Caracas_ In response to the destabilizing proposal of the reactionary ultra-right wing in Venezuela, after nearly a month of violent protests, President Nicolás Maduro reiterated the call for a national dialogue among the main political actors of this South American nation, Prensa Latina reports.

The recent call for a National Constituent Assembly, which seeks to establish a work agenda that guarantees constitutional order and peace, overturned the arguments of the opposition bloc, which calls the Bolivarian government antidemocratic, and incites violence as a form of confrontation.

For the Venezuelan right, it is not enough to have lost 18 elections against the Chavista and Bolivarian project that is taking place in Bolivar’s homeland. In almost two decades of popular rule, the traditional parties opposed to it, have not given up trying to overthrow it, even appealing to a coup in 2002.

After the death of Commander Hugo Rafael Chávez Frías and President Maduro's arrival, the most reactionary groups intensified their destabilizing projects, with full support from Washington, the Organization of American States (OAS) and a group of allied countries.

In recent years, violence has become a weapon of political struggle for the enemies. Suffice it to recall the plan called La Salida, in 2014, casually applied after a governmental call to dialogue, which left a balance of 43 deaths and losses for more than 20 billion dollars.

Faced with this violent scenario and the opposition's lack of willingness to dialogue, Maduro launched a constituent call, allowing all parties to sit at the negotiating table and seek alternatives to advance the pacification of the country, with the indisputable premise of preserving the social achievements achieved in these 18 years of revolutionary power.

The call for a National Constituent Assembly in Venezuela is the result of the collapse of the possibilities of a process of dialogue with opposition sectors that, with its violent actions, seek to generate fear among the population.

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