7 hours agoShareSaveKwasi Gyamfi AsieduShareSaveVenezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has said her coalition should “absolutely” be in charge of the country, following the US ousting of President Nicolás Maduro last week.”We are ready and willing to serve our people as we have been mandated,” Machado said in an interview with the BBC’s US news partner CBS.She thanked US President Donald Trump for his “leadership and courage” after US forces stormed Caracas and arrested Maduro, but said nobody trusted the deposed president’s ally, who has been appointed as interim leader.Machado and her opposition movement claimed victory in 2024’s widely disputed elections, but Trump has refused to back her, saying she lacks popular support.The former legislator, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last year, described US military action in Venezuela over the weekend as “a major step towards restoring prosperity and rule of law and democracy in Venezuela”.She said she had not spoken to Trump this year, but expressed gratitude to him for deposing Maduro.”President Trump’s leadership and courage has brought Nicolás Maduro to face justice and this is huge,” she told CBS. Despite her overtures, the US president has publicly dismissed Machado as a credible successor to Maduro.”I think it would be very tough for her to be the leader,” Trump told a news conference on the day of the US operation, referring to Machado. “She doesn’t have the support within or the respect within the country. She’s a very nice woman, but she doesn’t have the respect.”Machado, who has been in hiding for months after being barred from running in the 2024 presidential elections in Venezuela, previously called for the opposition’s substitute candidate Edmundo González to assume power after Maduro’s arrest.Machado rallied support for González in the election, and vote tallies released by her party suggest he won by a landslide.However, Maduro was declared president by Venezuela’s electoral council (CNE), a body dominated by government loyalists. The US and dozens of other countries recognised González as the president-elect.David Smolansky, a spokesman for the Venezuelan opposition, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that there was no future for a well-functioning country without González and Machado in power.”They could guarantee a democratic transition, and they have the respect of Venezuelans and several governments across the world,” he said. Asked why he thought Trump had so far chosen to back Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodríguez – formerly Maduro’s vice-president – rather than the opposition, Smolansky said: “Every transition, when it begins, is not perfect – it’s messy.”He also responded to suggestions that the opposition’s lack of support within the military was one of the reasons Trump had chosen to back Rodríguez, saying there were members of the armed forces – both currently serving and in exile – that were ready to work with them. …