The President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro Moros, participated this Tuesday in the Constituent Assembly of the Working Class, a national deliberative forum that brought together delegates from 110 assemblies across the country, representing more than 66,000 delegates.

The event, led by the Minister of Popular Power for the Social Process of Labor, Eduardo Piñate, aimed to present a summary of the proposals gathered to strengthen the labor sector and the Bolivarian Economic Agenda.

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“More than 5,000 proposals were first systematized and then synthesized before arriving here. Proposals for each of the pillars of the Bolivarian Economic Agenda,” explained Piñate, noting that the initiatives have already been incorporated into documents that culminated in this session.

The spokesperson for the working class, María Alejandra Rondón, read the conclusions of the meeting, reporting that 22,110 assemblies were held throughout the country during the workers’ constituent process, with the participation of productive, urban, rural, and fishing sectors.

#Venezuela | More than 1,300 workers gathered in Caracas to take part in the “Great Constituent Congress of the Venezuelan Working Class,” an event whose main objective is the transformation and organization of the country’s labor movement.https://t.co/nWfJRFs8ma

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 16, 2025

These assemblies resulted in the appointment of 66,330 delegates, a figure that, according to Grimán Rondón, represents a historic milestone in the inclusion of women in these spaces: 40% are women and 60% are men, highlighting progress in gender equality within the Venezuelan labor movement.

During her address to the head of state, Grimán Rondón presented a set of proposals that emerged from the collective debate, among which the appointment of a National Workers’ Transition Commission (CENOT) stands out. This commission would have full powers to lead the renewal of the Bolivarian Socialist Workers’ Central at all levels, sectors, and structures.

The National Confederation of Workers (CENOT) must present a transition timeline within 20 days, culminating in the National Workers’ Congress within 18 months, which will formalize the renewed central organization. Furthermore, within six months, it must define new bylaws, design the methodology for general elections in unions, federations, and the central organization itself, and ensure that grassroots leaders are active, employed workers with revocable mandates.

Other key proposals include the relaunch of the Bolivarian Workers’ University “Jesús Rivero,” the creation of the National School of Workers’ Cadres with a curriculum focused on production management, political economy, Venezuelan history, science, technology, and innovation, and the consolidation of the National Plan for the Training and Self-Training of the Working Class, promoted by the Ministry of Popular Power for the Social Process of Labor.

Grimán Rondón also announced that the workers’ sector has developed its own Production Plan, the result of collective work in assemblies, which will be presented in detail at the presidential meeting with representatives of the working class.


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