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Tag: Venezuela

  • Trump says he plans to end immigration from

    President Trump announced Thursday that he would “permanently pause” immigration from “Third-World Countries.” The declaration comes as the Trump administration takes aim at U.S. immigration policies in the wake of the shooting of two National Guard members in Washington, D.C. Weijia Jiang has the latest.

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  • Peru’s President to Declare Border State of Emergency to Prevent Entry of Undocumented Migrants

    LIMA (Reuters) -Peru will declare a state of emergency along its border with Chile, President José Jerí said on Friday, as migrants seek to cross into the country following a Chilean presidential frontrunner’s vow to expel undocumented migrants.

    The state of emergency “will generate tranquility before the risk of migrants entering without authorization,” said Jerí on X.

    At least 100 foreigners, mostly Venezuelans, are at the border seeking to cross into Peru, Peruvian police General Arturo Valverde told local television station Canal N on Friday. He said surveillance at the border has increased in anticipation of the declaration.

    On November 20, far-right Chilean presidential candidate José Antonio Kast, the favorite to win the runoff election next month against leftist Jeannette Jara, warned that illegal migrants must leave in the coming months or they will be detained and expelled when he comes to power.

    “If you don’t leave voluntarily, we will detain you, retain you, expel you, and you’ll leave with what you have on,” he said in a video message at the border.

    (Report by Marco Aquino, additional report by Fabián Cambero from Santiago. Writing by Leila Miller. Editing by Rod Nickel)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • One of the Caribbean region’s longest-serving prime ministers just got ousted

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 24: Honorable Ralph Gonsalves, Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, speaks onstage during Global Citizen NOW: Impact Sessions on September 24, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images for Global Citizen)

    Honorable Ralph Gonsalves, Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, speaks onstage during Global Citizen NOW: Impact Sessions on September 24, 2025 in New York City.

    Getty Images for Global Citizen

    For the first time in nearly a quarter of a century, the twin-island of St. Vincent and the Grenadines in the eastern Caribbean is expected to be governed by someone other than Ralph Gonsalves.

    In a stunning upset, opposition leader Godwin Friday is projected to be the country’s seventh prime minister after his New Democratic Party defeated Gonsalves’ Unity Labor Party in a close race, according to the St Vincent Times. Gonsalves, 79, is projected to hold onto his North Central Windward seat. He will now serve as leader of the opposition after failing to secure an unprecedented sixth-consecutive, five-year term as prime minister.

    Preliminary results have the NDP winning 11 of the 15 seats up for grab in the election, which was a contest primarily centered between Gonsalves’ and Friday’s political parties. Among the casualties were Gonsalves’ son and finance minister, Camillo Gonsalves.

    Friday, 66, unsuccessfully ran in 2020, and this go-around campaigned on severing ties with Taiwan in favor of mainland China and introducing the controversial citizenship by investment, CBI, program, which allows foreigners to get a passport in exchange for investments or payments. Both policies were opposed by Gonsalves, who headed one of the region’s longest, uninterrupted political dynasties.

    The change of leadership in the island-nation with an estimated population of just over 100,600 residents, comes amid heightened regional tensions over the U.S. military buildup in the southern Caribbean, off the coast of Venezuela. While the Trump Administration says the operations are targeted at drug traffickers, they have divided regional leaders, some of whom believe the real purpose is to pressure Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro to step down.

    A Maduro ally, Gonsalves has criticized the U.S. operations as well as Trinidad and Tobago’s support. He’s also expressed frustration over the lack of clarity coming from the 15-member Caribbean Community bloc known as CARICOM.

    In October, during a regional conference he warned that any forced regime change in Caracas would have dire consequences, including mass migration and new security threats in the Caribbean, which has promoted itself as a zone of peace.

    Since September, the U.S. strikes have killed at least 83 people.

