President Trump has announced that U.S. Special Forces successfully captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, flying them out of the country to face charges in the U.S.
While the official legal justification for this attack is “narco-terrorism” (based on indictments unsealed back in 2020), the psychological and political justification for the MAGA base is deeply rooted in his “2020 Stolen Election” narrative.
The central claim of the “Kraken” lawsuits and the arguments made by Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani in late 2020 was that Venezuela was the architect of the theft. They alleged that the Dominion voting systems were originally designed by Smartmatic at the behest of Hugo Chávez specifically to rig elections in Venezuela, and that this same “Venezuelan software” was imported to the U.S. to steal the election from Trump. This framed the Venezuelan government not just as a geopolitical annoyance or a drug state, but as the primary foreign entity responsible for removing Trump from power. In this narrative, the Venezuelan regime committed an act of war against the U.S. presidency itself.
Because of those 2020 claims, today’s attack likely feels to the Trump base like a “settling of scores” rather than just a drug bust.
By capturing Maduro, Trump isn’t just arresting a foreign dictator; he is capturing the man his supporters believe (via the conspiracy theories) helped install Joe Biden.
It provides a “justice” narrative that goes beyond geopolitics: They stole our country, so we took their leader.
There is a direct personnel bridge between these two worlds. Erik Prince (founder of Blackwater) has been a key figure in both the “election integrity” movement and the push for aggressive intervention in Venezuela.
Throughout 2024 and 2025, Prince was heavily involved in the “Ya Casi Venezuela” (Almost There Venezuela) movement, raising funds and lobbying for the privatized removal of the Maduro regime.
Prince has long argued that the U.S. should take the gloves off, and his influence suggests a merging of the “Stop the Steal” sphere with private military interventionism.
Usually, kidnapping a sitting head of state is a massive violation of international norms that would face domestic skepticism. However, because a large portion of the U.S. electorate was convinced by the 2020 narrative that Venezuela is an active, existential enemy that “hacked” American democracy, the political threshold for this kind of extreme military action was significantly lowered.
While the White House press briefing will cite “drugs” and “national security,” the emotional fuel for this attack—and the reason it will likely be cheered rather than questioned by Trump’s core supporters—is the belief that the Venezuelan regime “messed with the wrong President” in 2020.
