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Venezuelans in U.S. face heartbreak after travel ban shuts door on family reunification
Venezuelans in U.S. face heartbreak after travel ban shuts door on family reunification

Miami Herald

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Venezuelans in U.S. face heartbreak after travel ban shuts door on family reunification

For Venezuelans in the United States, a new White House proclamation has reopened old wounds and deepened fears that exile in the U.S., once a certain path to safety, will now mean permanent separation from their loved ones. On Wednesday, the Trump administration announced sweeping travel restrictions on nationals from over a dozen countries—including Venezuela, Cuba, and Haiti. The order bars entry for most applicants seeking tourist, student and business visas, further narrowing the few remaining legal pathways for families torn apart by dictatorship, displacement and economic collapse. Among the thousands left in anguish is Sasha Escalante, a 44-year-old Venezuelan radio producer living in Miami. In the past year, Escalante has fought to stay alive while battling Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, a rare and severe skin condition that left her hospitalized with rashes resembling second- and third-degree burns covering 75% of her body. Today, she is still recovering—and fighting for the chance to reunite with her elderly parents, whom she hasn't seen in years. Escalante had applied for a humanitarian visa to bring her parents to the U.S. while she was in intensive care fighting for her life. Her parents' previous tourist visas had expired in October 2022. Despite the urgency of her condition, her request was denied. Her parents later secured a tourist visa appointment for this coming August, this time in Madrid, due to the absence of a U.S. embassy in Venezuela. That appointment had offered a faint for reunion. Now, with the travel ban in place, even that hope has all but disappeared. 'Being away from family as a refugee is already painful,' Escalante said. 'But it's even harder when you've come close to death. I don't know what else I can do.' Her father, a retired engineer, was trained in manufacturing and technology in the 1980s in Japan. Over the years, he returned to the U.S. numerous times to update his skills. But under the new travel policy, his decades of professional and personal ties may count for nothing. A former television journalist who fled Venezuela in 2012 after the Hugo Chávez shut down her station, Escalante now works as a content producer at Miami's Actualidad Radio, a Spanish-language station. In addition to her serious health struggles, she is also a mother to a son on the autism spectrum. 'This country gave me refuge,' she said. 'But it is devastating. That appointment was my hope' A community under siege Escalante's story echoes the growing fear and frustration spreading to the nearly one million Venezuelans living in the United States. The new proclamation suspends most immigrant and non-immigrant visas for Venezuelans—affecting tourism (B-1/B-2), students (F and M), and exchange visitors (J), with limited exceptions. While green-card holders and immediate family members of U.S. citizens remain exempt from the travel ban, the practical effect is clear: For countless Venezuelan Americans, family reunification is once again out of reach. Alberto Argüelles, a Venezuelan attorney and longtime asylum seeker in Doral, said he is depressed. Like many, he fled persecution at home only to feel persecuted again in exile. 'We Venezuelans are trapped between two oppressors—one who hunts us at home, and another who now targets us in the U.S.,' he said. Though the Trump administration first included Venezuela in a travel ban in 2017, that version targeted only government officials and their families. The current policy is far broader Beginning June 9, it affects the vast majority of Venezuelan visa seekers, citing concerns over identity verification and Venezuela's refusal to take back deportees from the U.S. Yet data reviewed by the Miami Herald shows that the U.S. has already carried out over 21 deportation flights, returning more than 3,400 Venezuelans since Trump resumed deportations—including 150 people deported just one day after the proclamation was signed. At the same time, approximately 1,500 Venezuelans have voluntarily returned from Mexico through Maduro's Vuelta a la Patria (Return to the Homeland) program. In total, more than 5,000 Venezuelans have returned to their country since Trump took office. A pattern of exclusion The proclamation comes as the U.S. government moves to terminate Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans, a policy that had shielded more than 600,000 migrants from deportation. More than 350,000 have already lost that protection, with the remainder at risk by September, pending a federal court ruling. Adelys Ferro, executive director of the Venezuelan American Caucus, condemned the policy as racially motivated and strategically cruel. 'They didn't even try to hide the racism, discrimination, and xenophobia when drawing up this list,' she said. 'The countries affected are all places devastated by war, dictatorship, famine and death.' Even before the new restrictions, Venezuelans were facing high rejection rates for U.S. visas. In 2024, 37.4% of all tourist visa applications were denied, according to the State Department. A Miami Herald analysis shows the average denial rate under President Biden was 33%, compared to 60% during Trump's first term. Despite the high denial rate, demand remains strong. In fiscal year 2025 through April, over 35,500 B1/B2 visas and 205 student visas (F) were issued to Venezuelan nationals. The administration claims the ban is justified due to a 10% overstay rate for Venezuelans—higher than average but not unique. Still, for Venezuelans like Escalante, the numbers pale in comparison to the human cost. Back home, Venezuela's main opposition coalition, Plataforma Unitaria Democrática, has also condemned the new Trump policy. In a statement Thursday, the group called it a measure that 'further aggravates the already complex immigration situation faced by Venezuelans. 'Penalizing individuals based solely on their nationality only increases the suffering of innocent Venezuelans,' the statement read. 'We deserve the support of the free world—not more punishment.' The travel ban was announced shortly after the expiration of Chevron's oil license in Venezuela—a move widely interpreted as a political blow to Maduro's regime. The timing of the ban may also be aimed at deterring a potential new wave of Venezuelan migration, as the U.S. cracks down on immigration. More than 8 million Venezuelans have fled their country in recent years, and nearly 1 million now reside in the United States. The consequences of the ban go beyond the U.S. border. In some Latin American countries, a valid U.S. visa is often a gateway to mobility. Countries like Panama now require visas for Venezuelans—but waive them for travelers holding valid U.S. visas. The new ban will likely sever those options as well. And with no U.S. embassy in Caracas and direct flights between the U.S. and Venezuela suspended since 2019, even navigating the application process has long been a logistical and financial burden. Now, the door has been all but slammed shut.