    On Wednesday, the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, agreed to allow U.S. aircraft to refuel at the San Isidro Air Base and Las Américas International Airport. The country’s decision came during a visit by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

    Gonsalves’ tenure in office dates to 2001. Since then, he’s emerged as not only a titan in the region, speaking out on various matters including the ongoing crisis in Haiti, a CARICOM member state. For example, he was behind a decision to put the Dominican Republic’s request to join the mostly English-speaking regional bloc on hold after the Dominican Constitutional Court in 2013 revoked the citizenships of tens of thousands of Black Dominicans and individuals of Haitian descent.

    As Vincentians celebrated Friday’s victory late Thursday, Caribbean leaders extended their congratulations.

    St. Lucia opposition leader, Allen Chastanet, who is hoping to return to power in his country’s Dec. 1 general election, told Friday the victory is a testament to his perseverance, integrity and the trust the people have placed in his leadership.

    “May your tenure be guided by wisdom, progress and an unwavering commitment to the people you now serve,” he said.

    Jamaica Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who is the current chairman of CARICOM, said the election marks “an important moment for the Vincentian people” and his hurricane-recovering nation looks “forward to strengthening our cooperation as we continue to build a more resilient and prosperous Caribbean region together.”

    Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar also extended congratulations. She and Gonsalves had disagreed over the U.S. operations in the Caribbean. In a statement, Persad-Bissessar, said the people of St. Vincent had given Godwin and his party, “a resounding democratic mandate.”

    This story was originally published November 27, 2025 at 10:18 PM.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Trump: US land action against alleged drug-trafficking networks in Venezuela will start ‘very soon’

    President Donald Trump suggested Thursday that the United States is preparing to take new action against alleged drug trafficking networks in Venezuela, telling service members during a Thanksgiving call that efforts for strikes in land will be starting “very soon.””In recent weeks, you’ve been working to deter Venezuelan drug traffickers, of which there are many. Of course, there aren’t too many coming in by sea anymore,” Trump told service members in the call.Video above: Foreign Terrorist Org: How a new designation could escalate U.S. military action in Venezuela”You probably noticed that people aren’t wanting to be delivering by sea, and we’ll be starting to stop them by land also,” the president continued. “The land is easier, but that’s going to start very soon.”We warn them: Stop sending poison to our country,” Trump added.Trump comments suggest he has made up his mind on a course of action in Venezuela following multiple high-level briefings and a mounting US show of force in the region earlier this month.Trump designated Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his government allies as members of a foreign terrorist organization earlier this week.The designation of “Cartel de los Soles,” a phrase that experts say is more a description of allegedly corrupt government officials than an organized crime group, as a foreign terrorist organization will authorize Trump to impose fresh sanctions targeting Maduro’s assets and infrastructure. It doesn’t, however, explicitly authorize the use of lethal force, according to legal experts.The US military has amassed more than a dozen warships and 15,000 troops in the region as part of what the Pentagon has branded “Operation Southern Spear.” The U.S. military has killed more than 80 people in boat strikes as part of the anti-drug-trafficking campaign.CNN reported earlier this month that Trump administration officials told lawmakers in a classified session the US was not planning to launch strikes inside Venezuela and doesn’t have a legal justification that would support attacks against any land targets right now.Lawmakers were told during the session that an opinion produced by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel to justify strikes against suspected drug boats does not permit strikes inside Venezuela itself or any other territories, four sources said.The officials did not rule out any potential future actions, one of the sources said.The administration has largely tried to avoid involving Congress in its military campaign around Latin America. A senior Justice Department official told Congress in November that the U.S. military could continue its lethal strikes on alleged drug traffickers without congressional approval and that the administration is not bound by a decades-old war powers law that would mandate working with lawmakers, CNN has reported.

    President Donald Trump suggested Thursday that the United States is preparing to take new action against alleged drug trafficking networks in Venezuela, telling service members during a Thanksgiving call that efforts for strikes in land will be starting “very soon.”

    “In recent weeks, you’ve been working to deter Venezuelan drug traffickers, of which there are many. Of course, there aren’t too many coming in by sea anymore,” Trump told service members in the call.

