Venezuela

Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, many in South Florida, lose TPS after Friday

US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks netx to Ecuador's Minister of Interior John Reimberg (out of frame) as they deliver a press briefing at the Carondelet Presidential Palace in Quito, on July 31, 2025. (Photo by Rodrigo BUENDIA / POOL / AFP) (Photo by RODRIGO BUENDIA/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem POOL/AFP via Getty Images/Archivo

Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans living in the U.S. will lose Temporary Protected Status at the end of the day Friday, leaving many of them vulnerable to deportation to a homeland in extreme turmoil.

Losing the protection: a group of about 268,000 Venezuelans who became eligible for TPS in March 2021 under the Biden administration.

The loss of TPS means that large swaths of the Venezuelan community will find themselves without a legal immigration status or work authorization at a time when the U.S. is weighing whether to attack targets in Venezuela. The Trump administration has been blowing up boats in the Caribbean and Latin America’s Pacific coast, claiming they are carrying drugs.

Venezuelans left without TPS may now be forced to return to a country plunged in a humanitarian crisis and economic turbulence, exacerbated by political repression — and now also facing the possibility of war with the world’s largest military superpower.

“Every Venezuelan, or any immigrant who isn’t a legal resident or citizen, feels distressed and anxious. Beyond the immigration challenges within the U.S., there’s a deeper reality: Venezuela remains under a horrifying dictatorship,” one Venezuelan activist losing TPS on Friday told the Miami Herald. She asked that her name not be used because she fears deportation.

The TPS holders join another 350,000 Venezuelans who were granted the benefit in October 2023 and lost it in April 2025. In September, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the Trump administration the green light to end TPS under the Venezuela designation, reversing a lower court’s decision to keep it in place through October 2026.

Perhaps no other state will feel the impact of the end of TPS like Florida, where about 230,000 Venezuelans with TPS resided as of March 2025. Many Venezuelans with TPS have pending asylum cases or submitted paperwork for work visas and green cards. But ongoing immigration applications don’t confer legal status, and those who don’t have a separate pathway to remain in the United States will find themselves unlawfully in the U.S. after Friday.

READ MORE: Once again, Supreme Court rules Trump can strip Venezuelans of TPS protections

In the notice announcing the termination of the 2021 protections, the Department of Homeland Security said that Venezuela does not meet conditions for TPS anymore and that there were notable improvements in certain key areas. It pointed to an economic outlook, including a reduction in hyperinflation and increase in oil production. But it also emphasized that the protections are ending because it’s not in American interests to keep Venezuela’s TPS designation in place.

But experts, lawyers and activists point out that conditions in Venezuela still merit TPS because it’s not safe for Venezuelans to return, especially those who have opposed the government of strongman Nicolás Maduro. A State Department’s travel advisory warns Americans to not go to Venezuela, citing the risk of arbitrary detention, kidnappings and torture as well as a poor health infrastructure, civil unrest and shortages of basic needs like water, electricity and medicine. It warns those who go or opt to stay in Venezuela to prepare a will. In a joint statement, Venezuela opposition leader María Corina Machado and Edmundo González, the candidate most nations, including the U.S., believe won the July 2024 presidential election, said they were worried about the TPS expiration on Friday, and said they had asked the Trump administration for solutions to protect TPS holders.

“Being Venezuelan cannot again be synonymous with being a refugee. That’s why the biggest protection for all Venezuelans, inside and outside Venezuela, is to recover the freedom of their country, the value of their passport, and be able to depend on a democratic government that defends them,” they wrote.

Options still available for some

In October, the Herald documented that hundreds of Venezuelans who had TPS have been detained, most of them under the 2023 designation that expired in April. At least one man under the 2023 designation was also deported back to Venezuela.

READ MORE: Trump administration detains hundreds of Venezuelans with TPS despite court order

Elizabeth Amaran, a South Florida-based immigration lawyer, told the Herald that many beneficiaries still have options available, such as pending asylum applications, which allow people to stay in the United States while those processes are ongoing but don’t provide legal status.

Amaran highlighted that TPS stops the clock on the one-year deadline to apply for asylum once an immigrant enters the country. That means those applied for TPS under the 2021 and 2023 designations can get their asylum application in. However, individuals who withdrew their asylum cases or closed their immigration court cases after receiving TPS must now reopen them to remain protected.

There is a significant number of Venezuelans who never applied for asylum and relied solely on TPS. Some even had their asylum cases closed or withdrawn because they received this status. With the expiration of TPS, these individuals are left completely unprotected and face the possibility of being detained or deported.