Latino voters abandon Donald Trump in droves as immigration crackdown sparks feelings of betrayal across communities
Latino voters abandon Donald Trump in droves as immigration crackdown sparks feelings of betrayal across communities

Time of India

time26-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Time of India

Latino voters abandon Donald Trump in droves as immigration crackdown sparks feelings of betrayal across communities

Support for Trump among Latinos has seen a sharp drop as he nears his first 100 days back in office. Many Latinos who once backed him now feel let down, especially because of how immigration policies have played out. According to a fresh Pew Research Center poll , about 72% of Latinos disapprove of the way Trump is handling his job, and 54% disapprove strongly. Only Black Americans showed a higher disapproval rate at 82%. #Pahalgam Terrorist Attack India stares at a 'water bomb' threat as it freezes Indus Treaty India readies short, mid & long-term Indus River plans Shehbaz Sharif calls India's stand "worn-out narrative" This sharp drop matters because Trump had actually made surprising gains among Latino voters in the last election. Exit polls show that Latinos swung 19 points toward Trump compared to the 2020 election results. Even though Vice President Kamala Harris still captured a slight majority of Latino votes, 52% to 46%, it was a big change from Biden's 33-point lead in 2020. Overall, the Pew poll shows 59% of Americans disapprove of Trump, while 40% approve. Among Whites, the numbers are more evenly split, with 49% approving (including 39% strongly approving). Among Asian Americans, the disapproval rate stands at 69% compared to just 29% approving. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Google Brain Co-Founder Andrew Ng, Recommends: Read These 5 Books And Turn Your Life Around Blinkist: Andrew Ng's Reading List Undo Why is support for Trump among Latinos collapsing so quickly? The main reason? Immigration policies. Many Latinos who had placed their hopes in Trump feel abandoned. One big sore spot is Trump's move to revoke Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Venezuelans, a decision that is currently being fought in court. Ronald Bellorin, a Venezuelan immigrant who fled to the U.S. during Trump's first term, told the Washington Post how betrayed he feels. "Today, I feel the same way I felt in Venezuela—that they're going to come take me somewhere I won't be able to escape from," he shared, tearing up as he recounted his family's journey. "I thought we would be safe here." Live Events Stories like Ronald's are becoming more common, especially among immigrant communities who once thought Trump would be their champion. What happened to Trump's strong Latino support in places like Florida? Florida tells an interesting story. Trump had made major inroads with Latino voters there, especially among Venezuelan Americans. In Doral, Florida—often nicknamed "Doralzuela" because around 40% of residents have Venezuelan roots—Trump flipped the city. He lost Doral in 2016, but in 2024, he won with 62% of the vote, beating Kamala Harris by 25 points. Many Venezuelan Americans felt Trump understood their struggle with socialism back home. That's why this feeling of betrayal cuts even deeper now. John De La Vega, a Venezuelan American immigration lawyer and Army veteran, said it plainly: "The Venezuelan community gave President Trump their support. This is completely different from what I thought it was going to be." How are changes to immigration programs fueling Latino anger? Beyond TPS, the Trump administration has taken action against several immigration programs that many Latinos depended on. For instance, the CBP One app, a Biden-era tool that let asylum seekers schedule appointments, is now being targeted. Migrants using the app are being told to self-deport or risk being permanently barred from entering the U.S. Another blow? The administration is also working to undo the CHNV program, which allowed over 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans sponsored by Americans to enter legally. Programs helping Colombians, Ecuadorians, Central Americans, Haitians, and Cubans reunite with U.S.-based family members are also under threat, causing even more worry in immigrant communities. Are Republicans still backing Trump despite these shifts? Yes, but there's some erosion there too. According to the Pew survey, about 75% of Republicans still approve of Trump's performance. However, about 24% now disapprove, and 14% disapprove strongly. Meanwhile, more than 9 in 10 Democrats disapprove of Trump, with just 7% approving. The growing dissatisfaction among some Republicans, especially those with ties to immigrant communities, shows that Trump's base isn't entirely immune to these policy shifts. What could this mean for Trump moving forward? Losing Latino support could have serious consequences. The Latino vote has been growing steadily in importance, especially in battleground states like Florida, Arizona, Nevada, and Texas. If Trump's immigration policies continue to alienate Latino voters, he might find it harder to hold onto the gains he made in 2024. And while strong support among White voters remains, it may not be enough to offset losses in diverse states.

