“Honduras declares an election winner before finishing the vote recount…”

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US Escalation in the Caribbean and Latin America – Live Updates

December 24, 2025:

4:45 PM:

Ahead of the December 30 deadline to declare a winner, Honduras’s National Electoral Council (CNE), which oversees elections, declared Nasry Asfura, the National Party candidate, the winner of the November 30 presidential election. Late last night, two of the council’s three members — Ana Paola Hall of the Liberal party and Cossette Lopez of the National party — voted to move forward with issuing the declaration. Although they did not specify when it would be made, the declaration was issued a couple of hours ago. The ruling LIBRE party’s councilor, Marlon Ochoa, protested last night’s decision and said he would file a complaint with the Attorney General, as all the tally sheets needed to be counted before the results could be announced. Ochoa alleged that an “electoral coup” was underway. He refused to sign today’s declaration, which was instead signed by an alternate councilor.

Honduras’s November 30 elections, which were marked by intense interference by the Trump administration in favor of National Party candidate Nasry Asfura, did not produce a clear winner. A virtual tie between Asfura and Liberal Party candidate Salvador Nasralla, combined with technical problems in the preliminary results transmission system (TREP) and last-minute changes that left thousands of tally sheets processed with inconsistencies, prevented an official declaration of the outcome until today. As a result, the legitimacy of the process has been undermined. The LIBRE party, Ochoa, and Nasralla had called for a vote-by-vote recount as the only way to ensure the election’s credibility, a request the National Party’s vice presidential candidate also appeared to be open to supporting. LIBRE councilor Marlon Ochoa alleged that approximately 13,000 tally sheets contain inconsistencies, while Nasralla cited a figure of more than 8,000. And although senior LIBRE figures have alleged fraud and said they would not recognize the results, they maintain that their own internal tallies show Nasralla won the election.

Nevertheless, on December 13, the CNE voted to conduct a special review of 2,792 tally sheets. The review did not begin until December 19, however, due to disagreements among the parties that prevented them from sending CNE staff to carry out the process. To resolve the impasse, the National and Liberal parties reportedly reached an agreement under which they would also support the review of an additional 7,795 tally sheets. During this time, CNE Councilors Hall and Lopez also issued a memo rejecting requests for a vote-by-vote recount on legal grounds.

Once it began, the special review process was further delayed by staff boycotts and by confrontations between party supporters outside the center where the review was taking place. Marlon Ochoa and Salvador Nasralla also alleged that Ana Paola Hall and Cossette Lopez voted to reduce the number of tally sheets under special review by 691. Additionally, on December 19, the US imposed visa restrictions on Ochoa and another LIBRE electoral official, citing their alleged efforts to impede the vote count.

In this context, on the night of December 23, Councilors Hall and Lopez voted for the CNE to issue an official declaration of a winner “with the data available at this time,” even though 395 tally sheets and several legal challenges remain pending review. In response, Nasralla called for a vote-by-vote recount, requested that the CNE extend the declaration deadline to January 10, and said that the council’s decision may be illegal. Ochoa contends that the decision is invalid, as he had left the plenary meeting before the vote, meaning the body lacked the necessary three-member quorum for holding the vote.

Although the CNE had not indicated when it would issue its declaration, the official announcement came just hours ago. Nasry Asfura was declared the winner with 40.27 percent of the vote, a margin of just over 27,000 votes ahead of Nasralla. The CNE’s declaration stated that while the special review process is “recognized as a mechanism of review and control,” it should not “paralyze the expression of the sovereign will of the electorate.”

Congratulating Honduras’ President-Elect Asfura’s Electoral Victory

Hidden Story Behind Trump’s Pardon? Peter Theil’s $11B Lawsuit in Honduras

“Trump Promotes NED-Soros Interference in Honduras”

Pre‑Scripted Contest: U.S. Sets Narrative for Honduras Election

Trump Claims Venezuelan Airspace Is Closed in Latest Illegal, ‘Dangerous Escalation’

Policy experts and advocates on Saturday denounced President Donald Trump’s claim that he had ordered the airspace above and around Venezuela “to be closed in its entirety”—an authority the US president does not have but that one analyst said signaled a “scorched earth” policy in the South American country and that others warned could portend imminent airstrikes.

Trump Claims Venezuelan Airspace Is Closed in Latest Illegal, ‘Dangerous Escalation’

Hopefully, when I wake up from my catnap, Venezuela is still there—and not renamed ‘Trump Tower South.’ /s

Venezuelan Opposition Prepares Coup, as HRW Pushes for Harsher Sanctions

Venezuelan opposition prepares coup

Fugitive oppositionists Maria Corina Machado and Ivan Simonovis (the latter is a US resident) are hatching plans for violence. 

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Liberal NGO Pushes for Harsher Venezuela Sanctions

NED targets Cuba with $6.6 million in 2025

The Trump-Rubio regime is lifting restrictions and will restore funds to the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) towards foreign interference in countries such as Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

María Corina Machado is the female Javier Milei (aka US Puppet)

Front organizations

Tag: 2024 Venezuelan Presidential election

US gov’t-linked firm is source of exit poll claiming Venezuelan opposition won election

Venezuela’s opposition and US media outlets claim there was fraud in the July 28 election based on an exit poll done by US government-linked firm Edison Research, which works with CIA-linked US state propaganda organs and was active in Ukraine, Georgia, and Iraq.

