Interim government of Pedro Carmona

The Government of Pedro Carmona was the de facto government installed after the overthrow of Hugo Chávez in 2002.

Government of Pedro Carmona
Interim Government in Venezuela
FormationApril 12, 2002
ExtinctionApril 13, 2002
CountryVenezuela

The Act Constituting the Government of Democratic Transition and National Unity was promulgated, which dissolved the national public powers and concentrated all power in Carmona.[1]

Carmona's government was recognized by Colombia, El Salvador, Spain and the United States.[2][3][4] It was not recognized by Argentina and Cuba.

Domestic policy

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The Act Constituting the Government of Democratic Transition and National Unity (Spanish: Acta de Constitución del Gobierno de Transición Democrática y Unidad Nacional), known colloquially as the "Carmona Decree" or El Carmonazo,[5] was a document drawn up on 12 April 2002 the day following the 2002 Venezuelan coup attempt, which attempted to oust President Hugo Chávez. This Act established a transitional government, dissolving the National Assembly and the Supreme Court, and also suspending the Attorney General, Comptroller General, governors, and mayors elected during Chávez's administration.[6][7]

Reactions

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Domestic

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Chávez had described Carmona as "straightforward and low-key – until schemers manipulated him".[8]

Foreign

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Andrés Pastrana in Colombia called Pedro Carmona to offer him "the full support and express solidarity of the Colombian people in this transition process".[9] El Salvador also recognized him as the legitimate president[9] as did the Bush administration in the United States, which blamed Hugo Chávez for the events, considering that Chávez had resigned and therefore Carmona's assumption of power could not be a coup d'état.[10]

Press

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Carmona, described by The Miami Herald as "president for a day" told the newspaper that his acceptance of that position was, in the Herald's paraphrase, "as a spontaneous act of bravery, not the result of a monthslong conspiracy". "I was not involved in any conspiracy", Carmona said. "I cannot accept any conjecture or soap operas. I categorically deny it."[11]

The Chicago Tribune said Carmona was "a buttoned-down businessman and economist who has degrees from Caracas' Andres Bello Catholic University and the University of Brussels" and who "has an international reputation, having represented Venezuelan commercial and diplomatic missions abroad".[12]

Describing Carmona as "a bookish economist" who had worked with the Foreign Ministry and "run a variety of trade associations", The Washington Post said that one reason he was chosen as interim president "was that he was one of the few people who didn't want the job". One condition imposed by the coup-makers was that the interim president would not be able to run for president in elections several months later, and those who really wanted the long-term position therefore took themselves out of the running for the interim post.[13]

Aftermath

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Carmona was succeeded by Diosdado Cabello, vice president during Chávez's previous administration, after being sworn in by the National Assembly. Cabello then returned power to Hugo Chávez , restoring his second term. Carmona resigned, was arrested, and later fled the country, seeking asylum in Colombia.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. Boron, Atilio. "Making coups invisible" (PDF). Honduras Documentation Center.
  2. "Revista Envío - Thirteen years of joint Venezuela-El Salvador history". www.revistaenvio.org. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
  3. "US, Spain supported anti Chavez 2002 coup". MercoPress. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
  4. Trapani, James (2026-01-05). "Before toppling Maduro, the US spent decades pressuring Venezuelan leaders over its oil wealth". The Conversation. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
  5. From the surname of Pedro Carmona and the suffix -azo, which implies a blow and/or magnitude: see Spanish nouns: Other suffixes. See also: Los procesos de legitimación y deslegitimación discursivas en la prensa escrita venezolana. Pérez de Pérez, Anneris. Letras. 2006, vol.48, no.72, retrieved 29 May 2007, p.349-363.
  6. BBC news. (BBC Venezuela investiga el "Carmonazo". Retrieved 13 June 2006. (in Spanish)
  7. BBC news. (BBC 13 April 2002) Interim Venezuelan president sworn in. Retrieved 31 August 2006
  8. The Miami Herald, 20 April 2002 Saturday BR EDITION, Venezuelan defends his brief presidency; Denies conspiring against Chavez, BYLINE: FRANCES ROBLES frobles@herald.com, SECTION: A; Pg. 1
  9. 1 2 Quintanar, Silvia. "Por la construcción de una verdadera comunidad internacional" (PDF).
  10. Vulliamy, Ed (2002-04-21). "Venezuela coup linked to Bush team". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
  11. The Miami Herald, 20 April 2002 Saturday BR EDITION, Venezuelan defends his brief presidency; Denies conspiring against Chavez, BYLINE: FRANCES ROBLES frobles@herald.com, SECTION: A; Pg. 1
  12. Chicago Tribune, 13 April 2002 Saturday, "New Venezuela leader installed; Latin American officials troubled by regime change", BYLINE: By Patrice M. Jones, Tribune foreign correspondent. Foreign correspondent Hugh Dellios in Mexico City and Tribune news services contributed to this report, SECTION: NEWS; ZONE: N; p. 1
  13. The Washington Post, 18 April 2002 Thursday, "Chavez Regained Power While Plotters Bickered; Coup Was Not Planned, Ex-Leader Says", BYLINE: Scott Wilson, Washington Post Foreign Service, SECTION: A SECTION; p. A17
  14. "COUP LEADER LEAVES VENEZUELA". Orlando Sentinel. 2002-05-30. Retrieved 2026-01-12.