View in browser | Support our newsroom
Support fearless independent journalism. Donate today.
DONATE NOW

THE WEEKLY REVEAL

Saturday, January 17, 2026

A Dictator Deposed—What Now for Venezuela?

A man and woman on a motorcycle are blurry in the foreground as they ride past a mural of Nicolás Maduro on a red concrete wall. Two black Xs are spray-painted over the eyes of Maduro’s portrait.

Cristian Hernandez/AP

Listen to the episode

Journalist Mariana Zúñiga woke up in the middle of the night to the sounds of explosions and military planes in Caracas, Venezuela. Her WhatsApp chats flashed the news: The ruling dictator, Nicholás Maduro, had just been captured by the US military.

She was surprised and felt uneasy about what was to come.

In the days that followed, Zúñiga would go into the field, despite the dangers journalists face, to report on what the country feels like at this tumultuous moment. 

This week on Reveal, we speak with Venezuelans about witnessing this moment of history from up close and afar. For Freddy Guevara, an exiled Venezuelan opposition leader living in the US, there is little confidence in the country’s new leadership. 

“They are not moderate at all,” Guevara says. “They are super radical, and they believe they are smarter than everyone.” 

And historian Alejandro Velasco explains the role Venezuela’s most valuable resource—oil—has played in the country’s history and relations with the US.

🎧 Other places to listen: Spotify, Overcast, iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.

America’s New Era of Violent Populism Is Here

Three men stand atop a vehicle in front of a crowd of others outside the US Capitol. They are dressed in MAGA gear and wave American flags. Many in the crowd wear red MAGA hats.

Joel Marklund/Bildbyran

A year ago this month, President Donald Trump granted clemency to nearly 1,600 people responsible for the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol. 

When Robert Pape, a University of Chicago political science professor who studies domestic political violence, heard about the pardons, he says he immediately thought it was “going to be the worst thing that happened in the second Trump presidency.”

The first year of Trump’s second term has been a blizzard of policies and executive actions that have shattered presidential norms, been challenged in court as unlawful, threatened to remake the federal government, and redefined the limits of presidential power.

But Pape argues that Trump’s decision to pardon and set free the January 6 insurrectionists, including hundreds who had been found guilty of assaulting police, could be the most consequential decision of his second term.

“There are many ways we could lose our democracy. But the most worrisome way is through political violence,” Pape says. “Because the political violence is what would make the democratic backsliding you’re so used to hearing about irreversible. And then how might that actually happen? You get people willing to fight for Trump.”

On this week’s More To The Story, Pape talks with host Al Letson about how America’s transformation to a white minority is fueling the nation’s growing political violence, the remarkable political geography of the insurrectionists, and the glimmers of hope he’s found in his research that democracy can survive this pivotal moment in history.

Find this episode wherever you listen to Reveal, and don’t forget to subscribe:

Advertisement

In Case You Missed It

A close-up photograph of Donald Trump peering out a back window of the presidential limousine. With narrowed eyes and mouth slightly ajar, he is wearing a suit and tie with an American flag pin on his left lapel.

🎧 I Study Fascism. I’ve Already Fled America.


Former Yale professor Jason Stanley has taken a lot of heat for moving to Canada. Why? Because he studies fascism—and he believes it’s already arrived in the US.

Photo Credit: ANP/Zuma
An ICE agent dressed in camo and a gas mask kneels on the back of a detained protester; the agent is surrounded by fellow officers and there are lingering clouds of tear gas around the group.

🎧 Lessons From Trump’s “War” on Chicago 


As ICE continues to terrorize Minneapolis, now is a good time to revisit one of the earlier stops on the Trump administration’s deportation blitz: Chicago.

Photo Credit: Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times/AP

🎧 What Trump’s Venezuela Attack Means for the World 

Foreign Policy’s Emma Ashford examines how the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro could signal a new era of US foreign policy.

Photo Credit: Kyle Mazza/CNP/Zuma

A close-up photo of a woman’s hand cradling the face of a short-haired brown tabby with striped fur. The cat’s eyes are half-open and relaxed, giving it a calm, slightly sleepy expression.

🎧 The Black Market for a Lifesaving Cat Drug
 

A fatal cat disease was finally cured, but the treatment wasn’t legally available. So a group of cat lovers created an international black market.

Photo Credit: Krissy Krummenacker/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle/Getty

Advertisement
This issue of The Weekly Reveal was written by Arianna Coghill and edited by Nikki Frick. If you enjoyed this issue, forward it to a friend. Have some thoughts? Drop us a line with feedback or ideas!
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
Donate
Copyright © 2026 The Center for Investigative Reporting. All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up for The Weekly Reveal newsletter.

Our mailing address is:
The Center for Investigative Reporting
PO Box 584
San Francisco, CA 94104

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from all Reveal emails.