Venezuelans in Florida push Trump to topple Maduro
Digest more
Florida is home to over half of the 600,000 Venezuelan TPS holders impacted. Officials say their loss of legal status will harm Florida's economy.
While the US escalates a military threat in nearby waters, Venezuelans say the real enemy of the people is a sharp rise in food prices.
President Trump’s military actions and immigration policies have divided Venezuelans in South Florida, many of whom fled the Maduro regime.
The temporary protected status designation for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans living in the U.S. legally expired late Friday.
14don MSN
Venezuelans voice uncertainty, fear and skepticism after arrival of US aircraft carrier in region
From concern to skepticism, Venezuelans in Caracas are expressing a range of emotions a day after the United States’ most advanced aircraft carrier strike group arrived in the Latin American region and intensified the friction between both nations.
Latin Times on MSN
Venezuelans in South Florida Split Over Potential US Military Action in Their Country: 'In Theory, The Same Cause Should Unite Us'
The divide is also shaped by concerns about immigration since many struggle to reconcile calls for intervention with the administration's simultaneous efforts to end TPS for Venezuelans
The brief, filed in the case of National TPS Alliance et al. v. Noem, argues that the administration’s move to vacate and terminate Venezuela's TPS designation — first granted in 2021— was a "baseless decision" and an unlawful overreach of executive authority.
Venezulans "disappeared" from the United States to El Salvador where they were held in the country's CECOT maximum security were routinely tortured.
ProPublica on MSN
‘I Lost Everything’: Venezuelans Were Rounded Up in a Dramatic Midnight Raid but Never Charged with a Crime
Federal agents raided a Chicago apartment building and detained 37 immigrants, most of them Venezuelans, in a highly publicized operation that was presented as a victory against terrorism, but no evidence has been found to support the government's claims.
A report by Human Rights Watch and Central American rights group Cristosal alleges that dozens of Venezuelans deported from the US to a Salvadoran prison earlier this year were subjected to torture and other serious abuses including sexual violence.
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem directed that hundreds of Venezuelan men who were removed from the U.S. in March be transferred to El Salvador, according to a new court filing.