    Video above: Foreign Terrorist Org: How a new designation could escalate U.S. military action in Venezuela

    “You probably noticed that people aren’t wanting to be delivering by sea, and we’ll be starting to stop them by land also,” the president continued. “The land is easier, but that’s going to start very soon.

    “We warn them: Stop sending poison to our country,” Trump added.

    Trump comments suggest he has made up his mind on a course of action in Venezuela following multiple high-level briefings and a mounting US show of force in the region earlier this month.

    Trump designated Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his government allies as members of a foreign terrorist organization earlier this week.

    The designation of “Cartel de los Soles,” a phrase that experts say is more a description of allegedly corrupt government officials than an organized crime group, as a foreign terrorist organization will authorize Trump to impose fresh sanctions targeting Maduro’s assets and infrastructure. It doesn’t, however, explicitly authorize the use of lethal force, according to legal experts.

    The US military has amassed more than a dozen warships and 15,000 troops in the region as part of what the Pentagon has branded “Operation Southern Spear.” The U.S. military has killed more than 80 people in boat strikes as part of the anti-drug-trafficking campaign.

    CNN reported earlier this month that Trump administration officials told lawmakers in a classified session the US was not planning to launch strikes inside Venezuela and doesn’t have a legal justification that would support attacks against any land targets right now.

    Lawmakers were told during the session that an opinion produced by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel to justify strikes against suspected drug boats does not permit strikes inside Venezuela itself or any other territories, four sources said.

    The officials did not rule out any potential future actions, one of the sources said.

    The administration has largely tried to avoid involving Congress in its military campaign around Latin America. A senior Justice Department official told Congress in November that the U.S. military could continue its lethal strikes on alleged drug traffickers without congressional approval and that the administration is not bound by a decades-old war powers law that would mandate working with lawmakers, CNN has reported.

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  • Trump Says US Will ‘Very Soon’ Begin Stopping Suspected Venezuelan Drug Traffickers by Land

    PALM BEACH, Florida (Reuters) -The United States will “very soon” start taking action to stop suspected Venezuelan drug traffickers on land, U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday.

    “You probably noticed that people aren’t wanting to be delivering by sea, and we’ll be starting to stop them by land also. The land is easier, but that’s going to start very soon,” Trump said, speaking virtually with U.S. military service members.

    “We warned them stop sending poison to our country,” he added.

    The Venezuelan communications ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    (Reporting by Jeff Mason and Ismail Shakil; editing by Diane Craft)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • The Reason Venezuela’s Maduro Won’t Resign Peacefully

    Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro is facing unprecedented American military and diplomatic pressure to resign and leave his country peacefully. He is unlikely to take the offer.

    The days when dictators could live in gilded exile with fortunes in secret Swiss bank accounts are mostly over, primarily because of global mechanisms for adjudicating human-rights abuses and tracking ill-gotten gains. The 63-year-old strongman doesn’t believe he will get lasting amnesty, analysts said, feeling only safe among the cadre of loyal military men with whom he has spent a decade surrounding himself.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Cuba Accuses US of Seeking Violent Overthrow of Venezuelan Government

    (Reuters) -Cuba on Tuesday accused the U.S. of seeking a violent overthrow of the Venezuelan government, calling the increased presence of U.S. military forces in the region an “exaggerated and aggressive” threat.

    The U.S. overthrowing Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government would be extremely dangerous and irresponsible, and would be in violation of international law and the United Nations charter, Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez said in a statement.

    Reuters reported on Saturday that the U.S. was poised to launch a new phase of Venezuela-related operations in coming days, citing four U.S. officials.

    (Reporting by Kylie Madry)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Is the U.S. invading Venezuela? Or trying to make a deal?

    On the face of it, the United States appears closer than ever to mounting a military campaign to remove President Nicolás Maduro from power in Venezuela.

    President Trump says he has authorized the CIA to conduct covert operations inside the Caribbean nation, and has massed troops, fighter jets and warships just off its coastline.

    U.S. service members in the region have been barred from taking Thanksgiving leave. Airlines have canceled flights to Venezuela after the Federal Aviation Administration warned of a “potentially hazardous situation” there. And on Monday the White House officially designated Maduro as a member of an international terrorist group.