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation
This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

CNN

time13-03-2025

  • Politics
  • CNN

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

South Florida's Venezuelan community has long gathered at the restaurant El Arepazo to mark major milestones. This is where activists waved Venezuelan flags in celebration when President Joe Biden announced deportation protections for immigrants from the country four years ago, and where supporters of the Venezuelan opposition have gathered to hold rallies and anxiously follow election results back home. But the lunch crowd has thinned out since President Donald Trump's administration moved last month to revoke the temporary status that had allowed hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants to stay legally in the US, and announced an agreement with the country's authoritarian government to restart deportation flights. 'You can feel the fear,' said Daniel Oropeza, a Temporary Protected Status holder whose entire family is facing the possibility of deportation, as he sat on the patio outside the restaurant. 'You stop doing things that you normally did before because you don't know for certain if in a couple of weeks you're going to be able to remain in the country.' Trump's move has sparked a sense of betrayal in this Miami suburb affectionately known as 'Doralzuela' that is home to more Venezuelan immigrants than any other city in the United States. Venezuelan Americans helped deliver Trump a resounding victory in the city, where his margin of victory grew by about 20 percentage points from 2020 to 2024. Voters from the community said they appreciated Trump's tough line on government abuses in their homeland – and didn't expect him to deport their relatives. Noel Ginestra voted for Trump, but now his sister, who is a TPS holder, is facing possible deportation. While he still backs the president, he said he hoped the TPS revocation is blocked in the courts. 'I supported him, but it disappointed us that he decided to end TPS,' Ginestra said, referring to Venezuelans. 'It bothered us that he put everyone in the same bucket.' The unease of Venezuelan American voters illustrates the larger political risk Trump is taking by moving to revoke deportation protections for certain immigrant communities, even as Latinos moved rightward in supporting his reelection campaign. The Trump administration has argued that conditions have improved in Venezuela and that the revocation will improve public safety, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem saying on Fox News that the Biden administration's move to extend protections meant immigrants 'were going to be able to stay here and violate our laws for another 18 months – and we stopped that.' Concern over Trump's TPS decision is particularly acute in Doral, which has seen significant population growth in recent years, thanks in part to the 27,000 Venezuelan immigrants who now make up more than a third of its population. One of its largest employers is Trump's Doral golf resort, which he's visited multiple times as president. Minutes away from the golf course, Venezuelan Americans come to El Arepazo not just for its arepas, but for a reminder of home. The restaurant's wallpaper is decked out with prints of Venezuelan newspaper front pages chronicling the country's turbulent history. A statue of Venezuelan independence hero Simón Bolívar stands in the parking lot, looking out over SUVs and sedans. After the administration first announced the TPS retraction, community leaders gathered at El Arepazo to condemn the action. Adelys Ferro, the head of a Venezuelan advocacy group, declared at a press conference in front of the restaurant that the local community had been 'betrayed' by Republicans. 'They used us,' she said. 'They actually told us that he was not going to touch the documented people.' Multiple groups of TPS holders have sued the Trump administration in an attempt to overturn the revocation, arguing that it was 'arbitrary and capricious.' Judges have yet to rule on the case, although similar lawsuits delayed Trump's efforts to end TPS protections for other nationalities during his first term. In Doral, a divide is growing between Venezuelan Americans who are still holding out hope that Trump will course-correct, and others who believe he'll stay steady. 'I want to believe that in the next weeks or in the next month, he will take a decision with (his) team that will help us. I want to think that,' said Johanna Lazarde, a TPS holder who says she still supports the president. But not all agree. 'I think they're probably going to double down on it,' Oropeza said. TPS has been used for decades to protect people already in the US from deportation when their homelands have faced armed conflict, natural disasters or unsafe conditions. Both Republican and Democratic administrations have extended protections for immigrants from certain countries, though some Republicans have argued the program, intended to be temporary, has gone on too long. The Biden administration first granted TPS for Venezuelans in March 2021, citing the increased instability in the country, and expanded it in 2023. Two weeks before Trump took office, the Biden administration renewed protections for an additional 18 months. But Noem quickly reversed that move. Under Noem's order, protections will end for about 300,000 Venezuelan TPS holders on April 7, after which they could be deported. Another roughly 250,000 Venezuelan immigrants who arrived in the US before 2023 are set to lose their TPS status in September. In a memo, Noem said there have been 'notable improvements in several areas such as the economy, public health, and crime' in Venezuela – a stance that has angered Venezuelan American activists who have strongly opposed President Nicolás Maduro. In his first term, Trump took a hard line against Maduro, who has jailed opponents and overseen torture and extrajudicial killings, according to human rights groups and a UN fact-finding mission. Trump recognized an opposition leader as the country's rightful president in 2019 and implemented