US gov’t-linked firm is source of exit poll claiming Venezuelan opposition won election

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The US government funds election observers and exit polls for regime change

All of my recent posts about the 2024 Venezuelan presidential election are linked below:

As predicted: violence by the far-right Venezuelan opposition breaks out across Caracas

Pentagon contradicts White House about US troop presence in Yemen

US defense officials claim they have no boots on the ground in Yemen, despite a recent acknowledgement that US forces are indeed present in the war-torn Gulf state, a 27 January report from The Intercept shows.

Pentagon contradicts White House about US troop presence in Yemen

Related:

Biden’s announcement on ending US support for the war in Yemen, explained

But that doesn’t mean the US will stop fighting in Yemen. Per the administration, it will continue to strike al-Qaeda and ISIS militants in the country to ensure they can’t use it as a base to hatch plots against America. The US has been targeting terrorists in Yemen, most of them against al-Qaeda, since 2002 and has killed around 1,000 people in strikes. Stopping that campaign, experts say, might give the terrorists more space to operate.

So ending support for the fight against the Houthis, and continuing the fight against America-threatening terrorists — that’s pretty straightforward. What isn’t as clear is what the second element, supporting Saudi Arabia’s defense, means in practice.

The biggest complication here is what defines an “offensive” versus a “defensive” move. Say the Houthis attack Saudi Arabia, which experts I spoke to expect they will continue to do. The rebels launched missiles at an airport and airbase in Saudi Arabia in 2019, and at Saudi oil stations last year. Under international law, Riyadh has the right to retaliate in a commensurate way.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez set to tour Latin America with a group of congressional Democrats 🧐💭

“We have much to learn from our counterparts in these countries, including how to confront disinformation and violent threats to our democracies,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), pictured in April, said of the delegation to Brazil, Chile and Colombia.
(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez set to tour Latin America with a group of congressional Democrats

The agenda (which has not yet been made public) is expected to include meetings with Presidents Lula da Silva (Brazil), Gabriel Boric (Chile) and Gustavo Petro (Colombia) and parliamentary representatives. The legislators will also meet with civil society organizations that work “on the frontlines of ecological transitions, democratic transformations and peace negotiations in the countries,” the delegation explains in a joint statement. The trip seeks to “promote a U.S.-Latin American relationship based on mutual respect, understanding and a commitment to cooperation.”

Ocasio-Cortez, a key figure in the Democratic Party’s most progressive wing, and Misty Rebik, Sanders’s chief of staff (sent on behalf of the 81-year-old veteran senator), will be joined by four congressmen: Joaquin Castro and Greg Casar (both from Texas), Nydia Velázquez (New York) and Maxwell Frost (Florida), who is the youngest congressman in the House of Representatives at 26. Castro is a member of the Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, which is part of the Congressional Foreign Affairs Committee. He recently spearheaded a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken to pressure Peru’s President Dina Boluarte over human rights violations occurring in that country. Casar is in his first term as a congressman and belongs to the Progressive Caucus, while Velazquez became the first Puerto Rican woman to serve in Congress in 1993.

The defense of democracy is another ideal that guides the trip. According to the congresspeople, the “twin” insurrections on Capitol Hill, on January 6, 2021, and in Brasilia (on January 8, 2023) “made it clear that the fate of democracy in the United States is closely tied to that of its southern neighbors. “[Our] democracies,” they believe, “not only share the challenge of defending their institutions from political violence, disinformation and other forms of anti-democratic intervention; they also share the challenge of restoring confidence in the ability of those institutions to meet citizens’ fundamental needs.”

Ocasio-Cortez highlights another goal of the trip: exploring how to “confront disinformation and violent threats to our democracies.” The charismatic congresswoman adds that “it’s long past time for a realignment of the United States’ relationship to Latin America. The U.S. needs to publicly acknowledge the harms we’ve committed through interventionist and extractive policies, and chart a new course based on trust and mutual respect.”

‘Nearly A Third Of The World Economy Is Now Subject To Sanctions’

The Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) just published a study about:

The Human Consequences of Economic Sanctions.

The results are as any observer of such acts would expect. Sanctions are used too broadly. They hardly ever serve their supposed original purpose and do not reach their aims. They hurt the poor more than the supposedly targeted leaders of this or that country.

‘Nearly A Third Of The World Economy Is Now Subject To Sanctions’

Taxpayers ARE on hook for bank bailout – and could even fund bankers’ bonuses

As regulators rush through emergency measures to prevent further chaos following the disastrous collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, there’s a point they’re very keen to emphasize: this is not a bailout.

Taxpayers ARE on hook for bank bailout – and could even fund bankers’ bonuses

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Joe Biden stuck around just long enough to lie about who’s on the hook for SVB bailout