Trump political base sets aside isolationism to cheer Maduro capture
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US President Donald Trump speaking during a press conference after Mr Nicolas Maduro and his wife were captured on Jan 3.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - Supporters of US President Donald Trump have largely praised the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro
While a handful of conservative figures criticised the attack on Venezuela and detainment of Mr Maduro as a betrayal of Mr Trump’s “America First” pledge to avoid foreign entanglements, most of the President’s Republican allies fell in line.
The early support came even after Mr Trump said the United States would temporarily “run” Venezuela
For now, the base appears willing to cheer on the removal of Mr Maduro, seeing little risk of an escalation into a years-long quagmire like the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, political analysts said.
“This is too recent for there to be significant MAGA-base push back,” said University of Denver professor of political science Joshua Wilson. “There are many questions about how things will develop, and so this could become another test of Trump’s ability to frame events and control his base.”
The military action comes amid a slump in Mr Trump’s approval ratings, with a Reuters/Ipsos poll in December showing that just 39 per cent of US adults approved of his job performance, largely reflecting disappointment over his handling of the economy.
Historically, presidents usually only gain a short-lived political boost from military action, according to Southern Methodist University political science professor Matthew Wilson. That means the risk for Mr Trump and Republicans is on the downside heading into November’s midterm elections, when control of Congress is at stake.
“If it goes well, it will largely be forgotten, I suspect, by the time of the midterms,” Prof Wilson said. “If it goes poorly, it will be an albatross.”
Before Jan 3’s events, the last time the United States took action to remove the ruler of a Latin American country was the 1989 invasion of Panama that ousted dictator Manuel Noriega.
That was the first of two quick, relatively successful military actions under US President George H. W. Bush, who also orchestrated the 1991 Gulf War, yet he still lost his re-election bid to Mr Bill Clinton in 1992, primarily due to a weak economy.
Greene, Owens criticise attack
Democrats have widely criticised the Trump administration’s actions in Venezuela as ill-advised and potentially unlawful, given they were carried out without approval from Congress. The party’s leader in the Senate, Mr Chuck Schumer, said Mr Trump risked dragging the US “into another costly foreign war”.
The Democrats have been joined by Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a long-time Trump supporter who had a public falling out with the President in 2025. Speaking on NBC’s Meet The Press programme on Jan 4, the Republican described Mr Maduro’s arrest as a betrayal of Mr Trump’s pledge during the 2024 presidential campaign to steer clear of foreign conflicts.
“This is the same Washington playbook that we are so sick and tired of that doesn’t serve the American people,” she said.
Ms Candace Owens, a right-wing podcaster known in part for spreading conspiracy theories, was also critical of Mr Maduro’s capture, writing on X that the Central Intelligence Agency had staged “another hostile takeover of a country at the behest of a globalist psychopaths (sic)”.
Yet most of Mr Trump’s political supporters – and even some critics – either backed the attack or declined to weigh in.
Mr Steve Bannon, a former Trump aide and prominent voice in the MAGA movement, praised the raid as “bold and brilliant” on his podcast hours after the operation, embodying the hawkish tone prevalent across the President’s base.
Trump administration officials have gone to lengths to characterise Jan 3’s operation as a law enforcement action against Mr Maduro, who has been indicted on drug-related charges and has a court hearing on Jan 5 in New York.
Some MAGA influencers said they also supported Mr Trump’s stated goal of asserting US dominance in the Western Hemisphere.
Right-wing activist Laura Loomer argued on social media that the US must exploit Venezuela’s vast oil reserves rather than allow adversaries such as Iran, China, Russia and Cuba to benefit from them and finance attacks on the West.
“We will exert our power and take the oil and financially starve the axis of evil,” Ms Loomer wrote on X, in a broadside against Representative Thomas Massie, one of the few Republicans to question the legal basis for the strikes on Venezuela.
Ms Nikki Haley, who lost to Mr Trump in the Republican primary of 2024, called Mr Maduro a “brutal socialist dictator” in a post on X and said the Venezuelan people “deserve freedom”.
Republican Senator Rand Paul, a long-time opponent of overseas military interventions, did not explicitly criticise Mr Trump’s actions in a social media post, but cautioned that “time will tell if regime change in Venezuela is successful without significant monetary or human cost”.
Spelman College political science professor Matt McManus said it would be incorrect to cast the MAGA movement as strictly isolationist, when it has long been comfortable in projecting power.
He pointed to Trump backers’ support of the US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites in June and of Mr Trump’s various threats against other countries during his first term.
“MAGAdom has never really been defined by a great concern for ideological consistency,” Prof McManus said. “It very much takes its cues from the leading figures… And of course, right now, Trump is signalling very heavily that Venezuelan intervention is what's good for America.”
But Prof McManus and other experts agreed that a prolonged intervention in Venezuela would test Mr Trump's grip over his party and the MAGA movement, especially if US troops are deployed – a possibility the President has not ruled out.
“I guess Venezuela will be the acid test that answers the question is MAGA whatever Donald Trump says it is,” said University of New Hampshire political science professor Dante Scala. REUTERS