sanctions against the regime. So far in his second term, Trump has vacillated, with his administration coming to an agreement with Maduro's government to restart deportations to Venezuela in January, but more recently ending a deal that allowed Chevron to export oil from the country. Already, the Trump administration has started detaining Venezuelan immigrants at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. Officials said that people kept there include the 'worst of the worst' members of Tren de Aragua, a transnational gang – although some of those sent to Guantanamo were deemed by federal authorities as low-to-medium threats, according to court documents. They were deported to Venezuela last month. TPS holders in Doral say they're living in fear that their families will be next – and some argue that if they are sent back, there's a chance they will be killed or jailed. While living in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Carol Durán Pérez had faced harassment for years from a pro-Maduro militia and the country's intelligence agency due to her opposition to the government, she said. She arrived in Florida in 2021 with her son for what she thought would be a family vacation lasting a few weeks. But while she was in the US, the threats against her family increased, and Durán Pérez said she felt she had no choice but to stay 'because my life was in danger, and my son's too.' Receiving TPS status gave them a chance to build a future in the US, she said. When Trump won in November, Durán Pérez said she was happy because she thought he was a stronger leader than Biden – and didn't expect him to undo the TPS extension approved under the previous administration. 'I totally agree that they should pursue Tren de Aragua and that they should leave this country,' she said. 'The surprise was that the measure was against all Venezuelans,' including 'hard-working people, professional people who contribute a lot to this country.' Now, some of the things Durán Pérez loved about living in Doral – like a school in walking distance for her 13-year-old son – consume her with fear. She's stopped letting him play at a nearby park on weekends. 'That they'll pick him up – I think that is the worst fear I have, that it might happen when I am not with him or he is not with me,' she said, her voice breaking. Like many TPS holders, Durán Pérez has applied for political asylum. But asylum cases typically drag on for years, with some people waiting a decade or more in uncertainty about the outcome. Immigration lawyers in Doral say they're struggling to handle a wave of cases from people who are desperately looking for a pathway to stay in the US after April. 'Our phone has been on fire,' said Ros-Ana Guillen, an immigration attorney who is representing hundreds of Venezuelans, including some with TPS. 'There're actually people sobbing on the other line, crying and scared for their family members. I have around a thousand WhatsApp messages, around a thousand texts that I haven't been able to respond.' Officials in Doral – a community where seemingly everyone has a friend, family member or neighbor with TPS – are ringing the alarm about the disastrous impact that mass deportations would have on the city. Maureen Porras, the Doral vice-mayor who recently left the Democratic Party to become a Republican, said that the city's economy would grind to a halt if local TPS holders are deported. Because TPS comes with employment authorization, many businesses in Doral are dependent on Venezuelan employees who are set to lose their legal status in weeks or months. Other TPS holders have started their own businesses and stores. 'The Venezuelan community is the community that built this city,' Porras said. 'And without that community, I think Doral will cease to be what it is.' She said that the TPS decision could also hurt the Trump Organization's plans to build four luxury condo towers overlooking the president's Doral golf course. 'I think that it could potentially impact them in looking for service workers or people that are going to perhaps buy their condos and also work within that project,' Porras said. Already, some businesses in the city, including El Arepazo, say they're seeing fewer customers in recent weeks, which they attribute in part to Venezuelans without permanent immigration status staying home out of fear. City councilman Rafael Pineyro, the only Venezuelan member of the council, voted for Trump in November. While he opposes Trump's TPS move and initial steps toward rapprochement with the Maduro regime, he said he believed the president needed to make drastic moves in response to Biden's less restrictive immigration policy. 'I don't think that we have to enter in some type of confrontation with the administration at this point, or making demands,' Pineyro said. 'I think it's more about working together.' Pineyro authored a resolution that the city council passed last month calling on Trump to find a solution allowing law-abiding TPS holders to stay in the US, and said he hoped the president would make a move to do so before the April deadline. If he didn't, Pineyro said, there could be electoral consequences for Republicans in Florida's congressional elections next year, because the Venezuelan American community is 'going to be diligent and pay attention' to how the GOP responds to the TPS revocation. A bipartisan group of Florida congressmembers has introduced a bill to grant some Venezuelan immigrants permanent legal status, although it's unclear whether it has any chance of passing. Back at El Arepazo, Oropeza, the TPS holder, said he was trying to take the uncertainty he was facing about his future day by day. Asked about what he thought of his community's support for Trump, said he didn't have a problem with the president trying to deport criminals. 'But I don't feel like he should punish the vast majority of us who are hard-working people who have dreams and hopes and just want to provide for their families,' he said. 'I don't think this is the right decision if he wants to bring stability back into the country – or if he wants to continue to have the support of our people.'