    In Caracas, the nation’s capital, there is a palpable sense of anxiety, especially as each new bellicose pronouncement emerges from Washington.

    “People are very tense,” said Rosa María López, 47, a podiatrist and mother of two. “Although no one says anything because they are afraid.”

    Traffic is sparse at the Simon Bolivar Maiquetia International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela, on Sunday after several international airlines canceled flights following a warning from the Federal Aviation Administration about a hazardous situation in Venezuelan airspace.

    (Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press)

    Trump has been presented with a set of military options by the Pentagon, a source familiar with the matter told The Times, and is said to be weighing his options. Still, his plans for Venezuela remain opaque.

    Trump, even while warning of a possible military action, has also continually floated the possibility of negotiations, saying he “probably would talk” to Maduro at some point.

    “I don’t rule out anything,” Trump said last week.

    Now people in both the U.S. and Venezuela are wondering: is the U.S. military buildup in the Caribbean the prelude to an invasion, or a bluff intended to pressure Maduro to make a deal?

    There are members of the White House — especially Secretary of State Marco Rubio — who are desperate to unseat Maduro, a leftist autocrat whom the U.S. does not recognize as Venezuela’s legitimately elected president.

    But other members of Trump’s team seem more intent on securing access to Venezuela’s oil riches, and keeping them from China and Russia, than pushing for regime change. Parties of that camp might be willing to accept a deal with Venezuela that does not call for Maduro’s exit and a plan for a democratic transition.

    Months of U.S. saber-rattling without any direct military action against the Maduro government may be weakening the Americans’ negotiating position, said Geoff Ramsey, a Venezuela expert at the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based research group. “There is a psychological component to this operation, and it’s starting to lose its credibility,” he said. “I do fear that the regime thinks that it has weathered the worst of U.S. pressure.”

    Maduro, for his part, insists he is open to dialogue. “Whoever in the U.S. wants to talk with Venezuela can do so,” he said this week. “We cannot allow the bombing and massacre of a Christian people — the people of Venezuela.”

    Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro speaks at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas.

    Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, speaking Friday at the presidential palace in Caracas, has insisted he is open to dialogue with the United States.

    (Cristian Hernandez / Associated Press)

    For years, he has refused efforts to force him from office, even in the face of punishing U.S. sanctions, domestic protests against his rule and various offensives during the first Trump administration that Caracas deemed as coup attempts. Experts say there is no evidence that Trump’s buildup of troops — or his attacks on alleged drug traffickers off of Venezuela’s coast — has weakened Maduro’s support amid the military or other hard-core backers.

    Venezuela, meanwhile, has sought to use the prospect of a U.S. invasion to bolster support at home.

    On Monday, top officials here took aim at the State Department’s designation of an alleged Venezuelan drug cartel as a foreign terrorist group. Rubio claims the Cartel de los Soles is “headed by Nicolás Maduro and other high-ranking individuals of the illegitimate Maduro regime who have corrupted Venezuela’s military, intelligence, legislature and judiciary.”

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth praised the declaration for introducing “a whole bunch of new options” to fight what he described as “narco-terrorists” and “illegitimate regimes.”

    The Venezuelan government says the Cartel de los Soles does not exist. Foreign Minister Yván Gil described Monday’s designation as a “ridiculous fabrication.” The U.S., he said, is using a “vile lie to justify an illegitimate and illegal intervention against Venezuela under the classic U.S. format of regime change.”

    The truth is somewhere in the middle.

    The Cartel de los Soles, experts say, is less a traditional cartel — with a centralized command structure directing various cells — than a shorthand term used in the media and elsewhere to describe a loose group of corrupt Venezuelan military officials implicated in the drug trade.

    The name, Cartel of the Suns, derives from the sun insignia found on the uniforms of Venezuelan soldiers, much like stars on U.S. military uniforms. It has been around since the early 1990s, when Venezuela was an important trans-shipment point for Colombian cocaine bound for the U.S. market. Today, only a small portion of cocaine trafficked to the U.S. moves through Venezuela.

