Venezuela: is anyone still betting on the opposition?Not me. Even a penny. But let's read its renewed commitments. “[We] are getting closer and closer to that change we [...] deserve so much (...) See you very soon in the streets of our beloved country”, declared yesterday opposition leader María Corina Machado, who has not been seen in public for weeks. I do not know what chess board the former congresswoman has in front of her, but I see checkmate in a move for her defense. The opposition does not have the muscle to win the pulse of Chavismo, which also surpasses it in wisdom—by a long distance—to fight political battles. I say this without disregarding the messy and obscure electoral management of Chavismo, but arguing that the opposition should have defended its point about the electoral fraud before the judiciary—when it had the chance—, and that the decision to go to the polls with Edmundo González Urrutia was a huge nonsense. The cowardice of the stammering former candidate dynamited all the roads that could lead the anti-Chavez supporters to the Miraflores Palace, if any existed.