Only a small group of TPS holders who re-registered in January 2025 retains an automatic extension of their work permit until October 2026. The danger is greatest for those with final deportation orders, as they can be removed immediately once their temporary status expires.

“Surprisingly — surprisingly, I would have thought there wasn’t a single Venezuelan with TPS that has been left without protection, but many people have called me. We’ve actually been announcing this for a while now; the Supreme Court’s decision came out a couple of months ago, and still, many people have called who never filed for asylum. So I’d say there’s a large group,” said Amaran.

Other lawyers in South Florida note that the Trump administration is now regularly detaining people with pending asylum cases, arguing that even if they have an authorized stay in the United States they have no legal status and that’s grounds to arrest them.

‘I don’t want to be another disappeared person’

The Venezuelan activist who requested to speak anonymously because she fears deportation to Venezuela has lived in the United States for two decades. She has a deportation order that could send her back to a country she believes is deadly for those who, like her, have defied Maduro and his government.

The activist has a pending political asylum case and an appeal under review, but her status remains uncertain after recent policy changes. Some asylum petitions have been denied, while others are still in process. The Venezuelan government annulled her passport, which means she cannot emigrate elsewhere either.

She’s also a mother and longtime Florida resident with a home, cars and family who has spent half her life in the United States. Her children grew up here; her social and economic life is tied to South Florida’s Venezuelan community. She fears that returning to Venezuela would amount to a prison sentence—or worse.

“I don’t see myself outside this country—not out of stubbornness, but because of what we’ve done for democracy in Venezuela, “ said the activist.

Her fears echo reports from Human Rights Watch and the human-rights group Foro Penal, which document hundreds of arbitrary detentions and disappearances. The activist believes she could face fabricated charges like “treason” or “incitement,” common tools of repression.

If her appeal for political asylum fails, she could be deported at any moment. Still, the Venezuelan woman still insists on hope.

“I have faith that the American system, with all its flaws, will recognize the truth in my case. “I don’t want to be another disappeared person.”

Elected officials speak up

The Cuban-American delegation from Miami in Congress has increasingly found itself on a political tight rope, trying to defend its constituents targeted by the president’s immigration policies while avoiding open criticism of the administration. They have said they had been in contact Homeland Security Kristi Noem about the issue, but so far the administration has pushed forward with the termination of the protections for over half-a-million Venezuelans.

Of the three Cuban-American members of the delegation, Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar has been the most vocal about how Trump’s policies are affecting Hispanic communities in South Florida. She told the Herald in a statement that “No law-abiding Venezuelan should be sent back until their country is free, period.”

“I will always stand with the Venezuelan community and defend Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans until Maduro and his illegitimate narco-regime are removed from power and brought to justice. And I pray that day comes very soon,” said Salazar, who has co-sponsored legislations to protect Venezuelan immigrants and grant them TPS and has sent letters to Noem to grant protections to recent arrivals from nations like Venezuela.

On Friday, Miami U.S. Rep. Carlos Giménez said he supported a “case-by-case approach for Venezuelan exiles as they pursue political asylum in the U.S.”

“Here in South Florida, Venezuelan Americans are law-abiding residents who contribute meaningfully to our local economy and community,” said Giménez. “As I have always said, although all members of the Tren de Aragua criminal organization are from Venezuela, not all Venezuelans are part of Tren de Aragua. We must not allow the actions of a few criminals to define an entire community that overwhelmingly respects our laws and values.”

Giménez had previously sent a letter to Noem asking her to find solutions for individuals affected by the TPS termination, also on a case-by-case basis. In a statement, U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz Balart’s spokesperson said that the congressman “always has and continues to support TPS for Venezuela.”

“Alongside his colleagues, he continues to work with the Trump administration for a viable solution that protects those with legitimate claims of persecution and asylum who cannot return to their countries,” said the spokesperson.

U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who is co-chair of the Congressional Venezuela Democracy Caucus and has sponsored legislation to restore Venezuela’s TPS, on Friday called Trump’s termination the protections “the ultimate betrayal of Venezuelans who trusted he’d target real criminals for deportation, not families who work hard and follow the law.”

“I’ve led the fight against Trump’s attempts to deport law-abiding Venezuelans to Maduro’s narco-terrorist dictatorship, and I won’t stop fighting until our community is free from fear,” Wasserman Schultz said.

This story was originally published November 7, 2025 at 3:53 PM.

SB
Syra Ortiz Blanes
el Nuevo Herald
Syra Ortiz Blanes covers immigration for the Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald. Previously, she was the Puerto Rico and Spanish Caribbean reporter for the Heralds through Report for America.
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