    Venezuelan journalist Ronna Rísquez Sánchez said it is unclear whether Maduro actually directs illicit activities conducted by his military or simply allows it to transpire among his government. Either way, she said, it is “happening under his nose.”

    But she did not rule out that seizing on Maduro’s possible links to drug trafficking might be a convenient “pretext” for U.S. political machinations.

    For the people of Venezuela, recent weeks have seen a heightened sense of uncertainty and anguish as people ponder ever-conflicting reports about a possible U.S. strike.

    More than a decade of political, social and economic upheaval has left people exhausted and numbed, often unable to believe anything they hear about the future of Maduro’s government. There is a widespread sense of resignation and a feeling that things can only get worse.

    “Every week we hear they are going to get rid of Maduro, but he’s still here,” said Inés Rojas, 25, a street vendor in Caracas. “We all want a change, but a change that improves things, not makes them worse. We young people don’t have a future. The doors of immigration are closed, we are locked in here, not knowing what is going to happen.”

    Mostly, people seem to want an end to the overwhelming feeling of not knowing what comes next.

    “I pray every day that this uncertainty ends,” said Cristina López Castillo, 37, an unemployed office worker who favors Maduro’s removal from office. “We don’t have a future — or a present. We live every day wondering what will happen tomorrow. I have more fear of hunger than of Trump.”

    Still, Maduro retains many backers — and not only among the military and political elite who have seen their loyalty rewarded with additional wealth. Many people remain thankful for the social welfare legacy of Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, and are wary of U.S. motivations in Venezuela.

    “We Venezuelans do not want to be anyone’s colony, nor do we want anyone to drop bombs on us to get rid of a president,” said José Gregorio Martínez Pina, 45, a construction worker in the capital.

    “Is Maduro a narco? I haven’t seen any proof,” he said. “And if they have it, they should present it, instead of having a country living under terror for weeks.”

    Times staff writers Linthicum and McDonnell reported in Mexico City. Mogollón, a special correspondent, reported in Caracas. Michael Wilner in the Times’ Washington bureau also contributed reporting.

    Kate Linthicum, Patrick J. McDonnell, Mery Mogollón

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  • Most Americans don’t think Trump has clearly explained military actions in Venezuela, poll finds


    Most Americans don’t think Trump has clearly explained military actions in Venezuela, poll finds – CBS News









































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    A new CBS News poll captures how Americans view potential U.S. military action in Venezuela. CBS News executive director of elections and surveys Anthony Salvanto breaks down the findings.

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  • 11/23: CBS Weekend News



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    Ukrainian and U.S. officials discuss peace plan; U.S. increases military activity around Venezuela.

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  • CBS News poll finds most would oppose U.S. military action in Venezuela, say Trump hasn’t explained

    The situation around Venezuela has Americans asking to know more. 

    Across party lines, big majorities say the administration needs to explain what the U.S. intends regarding any action, and that it has not done so clearly yet.

    Meanwhile, what Americans hear from the White House about inflation is, they say, not what they’re actually feeling at home: rising prices and worsening economic views. 

    trump-need-explain-by-party.png

    In the meantime, Americans do not think of Venezuela as a major threat to the US. Instead, more see a minor one, and they are largely opposed to potential military action.

    vz-threat.png

    So, the idea of potential U.S. military action in Venezuela meets with widespread disapproval. It doesn’t get overwhelming backing from Republicans either. 

    Three in four Americans also say Trump would need congressional approval before taking military action in Venezuela, including just over half of Republicans.

    vz-military-action.png

    Just one in five Americans have heard a lot about the U.S. military buildup in the first place. That may be another expression of that sense of limited information about the purpose. 

    The current military attacks on boats suspected of bringing drugs find division — just over half approve, driven by nearly universal support among Republicans — though Americans overall overwhelmingly say they should see the evidence that there are drugs.

    boat-attacks.png

    need-show-evidence-boats.png

    However, most Americans don’t think U.S. military action in Venezuela would change the amount of drugs coming into the U.S.

    decrease-drugs-in-us.png

    Looking more closely within the president’s GOP base: MAGA Republicans are actually more supportive of potential military action than non-MAGA ones.

