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Recognized by U.S. as VenezuelaтАЩs President-Elect, Edmundo Gonz├бlez Meets With Biden

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He is widely believed to have won VenezuelaтАЩs presidential election, and by a landslide. But on Monday, instead of making preparations for his swearing-in at the palm-lined palace in Caracas, Edmundo Gonz├бlez was at the White House meeting with President Biden.

The encounter, a first for the two men, signals Mr. BidenтАЩs desire to present a broad coalition of support for Mr. Gonz├бlez, who met with the right-wing president of Argentina, Javier Milei, over the weekend, and will meet with other regional presidents in the coming days.

It is part of an effort by Mr. Biden, in the final days of his administration, to further isolate Nicol├бs Maduro, VenezuelaтАЩs longtime autocratic leader, who claims he won the countryтАЩs July election.

тАЬWe had a long, fruitful and cordial conversation with President Biden and his team,тАЭ Mr. Gonz├бlez said at a news conference outside the White House, but he did not provide any details about the topics they discussed.

The Biden administration did not comment immediately.

Pedro Mario Burelli, a veteran Venezuelan political operative and an opponent of Mr. MaduroтАЩs movement, called the visit part of an effort to тАЬfreak him outтАЭ тАФ to scare Mr. Maduro into believing that the global political tide is increasingly turning against him.

Yet the meeting is unlikely to change the narrative inside Venezuela: Mr. Gonz├бlez, 75, was forced to flee the country shortly after millions of Venezuelans voted for him, and he is now living in exile in Spain. Over the weekend, he promised once again that he would return to his country to be sworn in on Friday.

тАЬBy any means, I will be there,тАЭ Mr. Gonz├бlez told reporters during his visit to Argentina, where he and President Milei appeared together on the balcony of presidential palace, clasping hands. Mr. Milei offered his full support for Mr. Gonz├бlez.

But many Venezuelans are skeptical that Mr. Gonz├бlez will return to his country anytime soon тАФ the government has placed a $100,000 bounty on his head, and he faces likely arrest if he returns.

Mr. Gonz├бlezтАЩs most important political backer, Mar├нa Corina Machado, a conservative former lawmaker who threw her weight behind him after she was barred from running in the presidential election in July, has been in hiding in Venezuela for months. In a recent video message, she continued to encourage the armed forces to defect to her side. That also has not happened.

Instead, Mr. Maduro is expected to be sworn in for another six-year term on Friday, and the real question hanging over the nation is how a second Trump administration, set to take office on Jan. 20, will approach Mr. Maduro.

Mr. TrumpтАЩs picks for foreign policy positions тАФ Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, his choice for secretary of state; Representative Mike Waltz of Florida; and Mauricio Claver-Carone among them тАФ have a history of taking a hard line against Mr. Maduro. They favor harsh economic sanctions meant to squeeze the Venezuelan leader economically rather than negotiating with him.

Yet others wonder if Mr. Trump, who has a penchant for deal-making, will instead engage in dialogue with Mr. Maduro. The U.S. president-elect is eager to reduce migration and to push one of VenezuelaтАЩs important allies, China, out of the region.

In an effort to gain leverage over Mr. Trump, Mr. Maduro has spent the last few months detaining foreigners inside Venezuela, including several U.S. citizens who are now in his governmentтАЩs custody.

Such a dialogue could involve a deal in which Mr. Maduro accepts returned migrants тАФ and releases U.S. citizens тАФ in exchange for the United StatesтАЩ easing up on sanctions that have hobbled his economic power.

Some U.S. oil executives, eager to do business in Venezuela, have been lobbying for that approach.

But Ms. Machado, in a recent interview with The New York Times, argued that Mr. Trump should take the sanctions route, revoking Biden-era licenses that have allow some oil companies to work in Venezuela. Mr. Gonz├бlez has been less vocal about what approach he would like the Trump administration to take.

Luz Mely Reyes, a prominent Venezuelan journalist, said that while Mr. BidenтАЩs meeting with Mr. Gonz├бlez marked an important moment, тАЬBiden is leaving soon, and we have to see how the government of Donald Trump will act.тАЭ

So far, just one Republican official, Senator Rick Scott of Florida, has announced plans to meet with Mr. Gonz├бlez during his visit to the United States.

Representatives for Mr. TrumpтАЩs transition team did not respond to a request for comment.

Laura Dib, a Venezuela analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights advocacy group, said Mr. Gonz├бlez needed a stronger show of support from Republicans.

тАЬI am hoping for Rubio to meet with him,тАЭ she said.

On Monday Mr. Gonz├бlez was also to appear at the Organization of American States in Washington.

Ms. Machado has called for Venezuelans to head to the streets on Thursday to show their support for Mr. Gonz├бlez.

And, despite the Maduro governmentтАЩs threat to arrest her, she has promised to appear in public that day. тАЬThe hour has come to act,тАЭ she wrote on X on Saturday. тАЬWeтАЩll see each other in the streets.тАЭ

Genevieve Glatskycontributed reporting.

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