Venezuelans in ‘state of uncertainty’ over US temporary protected status

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Fort Worth, Texas – The toughest part of Ana Maria Fores Tamayo’s job is seeing the trauma etched into the faces of the refugees she helps. That trauma was clear when she and her husband travelled to Aurora, Colorado, last year to meet with Venezuelans living in the United States.

“Everyone’s afraid,” said Tamayo, 69, who leads the Refugee Support Network. Among other services, her organisation helps people fleeing their home country apply for temporary protected status (TPS) in the US.

“They were leaving because things were terrible there,” she said of the people she met in Colorado. “Most of them did not talk too much about it except to say that this was the chance for them to live here legally.”

TPS is a designation created by the US government in 1990 to shield foreign nationals already in the country from deportation to countries designated unsafe to return to.

President Donald Trump announced in February that nearly 300,000 Venezuelans would be stripped of their TPS on Thursday. But a US federal judge blocked the move the following month, saying the Trump administration’s characterisation of the migrants as criminals “smacks of racism”.

Tamayo’s husband, Andres Pacheco, 64, told Al Jazeera that until now, TPS was a “relatively easy process” compared with asylum claims, but he worries that the status could soon no longer be an option for some people.

“The only problem with TPS is that it only goes up to 18 months,” said Pacheco, who runs a legal aid nonprofit for immigrants in Texas. “So these are people who live in a state of uncertainty.”

‘A warzone’ in Colorado

In March, the Trump administration announced it would revoke the temporary legal status of 530,000 people, including Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, according to a Federal Register notice.

Despite studies consistently showing that undocumented immigrants commit crimes at lower rates than US citizens, Trump cast migrant crime as a central point of his presidential campaign.

Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump dances during his rally at Gaylord Rockies Resort and Convention Center in Aurora, Colorado, U.S., October 11, 2024. REUTERS/Isaiah J. DowningUS President Donald Trump dances during his campaign rally in Aurora, Colorado, on October 11, 2024 [Isaiah J Downing/Reuters]

Trump also echoed unproven claims about Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang during campaign rallies, including an October stop in Aurora, where such fears had emerged. He went on to call the city a “warzone” and used the issue to attack Democrats and stoke voter fears, warning that “migrant criminals” would “rape, pillage, thieve, plunder and kill the people of the United States of America”.

“Do you see what they’re doing in Colorado? They’re taking over,” Trump said at a rally in Pennsylvania. He added, without providing evidence: “They’re taking over real estate. They become real estate developers from Venezuela. They have equipment that our military doesn’t have.”

In the months that followed, Tamayo and Pacheco watched as Trump repeatedly spoke out against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro while, at the same time, describing Venezuelan immigrants as criminals. That portrait didn’t align with what Tamayo saw from the dozens of people they met in Aurora.

“Their country had completely collapsed, and so they had no medicines, no food, no anything. And so they just had to leave.”

Despite Trump’s criticisms, many Venezuelans living in the US voted for the president.

And despite a federal judge temporarily blocking the Trump administration from ending TPS for Venezuelans, this has not eased their fears as many now are grappling with the rising uncertainty of their futures.

Presidential actions like those taken in March, when the US flew more than 200 immigrants – alleged members of Tren de Aragua – to be imprisoned in El Salvador after Trump controversially invoked wartime legislation to expel them, only compound those fears.

Luis, a Venezuelan-American Trump voter living in Dallas, told Al Jazeera he “never thought” Trump would target the relief programme that keeps more than half a million Venezuelans – including some of his loved ones – safe from deportation. He asked to use only his first name for fear of retribution against his family.

“[Trump has] admitted Venezuela is not safe, and I understand he doesn’t want criminals,” said the 34-year-old. “But why does he want to get rid of honest, hardworking people? What does he want to send us back to?”

Second attempt

This is not the first time Trump has tried to end the programme.

During his first term, the president tried to strip TPS from people from El Salvador, Haiti and other nations he infamously dubbed “s***hole countries”.

Advocacy groups blocked him with lawsuits, and Marco Rubio, then a US senator and now Trump’s secretary of state, cosponsored the Venezuela TPS Act and personally lobbied for Venezuelans in a letter to then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

However, this year, Rubio took a new position on the matter.

“Designating Venezuela under TPS does not champion core American interests or put America and American citizens first,” he wrote.

Few other Republicans have spoken up for Venezuelans.

US Representative Maria Salazar from Miami, Florida, called on Trump not to “punish” immigrants by revoking their humanitarian parole, a pathway to legal status arranged by the Biden administration. More than 70 percent of Salazar’s constituents are Hispanic, and nearly one-fourth are not US citizens.

“They came here fleeing failed communist countries believing in Biden’s empty promises,” Salazar wrote.

Recently, Salazar celebrated the courts blocking Trump’s manoeuvring, even going so far as to say she had “led the fight” to protect TPS. In reality, the fight has been led by groups like the National TPS Alliance, which filed the lawsuit that led to the courts blocking Trump’s moves.

A member of SEBIN (Bolivarian National Intelligence Service) carries a box with the files of the Venezuelan migrants as migrants arrive after being deported from the United States, at the Simon Bolivar International Airport, in Maiquetia, Venezuela April 23, 2025. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez ViloriaA member of Venezuela’s national intelligence service carries a box with the files of Venezuelan migrants as they arrive at Simon Bolivar international airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela, on April 23, 2025, after being deported from the US [Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters]

‘A blessing for my life’

Jose Palma, a National TPS Alliance coordinator, said he’s counselled hundreds of TPS recipients.

“We have stories of people from Honduras or El Salvador that have been in the United States for the last 25 years,” he said. “They are at risk of losing their immigration status and getting deported, even though they have established their life in the United States.”

Palma is particularly concerned about parents who are TPS beneficiaries and have started families in the US, which makes their children US citizens.

If they are ultimately deported, he said, “their kids will either need to stay in the United States without their parents, or they will be forced to go to another country”.

Liz, a native of El Salvador who is now in her 50s, arrived in the US in 2001 after a devastating earthquake.

Liz, who gave only her first name for fear of reprisals, said she has since reapplied for TPS roughly a dozen times, and she calls the programme “a blessing for my life” that has allowed her to build a family and a life in a place she now considers her home.

Some fees have increased, and some documents have become more complicated, but the process has been reliable: You turn in the necessary forms, and as long as your country is on the list, you receive the status.

“TPS is at least one piece of the many we need in order to exercise our rights,” Liz said.

“Even if it’s temporary, it’s created a lot of good for the American public,” Liz said of TPS. “We have TPS holders who are faith leaders. We have TPS holders who are business owners providing employment to US citizens.”

Carmen, a 27-year-old Venezuelan living in Fort Worth, Texas, echoed Liz’s comments, calling TPS “a godsend” that helped her “start a life I didn’t know I would have”.

‘It’s time for you to leave’

Sindy Mata, a 30-year-old community organiser in Fort Worth, has also counselled immigrants and recipients of either TPS or humanitarian parole, which is permission to enter and stay in the US temporarily for urgent reasons.

She said that since early this year, many under temporary status received emails from the Department of Homeland Security that began: “It is time for you to leave the United States.”

Part of the administration’s strategy is to encourage immigrants to start “self-deporting”.

But Mata said the Homeland Security Department’s emails were not always having that intended effect.

“I know one person who, when they received the email, their first thought was, ‘Who else got this? Who else in the community needs advice or needs some help?’”

That’s when she worked to connect people with legal representation and organisations like Palma’s that are determined to keep TPS alive.

“It’s a reminder,” she said, “that we need to stand up for each other.”

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