    For context, that is similar to what we’ve seen over time on many issues, including foreign policy, in which that part of the base is largely deferential to the president. (As one example, MAGA was also supportive of the bombing in Iran months ago.) Most of them say the president has explained things, and in turn, are more apt to see any action in Venezuela as decreasing the amount of drugs entering the U.S. 

    vz-military-action-reps.png

    But many who are opposed to military action, including those within the GOP ranks, may also be seeing this in terms of issue priorities. They’re a little more likely to judge the administration on what it does about the economy than those in favor. And most who judge him on the economy think he isn’t spending enough time on it.

    Here’s what Americans say about the economy

    There’s a disconnect between how Americans hear the White House describing the economy, and what they’re feeling themselves. 

    Most Americans say Trump describes things with prices and inflation as better than they really are.

    econ-trump-makes-things-sound.png

    (This includes four in 10 Republicans who say this about Trump. They are also among those more likely to say prices are going up.)

    This comes as ratings for the overall economy continue to be low — as they’ve been for years — ticking down this week to their lowest mark in 2025.

    econ-line-chart.png

    Prices, more generally, are still seen by most as going up.

    prices-up-or-down.png

    As we head into the holiday season, that economic dissatisfaction includes the majority of Americans who feel President Trump’s policies are making the cost of food and groceries, specifically, go up.

    trump-policies-on-prices.png

    So, that disconnect appears to continue to weigh on the president’s ratings. 

    There are many ways Americans judge a president. For those who say they judge Mr. Trump most on what he does about the economy and inflation, they overwhelmingly say he isn’t spending enough time on that.

    most-imp-judge-trump.png

    trump-time-spend-econ.png

    That, in turn, has continued to push his approval on handling the economy and inflation down over the course of several months. That trend continues this week, with assessments of the overall economy, and his ratings for handling the economy and inflation, hitting lows for the year. 

    More than two-thirds disapprove of his handling of inflation.

    He does especially poorly on handling the economy among people who mainly judge him on that. 

    Among independents, his ratings for handling the economy, and his ratings overall, have also hit lows for the year. That has continued to push his approval rating overall lower over time too, now down to their low point for his second term after a steady decline over recent months.

    trump-approve-line-chart.png

    trump-approve-issues.png

    trump-overall-job.png

    The president does a little better on his handling of immigration, backed by continued large support from the GOP base, as has been the case for months.

    The decline in the president’s overall approval ratings connects to people’s economic priorities in this way: even among those who voted for him in 2024, disapproval today is more likely to come when people are judging him mostly on the economy.

    Deportation

    The administration’s deportation program continues to split the country, but support is underpinned by strong approval from Republicans.

    trump-deport-by-party.png

    Most — particularly those outside the GOP base — continue to feel that ICE is detaining more people than necessary.

    ice-stop-and-detain.png

    But the deportation program is seen by many as more undermining than strengthening the economy.

    deport-econ.png

    One possible reason: a third of the country (who tend to live in cities and suburbs) say it is impacting their community for the worse, and they feel people in their area are staying home more as a result of the program.

    trump-deport-impact-local.png

    Epstein files

    Americans across party lines think it is important to see the Epstein files released. 

    epstein-important-to-release.png

    Americans overwhelmingly believe they will contain damaging information about powerful people. Most say it’s too soon to know if what’s in them is true. On balance, though, more think that information will be true rather than false. 

    epstein-info-true-false.png

    Republicans are more satisfied with how the Trump administration is handling the Epstein case than they were in the summer. (The survey was conducted just after Trump said Congress should vote to release the files, which they did shortly thereafter.) Today, most others are not satisfied.

    satisfied-trump-handle-epstein-by-party.png

    However, the president’s Republican base says issues surrounding the files are not important to how they judge him. Nearly two-thirds of Republicans say this doesn’t affect how they evaluate Trump overall. (Independents and Democrats, though, give it comparably more importance in this regard.)

    epstein-matter-to-trump-eval.png


    This CBS News/YouGov survey was conducted with a nationally representative sample of 2,489 U.S. adults interviewed between November 19-21, 2025. The sample was weighted to be representative of adults nationwide according to gender, age, race, and education, based on the U.S. Census American Community Survey and Current Population Survey, as well as 2024 presidential vote. The margin of error is ±2.4 points.

