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Well, yeah. Maduro knows what giving up power does to a dictator's life expectancy.
Brazil has a long list of dictators that abandoned power and did just fine. As a sibling commented, so does Argentina. I can only remember Peru in South America that made a fuss about it... and then reversed course.
But holding to it when things escalate does usually end very badly.
Left wing dictators maybe. Pinochet did just fine after handing things over.
Well mussolini was the og right wing dictator and he didn't have a fun end
Mussolini was the OG fascist. Certainly not any OG dictator.
The OG right wing dictators are called kings.
(Also literal Roman dictators)
Technically, there was no right wing as we understand it today before the French revolution. The left sat to the left of the king (represented the people) and the right...to the right (represented the nobility and the clergy). The king was supposed to be in the "middle" and arbitrate.
The romans had two factions in the Senate which you could associate with right/left: the optimates and the populares. e.g. Caesar, a dictator, was in the populares (a populist?), so according to your anachronistic view he was a left-wing dictator.
There are more examples of kings that tried to reduce the power of the nobility by appealing to the common people, distribute wealth and build infrastructure.
That's how absolutism came to be, strengthening of royal power as opposed to that of nobles, making the royal army stronger without vassal troops, and that infrastructure being built too strengthened central power.
Yea, absolutism took power away from everyone into the state at a time when states were embodied in kings.
Well he also like lost WW2...