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation
This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

CNN

time13-03-2025

  • Politics
  • CNN

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

South Florida's Venezuelan community has long gathered at the restaurant El Arepazo to mark major milestones. This is where activists waved Venezuelan flags in celebration when President Joe Biden announced deportation protections for immigrants from the country four years ago, and where supporters of the Venezuelan opposition have gathered to hold rallies and anxiously follow election results back home. But the lunch crowd has thinned out since President Donald Trump's administration moved last month to revoke the temporary status that had allowed hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants to stay legally in the US, and announced an agreement with the country's authoritarian government to restart deportation flights. 'You can feel the fear,' said Daniel Oropeza, a Temporary Protected Status holder whose entire family is facing the possibility of deportation, as he sat on the patio outside the restaurant. 'You stop doing things that you normally did before because you don't know for certain if in a couple of weeks you're going to be able to remain in the country.' Trump's move has sparked a sense of betrayal in this Miami suburb affectionately known as 'Doralzuela' that is home to more Venezuelan immigrants than any other city in the United States. Venezuelan Americans helped deliver Trump a resounding victory in the city, where his margin of victory grew by about 20 percentage points from 2020 to 2024. Voters from the community said they appreciated Trump's tough line on government abuses in their homeland – and didn't expect him to deport their relatives. Noel Ginestra voted for Trump, but now his sister, who is a TPS holder, is facing possible deportation. While he still backs the president, he said he hoped the TPS revocation is blocked in the courts. 'I supported him, but it disappointed us that he decided to end TPS,' Ginestra said, referring to Venezuelans. 'It bothered us that he put everyone in the same bucket.' The unease of Venezuelan American voters illustrates the larger political risk Trump is taking by moving to revoke deportation protections for certain immigrant communities, even as Latinos moved rightward in supporting his reelection campaign. The Trump administration has argued that conditions have improved in Venezuela and that the revocation will improve public safety, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem saying on Fox News that the Biden administration's move to extend protections meant immigrants 'were going to be able to stay here and violate our laws for another 18 months – and we stopped that.' Concern over Trump's TPS decision is particularly acute in Doral, which has seen significant population growth in recent years, thanks in part to the 27,000 Venezuelan immigrants who now make up more than a third of its population. One of its largest employers is Trump's Doral golf resort, which he's visited multiple times as president. Minutes away from the golf course, Venezuelan Americans come to El Arepazo not just for its arepas, but for a reminder of home. The restaurant's wallpaper is decked out with prints of Venezuelan newspaper front pages chronicling the country's turbulent history. A statue of Venezuelan independence hero Simón Bolívar stands in the parking lot, looking out over SUVs and sedans. After the administration first announced the TPS retraction, community leaders gathered at El Arepazo to condemn the action. Adelys Ferro, the head of a Venezuelan advocacy group, declared at a press conference in front of the restaurant that the local community had been 'betrayed' by Republicans. 'They used us,' she said. 'They actually told us that he was not going to touch the documented people.' Multiple groups of TPS holders have sued the Trump administration in an attempt to overturn the revocation, arguing that it was 'arbitrary and capricious.' Judges have yet to rule on the case, although similar lawsuits delayed Trump's efforts to end TPS protections for other nationalities during his first term. In Doral, a divide is growing between Venezuelan Americans who are still holding out hope that Trump will course-correct, and others who believe he'll stay steady. 'I want to believe that in the next weeks or in the next month, he will take a decision with (his) team that will help us. I want to think that,' said Johanna Lazarde, a TPS holder who says she still supports the president. But not all agree. 'I think they're probably going to double down on it,' Oropeza said. TPS has been used for decades to protect people already in the US from deportation when their homelands have faced armed conflict, natural disasters or unsafe conditions. Both Republican and Democratic administrations have extended protections for immigrants from certain countries, though some Republicans have argued the program, intended to be temporary, has gone on too long. The Biden administration first granted TPS for Venezuelans in March 2021, citing the increased instability in the country, and expanded it in 2023. Two weeks before Trump took office, the Biden administration renewed protections for an additional 18 months. But Noem quickly reversed that move. Under Noem's order, protections will end for about 300,000 Venezuelan TPS holders on April 7, after which they could be deported. Another roughly 250,000 Venezuelan immigrants who arrived in the US before 2023 are set to lose their TPS status in September. In a memo, Noem said there have been 'notable improvements in several areas such as the economy, public health, and crime' in Venezuela – a stance that has angered Venezuelan American activists who have strongly opposed President Nicolás Maduro. In his first term, Trump took a hard line against Maduro, who has jailed opponents and overseen torture and extrajudicial killings, according to human rights groups and a UN fact-finding mission. Trump recognized an opposition leader as the country's rightful president in 2019 and implemented sanctions against the regime. So far in his second term, Trump has vacillated, with his administration coming to an agreement with Maduro's government to restart deportations to Venezuela in January, but more recently ending a deal that allowed Chevron to export oil from the country. Already, the Trump administration has started detaining Venezuelan immigrants at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. Officials said that people kept there include the 'worst of the worst' members of Tren de Aragua, a transnational gang – although some of those sent to Guantanamo were deemed by federal authorities as low-to-medium threats, according to court documents. They were deported to Venezuela last month. TPS holders in Doral say they're living in fear that their families will be next – and some argue that if they are sent back, there's a chance they will be killed or jailed. While living in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Carol Durán Pérez had faced harassment for years from a pro-Maduro militia and the country's intelligence agency due to her opposition to the government, she said. She arrived in Florida in 2021 with her son for what she thought would be a family vacation lasting a few weeks. But while she was in the US, the threats against her family increased, and Durán Pérez said she felt she had no choice but to stay 'because my life was in danger, and my son's too.' Receiving TPS status gave them a chance to build a future in the US, she said. When Trump won in November, Durán Pérez said she was happy because she thought he was a stronger leader than Biden – and didn't expect him to undo the TPS extension approved under the previous administration. 'I totally agree that they should pursue Tren de Aragua and that they should leave this country,' she said. 'The surprise was that the measure was against all Venezuelans,' including 'hard-working people, professional people who contribute a lot to this country.' Now, some of the things Durán Pérez loved about living in Doral – like a school in walking distance for her 13-year-old son – consume her with fear. She's stopped letting him play at a nearby park on weekends. 'That they'll pick him up – I think that is the worst fear I have, that it might happen when I am not with him or he is not with me,' she said, her voice breaking. Like many TPS holders, Durán Pérez has applied for political asylum. But asylum cases typically drag on for years, with some people waiting a decade or more in uncertainty about the outcome. Immigration lawyers in Doral say they're struggling to handle a wave of cases from people who are desperately looking for a pathway to stay in the US after April. 'Our phone has been on fire,' said Ros-Ana Guillen, an immigration attorney who is representing hundreds of Venezuelans, including some with TPS. 'There're actually people sobbing on the other line, crying and scared for their family members. I have around a thousand WhatsApp messages, around a thousand texts that I haven't been able to respond.' Officials in Doral – a community where seemingly everyone has a friend, family member or neighbor with TPS – are ringing the alarm about the disastrous impact that mass deportations would have on the city. Maureen Porras, the Doral vice-mayor who recently left the Democratic Party to become a Republican, said that the city's economy would grind to a halt if local TPS holders are deported. Because TPS comes with employment authorization, many businesses in Doral are dependent on Venezuelan employees who are set to lose their legal status in weeks or months. Other TPS holders have started their own businesses and stores. 'The Venezuelan community is the community that built this city,' Porras said. 'And without that community, I think Doral will cease to be what it is.' She said that the TPS decision could also hurt the Trump Organization's plans to build four luxury condo towers overlooking the president's Doral golf course. 'I think that it could potentially impact them in looking for service workers or people that are going to perhaps buy their condos and also work within that project,' Porras said. Already, some businesses in the city, including El Arepazo, say they're seeing fewer customers in recent weeks, which they attribute in part to Venezuelans without permanent immigration status staying home out of fear. City councilman Rafael Pineyro, the only Venezuelan member of the council, voted for Trump in November. While he opposes Trump's TPS move and initial steps toward rapprochement with the Maduro regime, he said he believed the president needed to make drastic moves in response to Biden's less restrictive immigration policy. 'I don't think that we have to enter in some type of confrontation with the administration at this point, or making demands,' Pineyro said. 'I think it's more about working together.' Pineyro authored a resolution that the city council passed last month calling on Trump to find a solution allowing law-abiding TPS holders to stay in the US, and said he hoped the president would make a move to do so before the April deadline. If he didn't, Pineyro said, there could be electoral consequences for Republicans in Florida's congressional elections next year, because the Venezuelan American community is 'going to be diligent and pay attention' to how the GOP responds to the TPS revocation. A bipartisan group of Florida congressmembers has introduced a bill to grant some Venezuelan immigrants permanent legal status, although it's unclear whether it has any chance of passing. Back at El Arepazo, Oropeza, the TPS holder, said he was trying to take the uncertainty he was facing about his future day by day. Asked about what he thought of his community's support for Trump, said he didn't have a problem with the president trying to deport criminals. 'But I don't feel like he should punish the vast majority of us who are hard-working people who have dreams and hopes and just want to provide for their families,' he said. 'I don't think this is the right decision if he wants to bring stability back into the country – or if he wants to continue to have the support of our people.'

