Reading time:

1–2 minutes

In 2025, Venezuela is once again in the crosshairs of US foreign policy, facing the threat of military intervention and heightened sanctions from a new Trump administration. But to understand the resilience of the Venezuelan people today, we must look back to a pivotal moment in their history that is often overlooked: the “Trienio” of 1945-1948.


In this episode, Nick explores the dramatic coup of October 1945, led by young officers like Carlos Delgado Chalbaud and the democratic party Acción Democrática. We delve into how a military uprising transformed into a radical experiment in social democracy—quadrupling budgets for health and housing, eradicating malaria, and enfranchising the illiterate and women for the first time. Drawing on Keith Lowe’s The Fear and the Freedom, we ask: Why did this democratic spring terrify the elites? And how does the memory of this revolution continue to shape Venezuelan resistance to US imperialism today?


Key Topics:

  • The 1945 Coup: How junior officers and democrats toppled a dictatorship.
  • The Trienio (1945-48): A brief golden age of literacy, health, and worker power.
  • Oil and Sovereignty: The radical decision to split oil profits 50/50, setting a global precedent.
  • Class War: Why the middle classes and traditional elites revolted against the “government of espadrille-wear

Get the weekly analysis

One piece every week connecting current events to their historical roots — free, every Tuesday.

Subscribe free →

Paid tier also available — deeper dives, full archive, essay guides.

If this was useful, there’s more where it came from.

Every week I publish one piece connecting a current event to its historical roots — free, every Tuesday. Paid subscribers get two additional deeper dives and full archive access.

Subscribe to Explaining History →

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Explaining History Podcast

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading