venezuela
Florida Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D), who’s been criticized in the past for having conflicting views on Venezuela and its leadership, has taken to Twitter to highlight the continued violation of human rights that Venezuela’s communist leadership has enacted.
During the 2002 State of the Union address given by President George W. Bush, the term “Axis of Evil” was coined by the former president to identify the terrorism-facilitating countries of Iran, Iraq, and North Korea, that posed a threat to the U.S.
With the latest Pew Research poll showing that the majority of Cuban American voters will be supporting President Donald Trump over former Vice President Joe Biden this November, the Trump campaign can be heard letting out an enthusiastic Cubaniche “Acere, Que Bola!?” or ‘What’s Up buddy!
As the 2020 presidential election nears, all eyes, including those of Venezuela’s Dictator Nicolas Maduro, will be fixed on the TV to see if President Donald Trump can win reelection.
China has received heavy criticism from a number of lawmakers, who have slammed the threat they pose on the United States from a technological perspective, China’s handling of COVID-19 while also pointing out that China has been expanding its detention camps that are directly affecting Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang, China.
As the protests in Portland, Oregon continue, lawmakers in South Florida exchanged verbal jabs on Twitter regarding the nature of the ongoing protests.
Amidst the growing COVID-19 Pandemic, President Trump (R) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D) have engaged in a back and forth when it comes to the rise of communist sympathy in the United States along with the human rights abuses in countries with communist governments like Venezuela.
As former Vice President Joe Biden (D) appears to surge in the polls, Florida Senator Marco Rubio (R) has taken to Twitter to slam the Obama administration over its alleged inaction when it came to holding Venezuela accountable.
In light of former national advisor John Bolton’s comments about Trump and Venezuela in his new book, Florida lawmakers that are supportive of the president are doubling down on his firm stance against communist regimes.
Vice president Joe Biden may have had one of his biggest senior moments yet when he attacked President Donald Trump for stating in an interview that he would be open to meeting with Venezuelan Dictator Nicholas Maduro, forgetting that he had previously hugged it out with the Venezuelan drug overlord.
President Trump took part in an interview with Axios, and Florida Democrats are slamming the president for some of his comments during the interview.
Florida Rep. Donna E. Shalala (D) took to Twitter to slam the Trump administration as new reports have surfaced claiming that funds seized from Venezuela’s dictatorship were used to fund President Trump’s wall.
Two Liberian-flagged, Greek-owned ships that "were en route to Venezuela carrying Iranian fuel, scrapped their deliveries after the U.S. threatened sanctions.”
“Recent press reports and a lawsuit suggest that former Congressman David M. Rivera (R-FL-25) worked on behalf of a foreign principal."
It wasn’t exactly another Bay of Pigs invasion by the U.S. supported nationals, but the failed kidnapping attempt of Nicolas Maduro by two former U.S. Special Forces and Venezuelan “traitors” was stomped out by that country's military. Venezuela’s Drug kingpin was quick to lay the entire operation on the Trump administration, saying that there is […]
“Joe Biden is doubling down on his support for this ruthless dictatorship, reversing any progress toward freedom in Latin America."
The U.S. Treasury has renewed a license that allows Chevron Corp. and U.S. oilfield service providers Halliburton, Schlumberger, Baker Hughes, and Weatherford International, to continue working in Venezuela, conducting limited maintenance of essential activities.
Lurking underneath Maduro’s control, however, the COVID-19 pandemic and plummeting oil prices have turned the world upside down, and its impact on Venezuela is exponential.