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation
This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

CNN

time13-03-2025

  • Politics
  • CNN

This South Florida suburb swung to Trump. Now many of its residents are facing deportation

South Florida's Venezuelan community has long gathered at the restaurant El Arepazo to mark major milestones. This is where activists waved Venezuelan flags in celebration when President Joe Biden announced deportation protections for immigrants from the country four years ago, and where supporters of the Venezuelan opposition have gathered to hold rallies and anxiously follow election results back home. But the lunch crowd has thinned out since President Donald Trump's administration moved last month to revoke the temporary status that had allowed hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants to stay legally in the US, and announced an agreement with the country's authoritarian government to restart deportation flights. 'You can feel the fear,' said Daniel Oropeza, a Temporary Protected Status holder whose entire family is facing the possibility of deportation, as he sat on the patio outside the restaurant. 'You stop doing things that you normally did before because you don't know for certain if in a couple of weeks you're going to be able to remain in the country.' Trump's move has sparked a sense of betrayal in this Miami suburb affectionately known as 'Doralzuela' that is home to more Venezuelan immigrants than any other city in the United States. Venezuelan Americans helped deliver Trump a resounding victory in the city, where his margin of victory grew by about 20 percentage points from 2020 to 2024. Voters from the community said they appreciated Trump's tough line on government abuses in their homeland – and didn't expect him to deport their relatives. Noel Ginestra voted for Trump, but now his sister, who is a TPS holder, is facing possible deportation. While he still backs the president, he said he hoped the TPS revocation is blocked in the courts. 'I supported him, but it disappointed us that he decided to end TPS,' Ginestra said, referring to Venezuelans. 'It bothered us that he put everyone in the same bucket.' The unease of Venezuelan American voters illustrates the larger political risk Trump is taking by moving to revoke deportation protections for certain immigrant communities, even as Latinos moved rightward in supporting his reelection campaign. The Trump administration has argued that conditions have improved in Venezuela and that the revocation will improve public safety, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem saying on Fox News that the Biden administration's move to extend protections meant immigrants 'were going to be able to stay here and violate our laws for another 18 months – and we stopped that.' Concern over Trump's TPS decision is particularly acute in Doral, which has seen significant population growth in recent years, thanks in part to the 27,000 Venezuelan immigrants who now make up more than a third of its population. One of its largest employers is Trump's Doral golf resort, which he's visited multiple times as president. Minutes away from the golf course, Venezuelan Americans come to El Arepazo not just for its arepas, but for a reminder of home. The restaurant's wallpaper is decked out with prints of Venezuelan newspaper front pages chronicling the country's turbulent history. A statue of Venezuelan independence hero Simón Bolívar stands in the parking lot, looking out over SUVs and sedans. After the administration first announced the TPS retraction, community leaders gathered at El Arepazo to condemn the action. Adelys Ferro, the head of a Venezuelan advocacy group, declared at a press conference in front of the restaurant that the local community had been 'betrayed' by Republicans. 'They used us,' she said. 'They actually told us that he was not going to touch the documented people.' Multiple groups of TPS holders have sued the Trump administration in an attempt to overturn the revocation, arguing that it was 'arbitrary and capricious.' Judges have yet to rule on the case, although similar lawsuits delayed Trump's efforts to end TPS protections for other nationalities during his first term. In Doral, a divide is growing between Venezuelan Americans who are still holding out hope that Trump will course-correct, and others who believe he'll stay steady. 'I want to believe that in the next weeks or in the next month, he will take a decision with (his) team that will help us. I want to think that,' said Johanna Lazarde, a TPS holder who says she still supports the president. But not all agree. 'I think they're probably going to double down on it,' Oropeza said. TPS has been used for decades to protect people already in the US from deportation when their homelands have faced armed conflict, natural disasters or unsafe conditions. Both Republican and Democratic administrations have extended protections for immigrants from certain countries, though some Republicans have argued the program, intended to be temporary, has gone on too long. The Biden administration first granted TPS for Venezuelans in March 2021, citing the increased instability in the country, and expanded it in 2023. Two weeks before Trump took office, the Biden administration renewed protections for an additional 18 months. But Noem quickly reversed that move. Under Noem's order, protections will end for about 300,000 Venezuelan TPS holders on April 7, after which they could be deported. Another roughly 250,000 Venezuelan immigrants who arrived in the US before 2023 are set to lose their TPS status in September. In a memo, Noem said there have been 'notable improvements in several areas such as the economy, public health, and crime' in Venezuela – a stance that has angered Venezuelan American activists who have strongly opposed President Nicolás Maduro. In his first term, Trump took a hard line against Maduro, who has jailed opponents and overseen torture and extrajudicial killings, according to human rights groups and a UN fact-finding mission. Trump recognized an opposition leader as the country's rightful president in 2019 and implemented sanctions