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  • U.S. continues to beef up military presence in Caribbean with eyes on Venezuela

    As the U.S. military strengthens its position off the coast of Venezuela, a new CBS News poll finds more than two-thirds of Americans say they are opposed to U.S. military action there. Charlie D’Agata is following the rising tension from San Juan, Puerto Rico.

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  • The Peril of Ousting Maduro | RealClearPolitics

    Only a gradual transition-not regime change by corce-can restore Venezuela’s democracy.

    Phil Gunson, Foreign Affairs

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  • Face the Nation: Salvanto, Paul, Stefanishyna

    Missed the second half of the show? Anthony Salvanto, CBS News director of elections of surveys, Sen. Rand Paul and Ukrainian Ambassador the U.S Olga Stefanishyna.

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  • U.S. considers dropping leaflets in Venezuela as it ramps up pressure on Maduro, sources say

    Officials in the Trump administration on Saturday discussed the possibility of dropping leaflets on Venezuela’s capital city of Caracas as it seeks to weaken the regime of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

    Among the potential avenues discussed regarding operations for Venezuela was dropping U.S. leaflets on Caracas as a kind of psychological warfare to pressure Maduro, multiple U.S. officials familiar with the talks told CBS News.

    The operation, which was not yet authorized, could possibly take place Sunday, the officials said, which is Maduro’s 63rd birthday.  

    The Washington Post was first to report on the proposed leaflet operation.     

    Over the past few months, the U.S. has ratcheted up the pressure on Maduro in multiple ways, including an extensive military buildup in the region, live fire exercises, and strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific.

    When asked Monday, President Trump said he wouldn’t rule out sending U.S. troops into Venezuela.

    “No, I don’t rule out that,” the president said. “I don’t rule out anything. We just have to take care of Venezuela.”

    For his part, Maduro on the same day said he would be open to “face-to-face” discussions with Mr. Trump.

    Last month, Mr. Trump also confirmed that he has authorized the CIA to go into Venezuela and conduct covert operations.

    Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro gestures as he arrives for the projection of a biographical series at the National Theatre of Venezuela in Caracas on Nov. 22, 2025.

    Juan BARRETO /AFP via Getty Images


    The Pentagon has conducted at least 21 strikes since early September, killing at least 80 people. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has said the strikes are designed to target cartels and drug traffickers, although it has not provided evidence that the vessels struck so far were carrying drugs.

    There are currently about 15,000 U.S. troops in the region. A Navy official told CBS News last week that the U.S. had four military ships in the western Atlantic, including the USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s most advanced aircraft carrier, and three guided missile destroyers. It had another seven military ships in the Caribbean, the official said, which included two guided missile destroyers, two guided missile cruisers, an amphibious assault ship and two amphibious transport dock ships.

    There are also several dozen U.S. fighter jets stationed in Puerto Rico.

    Maduro, who has led Venezuela since 2013, faced an international outcry when he declared victory in Venezuela’s presidential elections in July 2024 despite results showing he had lost by a large margin to the opposition candidate.

    The U.S. is one of several nations that does not recognize him as Venezuela’s president. The Trump administration has accused him of operating a cartel that funnels drugs into the U.S., and has offered a $50 million reward for information leading to his arrest. 

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  • Trump says he is ending deportation protections for Somalis in Minnesota

    President Trump on Friday said he is ending deportation protections for Somali immigrants in Minnesota.

    The president wrote on his Truth Social platform that he was “terminating effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS Program) for Somalis in Minnesota.”

    Mr. Trump said, without providing evidence, that “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State.”

