Miami — Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants in the United States face legal uncertainty after former president Nicolás Maduro was captured recently in New York on Jan. 3. The Trump administration revoked Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans last year, affecting about 600,000 people and followed more than 13,000 deportations. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed TPS for Venezuelans is over; migrants under TPS are now advised to pursue asylum. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said TPS recipients may apply for asylum. Local advocates and officials have urged reinstatement and pauses on deportations. Based on six articles reviewed and supporting research.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 6 original reports from The Straits Times, ABC7 Chicago, Internewscast Journal, WPTV, KGTV and WLOS.
U.S. immigration authorities and policymakers benefited by regaining policy flexibility and enforcement control over Venezuelan migrant status following TPS revocation.
Approximately 600,000 Venezuelan migrants and their families suffered increased legal uncertainty, risk of deportation, and disrupted lives after TPS was revoked.
After reading and researching latest news.... Venezuelan migrants in the U.S. face legal uncertainty after Temporary Protected Status was revoked last year, affecting about 600,000 people; DHS confirmed TPS is ended, and officials say former TPS recipients may seek asylum while advocates call for reinstatement and deportation pauses immediate policy.
Local advocates ask Trump admin. to reinstate Venezuelans' TPS, stop deportations amid uncertainty
ABC7 Chicago Internewscast JournalUS Venezuelan migrants face uncertainty after Maduro's capture
The Straits Times WPTV KGTV
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