Joint Statement from Senators Menendez and Durbin on Biden Administration’s Decision to Grant TPS to Venezuelans
Joint Statement from Senators Menendez and Durbin on Biden Administration’s Decision to Grant TPS to Venezuelans
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, issued the below statement in reaction to the Biden Administration’s announcement that it will designate Venezuela for Temporary Protected Status (TPS):
“Today’s welcomed announcement by the Biden administration reaffirms American support for the Venezuelan people. For years, the world watched in horror as man-made humanitarian and political crises turned Venezuela into a failed state—leaving the Venezuelan people to face political violence and without access to food, water, and electricity. Despite these disastrous and dangerous conditions, Venezuelans were still forcibly deported back to their country by the Trump Administration. Today’s action ensures that more than 300,000 Venezuelans in the United States can receive temporary legal status so they will not be forced to return to such terrible conditions and brings stability to these Venezuelan families,” said the Senators.
While former President Trump refused to grant Venezuelans TPS during his four years in office, Senate Republicans repeatedly blocked Senators Menendez and Durbin’s Venezuela Temporary Protected Status Act, allowing the Trump administration to continue forcefully returning them back to the Maduro regime. As the top Democrat in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Menendez launched an investigation into the Trump administration’s treatment of Venezuelan immigrants which revealed the Administration was conducting stealth deportations of Venezuelan nationals in possible violation of U.S. law and policies.
Established by the U.S. Congress through the Immigration Act of 1990, TPS is a temporary, renewable program that provides relief from deportation and the opportunity to apply for a work permit for eligible foreign nationals from certain countries who are unable to return safely to their home country due to natural disasters, armed conflicts, or other extraordinary conditions.