against the regime. So far in his second term, Trump has vacillated, with his administration coming to an agreement with Maduro's government to restart deportations to Venezuela in January, but more recently ending a deal that allowed Chevron to export oil from the country. Already, the Trump administration has started detaining Venezuelan immigrants at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. Officials said that people kept there include the 'worst of the worst' members of Tren de Aragua, a transnational gang – although some of those sent to Guantanamo were deemed by federal authorities as low-to-medium threats, according to court documents. They were deported to Venezuela last month. TPS holders in Doral say they're living in fear that their families will be next – and some argue that if they are sent back, there's a chance they will be killed or jailed. While living in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Carol Durán Pérez had faced harassment for years from a pro-Maduro militia and the country's intelligence agency due to her opposition to the government, she said. She arrived in Florida in 2021 with her son for what she thought would be a family vacation lasting a few weeks. But while she was in the US, the threats against her family increased, and Durán Pérez said she felt she had no choice but to stay 'because my life was in danger, and my son's too.' Receiving TPS status gave them a chance to build a future in the US, she said. When Trump won in November, Durán Pérez said she was happy because she thought he was a stronger leader than Biden – and didn't expect him to undo the TPS extension approved under the previous administration. 'I totally agree that they should pursue Tren de Aragua and that they should leave this country,' she said. 'The surprise was that the measure was against all Venezuelans,' including 'hard-working people, professional people who contribute a lot to this country.' Now, some of the things Durán Pérez loved about living in Doral – like a school in walking distance for her 13-year-old son – consume her with fear. She's stopped letting him play at a nearby park on weekends. 'That they'll pick him up – I think that is the worst fear I have, that it might happen when I am not with him or he is not with me,' she said, her voice breaking. Like many TPS holders, Durán Pérez has applied for political asylum. But asylum cases typically drag on for years, with some people waiting a decade or more in uncertainty about the outcome. Immigration lawyers in Doral say they're struggling to handle a wave of cases from people who are desperately looking for a pathway to stay in the US after April. 'Our phone has been on fire,' said Ros-Ana Guillen, an immigration attorney who is representing hundreds of Venezuelans, including some with TPS. 'There're actually people sobbing on the other line, crying and scared for their family members. I have around a thousand WhatsApp messages, around a thousand texts that I haven't been able to respond.' Officials in Doral – a community where seemingly everyone has a friend, family member or neighbor with TPS – are ringing the alarm about the disastrous impact that mass deportations would have on the city. Maureen Porras, the Doral vice-mayor who recently left the Democratic Party to become a Republican, said that the city's economy would grind to a halt if local TPS holders are deported. Because TPS comes with employment authorization, many businesses in Doral are dependent on Venezuelan employees who are set to lose their legal status in weeks or months. Other TPS holders have started their own businesses and stores. 'The Venezuelan community is the community that built this city,' Porras said. 'And without that community, I think Doral will cease to be what it is.' She said that the TPS decision could also hurt the Trump Organization's plans to build four luxury condo towers overlooking the president's Doral golf course. 'I think that it could potentially impact them in looking for service workers or people that are going to perhaps buy their condos and also work within that project,' Porras said. Already, some businesses in the city, including El Arepazo, say they're seeing fewer customers in recent weeks, which they attribute in part to Venezuelans without permanent immigration status staying home out of fear. City councilman Rafael Pineyro, the only Venezuelan member of the council, voted for Trump in November. While he opposes Trump's TPS move and initial steps toward rapprochement with the Maduro regime, he said he believed the president needed to make drastic moves in response to Biden's less restrictive immigration policy. 'I don't think that we have to enter in some type of confrontation with the administration at this point, or making demands,' Pineyro said. 'I think it's more about working together.' Pineyro authored a resolution that the city council passed last month calling on Trump to find a solution allowing law-abiding TPS holders to stay in the US, and said he hoped the president would make a move to do so before the April deadline. If he didn't, Pineyro said, there could be electoral consequences for Republicans in Florida's congressional elections next year, because the Venezuelan American community is 'going to be diligent and pay attention' to how the GOP responds to the TPS revocation. A bipartisan group of Florida congressmembers has introduced a bill to grant some Venezuelan immigrants permanent legal status, although it's unclear whether it has any chance of passing. Back at El Arepazo, Oropeza, the TPS holder, said he was trying to take the uncertainty he was facing about his future day by day. Asked about what he thought of his community's support for Trump, said he didn't have a problem with the president trying to deport criminals. 'But I don't feel like he should punish the vast majority of us who are hard-working people who have dreams and hopes and just want to provide for their families,' he said. 'I don't think this is the right decision if he wants to bring stability back into the country – or if he wants to continue to have the support of our people.'

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