2017 Constituent National Assembly of Venezuela

"[9] Since the opposition did not participate in the election, the incumbent Great Patriotic Pole, dominated by the United Socialist Party of Venezuela, won almost all seats in the assembly by default.

[10][11][12] After the assembly was elected, the body convened for the first time on 4 August 2017, despite criticism from the aforementioned parties and from the regional trade bloc Mercosur.

[14][13] The Assembly voted on its first day of work to remove the nation's Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega Díaz and named Tarek William Saab as her replacement.

[34] The Constituent Assembly barred three of the most influential opposition parties – Justice First, Democratic Action and Popular Will; from participating in the 2018 Presidential Elections.

[35] The EU condemned the Constituent Assembly stripping of Juan Guaidó's parliamentary immunity, calling the action a "serious violation of the Venezuelan constitution, as well as of the rule of law and separation of power".

[37] A November 2017 poll by IVAD showed that the majority of Venezuelans did not recognize the Constituent National Assembly, with 61.4% of respondents agreeing with the phrase that the constitutional body was "illegal and illegitimate".

Following the establishment of the ANC, Argentina,[42] Colombia,[43] France,[44] Peru,[45] and the United States[46] have characterized the Bolivarian Government of Venezuela as a dictatorship.

Nicolás Maduro Guerra , son of President Nicolás Maduro , beside Carmen Meléndez during a session
The Constituent Assembly's first meeting in the Salon Eliptico of the Federal Legislative Palace.
Fidel Vasquez reading from a folder with Chávez eyes during a Constituent Assembly session.
Edificio La Francia, administrative seat of the Constituent Assembly.
Law against Hatred, approved unanimously on 8 November 2017.
Map of countries who recognize ANC as of August 2017
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Legislatures South America
Legislatures South America