    He also accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, without proof, of overseeing a state that had become a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

    “Send them back to where they came from,” he said. “It’s OVER!”

    In response, Walz said in a social media post on X, “It’s not surprising that the President has chosen to broadly target an entire community. This is what he does to change the subject.”

    The president did not provide further details on the move.   

    TPS is a federal program that allows migrants from unstable countries to live and work legally in the U.S.

    Somalia’s TPS designation runs through March 17, 2026, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency that is part of the Department of Homeland Security. As of March 31, there are 705 Somali immigrants in the U.S. approved for TPS, according to Congress.gov. Minnesota also has the largest Somali population in the U.S., the Associated Press reports. 

    CBS News has reached out to DHS and Walz for comment.  

    The Trump administration has also moved to end TPS protections for AfghanVenezuelan, Syrian and South Sudanese nationals. Those actions have faced significant legal challenges. 

    Republican Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth, who represents Cold Spring, said in a written statement that she’s “glad” that Mr. Trump recognizes the “seriousness of the fraud problem” in the state. 

    “The unfortunate reality is that far too many individuals who were welcomed into this country have abused the trust and support that was extended to them, and Minnesota taxpayers have suffered billions of dollars in consequences as a result,” Demuth said, without providing evidence.

    Jaylani Hussein, president of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations decried the move Friday, saying in a statement that the group was “deeply disappointed that the administration has chosen to end the Somali TPS program in Minnesota, a legal lifeline for families who have built their lives here for decades.”

    “This is not just a bureaucratic change; it is a political attack on the Somali and Muslim community driven by Islamophobic and hateful rhetoric,” Hussein said. “We strongly urge President Trump to reverse this misguided decision.”

    Faris Tanyos

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  • Trump says he is ending deportation protections for Somalis in Minnesota

    President Trump on Friday said he is ending deportation protections for Somali immigrants in Minnesota.

    The president wrote on his Truth Social platform that he was “terminating effective immediately, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS Program) for Somalis in Minnesota.”

    As of March 31, there are 705 Somali immigrants in the U.S. approved for TPS, according to Congress.gov.

    Mr. Trump said, without providing evidence, that “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State.”

    He also accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, without proof, of overseeing a state that had become a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”

    “Send them back to where they came from,” he said. “It’s OVER!”

    The president did not provide further details on the move.   

    TPS is a federal program that allows migrants from unstable countries to live and work legally in the U.S.

    Somalia’s TPS designation runs through March 17, 2026, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency that is part of the Department of Homeland Security.  

    Minnesota House Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said in a written statement that she’s “glad” that Mr. Trump recognizes the “seriousness of the fraud problem” in the state. 

    “The unfortunate reality is that far too many individuals who were welcomed into this country have abused the trust and support that was extended to them, and Minnesota taxpayers have suffered billions of dollars in consequences as a result,” Demuth said, without providing evidence.

    CBS News has reached out to DHS, Gov. Walz and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith of Minnesota for comment.

    The Trump administration has also moved to end TPS protections for AfghanVenezuelan and South Sudanese nationals. Those actions have faced significant legal challenges. 

    This is a developing story and will be updated.   

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  • Former Venezuela ambassador on why the U.S. is building up military in Caribbean

    House Democrats have introduced a bill that calls for funding to be cut off for American operations against Venezuela. Former top diplomat to Venezuela, Ambassador James Story, joins CBS News with more on why the U.S. may be building up military presence in the Caribbean.

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  • The Web of Venezuelan Generals Accused of Fueling the Cocaine Trade

    For more than two decades, a loose-knit group of Venezuelan generals and senior officials has enabled the shipment of thousands of tons of cocaine to the U.S. and Europe, American and Colombian officials say.

    While nearly all cocaine is produced in neighboring Colombia, Venezuela plays an important role in allowing the drug to move through its territory and then onto ships and planes that traffic it to Europe, the Caribbean and the U.S., the officials have said. 

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    Behind Trump’s reversal on releasing Epstein files; Judge accuses DOJ of “disturbing pattern” of missteps in Comey case.

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