Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro on Friday rejected allegations that moves to merge his energy in the emergency hit nation had disregarded the constitution.
"In Venezuela, the constitution, common, political and human rights and individuals power are in full constrain," Maduro said in a discourse to cheering supporters.
Maduro's adversaries and political experts claimed an overthrow after the Supreme Court assumed control powers from the council and expelled administrators' resistance.
Universal forces denounced the court's turn, which gave the communist president control over the main significant state foundation that still had been beyond his control.
The move earned the administration open judgment surprisingly from a senior individual from Maduro's own camp, Attorney General Luisa Ortega, who broke positions with him on Friday.
She marked the court's decisions a "crack of established request," in an unexpected revelation on state TV which drew acclaim from the group.
Originating from a staunch supporter of Maduro's late ancestor Hugo Chavez, it was the most grounded indication of divisions in the administration camp since its standoff with the middle right resistance began in January 2016.
Maduro reacted to Ortega in his discourse by vowing "through exchange and the constitution, to determine the impasse" between the lawyer general and the court.
He additionally said he had assembled a conference of security boss to "think and draw up a determination.