Los Angeles Times

Venezuelan­s to get temporary legal status

The White House decision may allow tens of thousands who fled their homeland to remain in the U.S.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Molly O’Toole

WASHINGTON — The White House on Monday announced a temporary protected status decree that could allow tens of thousands of Venezuelan­s who fled their homeland to remain in the United States with legal standing.

The program marks a significan­t shift in U.S. policy from the Trump administra­tion, which denied Venezuelan­s protection even as President Trump tried to overthrow the leftist government in Caracas. His administra­tion also secretly deported Venezuelan­s despite clamor in Congress for protected status for the refugees.

Only on his last day in office did Trump issue an executive order deferring the removal of Venezuelan­s for 18 months, but not granting them temporary status and leaving them in limbo.

Fleeing poverty, hunger, disease and the brutal repression of President Nicolas Maduro, more than 4 million Venezuelan­s have left their country to date, according to the United Nations refugee agency, and more than 800,000 have sought asylum globally.

The protected status announced Monday will be issued through executive order rather than wending its way through Congress, and could benefit more than 320,000 people, administra­tion officials said, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity without providing a reason.

“The living conditions in Venezuela reveal a country in turmoil, unable to protect its own citizens,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro N. Mayorkas said in a statement. “It is in times of extraordin­ary and temporary circumstan­ces like these that the United States steps forward to support eligible Venezuelan nationals

already present here, while their home country seeks to right itself out of the current crises.”

Venezuelan­s who were physically present in the U.S. as of Monday were eligible and would have 180 days to apply, pay fees and prove their residence through bills or other documentat­ion, according to a release from the Homeland Security Department and officials.

The action won praise in numerous circles.

“To keep deporting Venezuelan­s back to Maduro’s tragedy would be to tell them they are a burden on our communitie­s, a menace to our national security, and an unwelcome guest in our country,” said Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), referring to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. Menendez has long fought for Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, for Venezuelan­s.

“This is huge,” said Geoff Ramsey, a longtime Venezuela expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights advocacy group. “TPS has proven to be far more sustainabl­e across administra­tions.”

Ramsey and others said they hoped Biden’s announceme­nt foretold a clearer, broader U.S. policy on Venezuela.

So far, the Biden administra­tion has offered few details on what it might do differentl­y from Trump, whose policies neither restored democracy to Venezuela nor significan­tly eased the humanitari­an crisis. “We are still waiting to see what’s new,” Ramsey said.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said the U.S. would continue Trump’s recognitio­n of opposition leader Juan Guaido as the rightful president of Venezuela. Nor has the Biden administra­tion agreed to talks with Maduro.

A second senior administra­tion official also briefing reporters said the U.S. government remained “very clear-eyed” about how the Maduro government has

used delay tactics in negotiatio­ns to crack down on opponents and consolidat­e power.

The administra­tion officials also rejected suggestion­s that President Biden’s decision was a political ploy to appease southern Florida, where a hard-core Republican vote supportive of Venezuelan refugees probably contribute­d to Biden losing the state in the 2020 election.

“It is not at all” partisan, one of the officials said. “The suffering and ongoing turmoil that the Venezuelan people have endured is well documented ... and that’s neither Democratic or Republican.”

Over the decades the TPS program has been used in limited fashion to grant a form of refugee status to people whose nations have been ravaged by natural disaster, such as hurricanes and earthquake­s in the case of some Central Americans and Haitians, and war. As its name suggests, the status is meant to be temporary, and critics have complained that too many beneficiar­ies of TPS have morphed into permanent residents.

This led the Trump administra­tion, already sponsoring measures to reduce legal and illegal immigratio­n, to end large parts of the programs.

Venezuelan­s were a peculiar case.

Even as the Trump administra­tion railed against Venezuela’s leadership, it resisted a bipartisan push — including from Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, an avowed hawk on Venezuela — to grant Venezuelan­s the right to stay in the U.S. under TPS.

While the Trump administra­tion worked to overthrow Venezuela’s government because of horrific abuses of its citizens, officials also secretly deported Venezuelan­s from the United States, removing them through third countries to mask their ultimate destinatio­n and skirt a 2019 law against flights to or from

Venezuelan airports, according to a report by Menendez, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.

Yet on Trump’s last day in office, he issued an executive order deferring the removal of Venezuelan­s for 18 months.

In late January, senators again introduced legislatio­n calling for TPS for Venezuelan­s.

In 2019, Senate Republican­s blocked a similar House-passed measure. Biden said during the 2020 presidenti­al campaign that he’d extend TPS for Venezuelan­s.

Since 2014, there’s been an 8,000% increase in the number of Venezuelan­s seeking refugee status, primarily in the Americas, according to the United Nations refugee agency.

And while many Venezuelan­s have sought protection closer by in the region, Venezuela in recent years has overtaken China as the top country of origin for asylum seekers in the United States, accounting for more than 25% of all asylum applicatio­ns filed with U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, according to the latest data. As recently as 2013, Venezuelan­s didn’t even rank in the top 10.

Many Venezuelan­s still fly to the United States — particular­ly those with more money and with family in Florida, which has a sizable Venezuelan expatriate community — and claim asylum upon arrival at U.S. airports or after, in a process known as affirmativ­e asylum.

But a growing number have sought protection at the U.S.-Mexico border. Mexico, too, has seen a dramatic increase in Venezuelan­s seeking asylum there, and most applicatio­ns there are approved.

In the United States, Venezuelan­s confronted several Trump-era policies to restrict the ability to claim asylum. More than 50% of Venezuelan asylum claims are denied on average, according to Syracuse University’s TRAC database of federal immigratio­n statistics. Last year, of the nearly 2,000 Venezuelan­s who received a decision on their asylum claims, about 900 were denied in U.S. immigratio­n court, putting them at risk of deportatio­n.

Before Monday’s announceme­nt, the Biden administra­tion had yet to issue new TPS designatio­ns for any country, or restore TPS for those terminated by Trump, according to a letter from 314 state and national organizati­ons urging Biden and Mayorkas to extend TPS for 18 countries, including Venezuela.

 ?? Ariana Cubillos Associated Press ?? MORE THAN 4 million people have f led Venezuela under the leadership of President Nicolas Maduro.
Ariana Cubillos Associated Press MORE THAN 4 million people have f led Venezuela under the leadership of President Nicolas Maduro.

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