Rodriguez: Venezuelan Government System is constitutionally a Presidential one


Hector Rodriguez, head of the Parliamentary Homeland Bloc in the National Assembly, explained this Thursday to the citizenry how does the Venezuelan judicial system works, referring to the figure of the President of the Republic within the Magna Carta.
“The Constitution established how you can develop a lawsuit against the President of the Republic and it requires the concomitance of several branches, this is, to involve the Legislative, the Citizen and the Executive Powers, to protect the figure of the Head of State,” he said.
During the broadcast of a special program on Venezolana de Television to analyze the legal powers of the Venezuelan Parliament, Rodriguez said that the deputies of the right wing are seeking to force the circumstances: “But they miscalculated the consciousness of the people in the streets.”
He expanded on that the Venezuelan Government System is a Presidential one. “Thus, the circumstantial majorities of one of the powers does not subject the figure of the Head of State”.
Rodriguez manifested that President Maduro has not been proven any crime as to run on him a Parliamentary Coup d’ Etat. “It is not possible that a single power can judge the President, if it is the people who elected him, it will be the people alone who has the power to withdraw his powers”.
The deputy said that after the constant threats by the right wing, the Bolivarian people will continue to defend the Homeland and the socialist system initiated by Hugo Chavez.
“Here this is not about a debate between a power or another, this is about the forces of a historical bloc who refuses to die, with a constitutional process that was born in Revolution,” he added.
He said that the process with which was born the Revolution can not disappear, and therefore the political groups refuse to accept it, and so they constantly threaten the Miraflores Palace.