The senator from the Communist Party supports the Venezuelan tyranny and organized a mobilization in its favor
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Senator Óscar Andrade, recently elected Secretary General of the Communist Party of Uruguay (PCU) in December 2025, keeps a stance of defense of the Venezuelan communist narco-dictatorship and rejection of external interventions, focusing his discourse on criticism of United States foreign policy.
But always supporting Maduro's tyranny, and of course in favor of the Venezuelan dictatorship installed in 1999 by Hugo Chávez.
Mobilization in favor of the tyranny
On Saturday, January 3, Óscar's Communist Party Andrade, Juan Castillo, and Marcelo Abdala, organized a mobilization in Plaza Cagancha in Montevideo, where there were very few demonstrators.
Andrade shared on social media a one-and-a-half-minute video in which he delivered a fiery speech in favor of the Caribbean dictatorship, trying to justify his position by claiming that it is an "interference by United States imperialism".
The Communist Party's support in general, and Andrade's in particular, for human rights violations goes back decades.
It is enough to remember that this party has supported the Cuban dictatorship since 1959, a sinister tyranny that Óscar Andrade describes as a "revolution".
When the entire democratic world sides with the Venezuelan people, Uruguayan communists support a tyranny that for 25 years has subjected Venezuelans to poverty and extreme misery.
Clandestine financing
Andrade's support for the Venezuelan dictatorship may have something to do with some clandestine financing that Chávez's and Maduro's tyranny has provided to the Uruguayan Communist Party.
Movilización en Plaza Cagancha
This is not mere speculation. The book by Uruguayan writer Martín Natalievich states that the Uruguayan Communist Party has been financed for years with Chavista petrodollars.
The book explains, with documentation, that Uruguayan communists have received thousands of dollars from the Chavista dictatorship. It is documented that several left-wing political parties received dirty money from the Venezuelan dictatorship, and one was the Communist Party, although of course the communists continue to hide it to this day.
Now that the tyrant is imprisoned in the United States and placed at the disposal of the courts, the fear of Uruguayan communists is that the deposed dictator will reveal his links with various political organizations on the continent.
In particular, that he will confess his financing of the Communist Party of Uruguay. This same party has financed itself illegally through the mega-scam of Sunca, where the case's own prosecutor acknowledged that communist unionists appropriated 1,200,000 dollars belonging to construction workers.