávez’s presidency and retreated to work behind the scenes in the corridors of power. Her appearances during these years were infrequent, almost always alongside Maduro.
Nicolás Maduro’s wife, who has also been captured by the US, worked behind the scenes to preserve the hegemony of the Chavista regime
The spectacular capture of Venezuelan leader and strongman Nicolás Maduro by the United States has somewhat overshadowed the impact of the arrest of his wife, Cilia Flores, the nation’s first lady, or “first combatant,” according to the official narrative from Miraflores Palace.
Flores has been one of the most powerful and influential figures within Venezuelan power circles, wielding fundamental influence over the decisions of the Chavista government. She was also responsible for some of the most important measures taken by the revolutionary command in power, both to confront the opposition and to run the country. During Maduro’s 12 years in office, Flores abandoned the public profile she had maintained during Hugo Chávez’s presidency and retreated to work behind the scenes in the corridors of power. Her appearances during these years were infrequent, almost always alongside Maduro.
Born in Tinaquillo, Cojedes State, in 1956, a lawyer by trade, married twice and with three children, Flores entered politics shortly after February 4, 1992, when Hugo Chávez led a military coup against Venezuela’s then-existing democracy. Like other far-left activists of the time, Flores went to Yare prison to meet Chávez personally and offer her services to carry out the Bolivarian Revolution. There she met Nicolás Maduro, with whom she would later begin a romantic relationship. In 1997, they founded the Fifth Republic Movement, the first electoral expression of Chavismo.EL PAÍS
Cilia Flores, the power behind the Venezuelan throne
Nicolás Maduro’s wife, who has also been captured by the US, worked behind the scenes to preserve the hegemony of the Chavista regime
The spectacular capture of Venezuelan leader and strongman Nicolás Maduro by the United States has somewhat overshadowed the impact of the arrest of his wife, Cilia Flores, the nation’s first lady, or “first combatant,” according to the official narrative from Miraflores Palace.
Flores has been one of the most powerful and influential figures within Venezuelan power circles, wielding fundamental influence over the decisions of the Chavista government. She was also responsible for some of the most important measures taken by the revolutionary command in power, both to confront the opposition and to run the country. During Maduro’s 12 years in office, Flores abandoned the public profile she had maintained during Hugo Chávez’s presidency and retreated to work behind the scenes in the corridors of power. Her appearances during these years were infrequent, almost always alongside Maduro.
Born in Tinaquillo, Cojedes State, in 1956, a lawyer by trade, married twice and with three children, Flores entered politics shortly after February 4, 1992, when Hugo Chávez led a military coup against Venezuela’s then-existing democracy. Like other far-left activists of the time, Flores went to Yare prison to meet Chávez personally and offer her services to carry out the Bolivarian Revolution. There she met Nicolás Maduro, with whom she would later begin a romantic relationship. In 1997, they founded the Fifth Republic Movement, the first electoral expression of Chavismo.
Fernando Llano (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Just as with Maduro, Flores cultivated a very close political relationship with Hugo Chávez, for whom she felt total admiration. She was one of the leading voices of the Chavista cause in the early years of the revolution and had a long and highly controversial parliamentary career. A founder of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) in 2007, she served as Attorney General in 2012 and as President of the National Assembly for four years (2006-2011), succeeding Maduro himself in that position. The two married in 2013, when Maduro assumed the presidency following Chávez’s death.
Over the years, Flores developed enormous cunning to expand her influence in the circles of the judiciary and the National Electoral Council (CNE), promoting figures close to her leadership within the circles of power and forming an enviable network of contacts and allies.case of the “narco-nephews,” as it became known, became a taboo subject in Venezuela and one of the most uncomfortable ones for the revolutionary leadership.On November 11, 2015, in an intelligence operation carried out by the DEA in Haiti, Efraín Campo Flores and Francisco Flores de Freitas, her nephews, were arrested and charged with attempting to illegally smuggle 800 kilos of cocaine into the United States. The case of the “narco-nephews,” as it became known, became a taboo subject in Venezuela and one of the most uncomfortable ones for the revolutionary leadership.
The scandal faded from public view thanks to censorship and political turmoil, but it became a family nightmare for the presidential couple. Both nephews were released by the Joe Biden administration in 2022, in the context of the Barbados talks. The Democratic administration, along with the Venezuelan opposition, maintained a strategy to try to compel Chavismo to hold credible and transparent presidential elections-Elpais


