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Venezuelans In Florida Tell Reporters They May Return Following Maduro’s Capture

by Trending Newsfeed
January 4, 2026 at 5:46 pm
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Venezuelans In Florida Tell Reporters They May Return Following Maduro’s Capture

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If there was ever a case study in how actual leadership differs from press release diplomacy, the takedown of Nicolás Maduro is it — and it’s hitting especially hard for the millions of Venezuelans who fled the chaos, only to watch America finally do something real about it.

And by “do something,” we’re not talking about symbolic speeches or State Department hashtags. We’re talking about a fully executed military operation that pulled Maduro — alleged narco-terrorist, election manipulator, cartel collaborator — out of Caracas in the middle of the night and dropped him in federal custody. Gray sweatsuit, eye mask, headphones. A dictator reduced to perp-walk chic.

🇻🇪Here’s what the legacy media refuses to show you.

Caracas wakes to the sound of Venezuelans shouting “freedom,” applauding, and celebrating a moment years in the making. pic.twitter.com/ZegFnSAyC8

— I Meme Therefore I Am 🇺🇸 (@ImMeme0) January 3, 2026

The moment was emotional, and rightfully so. For Venezuelan-Americans like Lucy Mimo, who fled Caracas seven years ago with her daughter and has since become a U.S. citizen, it was more than a headline — it was vindication. “It’s time to fight for our country and move it forward,” she said, already thinking about the logistics of returning to rebuild the homeland she left behind.

While the Venezuelan people are jumping with joy, thanking Donald Trump and the American Military for helping free them from an oppressive dictatorship.

The Democrats are mad, let that sink in.
pic.twitter.com/PCRG0oe9BV

— CALI🇺🇸 (@CALI4AZ) January 4, 2026

In Doral, Florida — now practically a Venezuelan capital in exile — restaurants turned into block parties. People sang, danced, wept, and waved flags like their country had just been handed back. Because in a way, it had. Not by the U.N., not by the OAS, and definitely not by the Biden administration’s toothless $25 million bounty, but by President Donald Trump and the kind of muscular foreign policy that makes socialists nervous and exiles hopeful.

Of course, that same foreign policy has its critics. You can almost hear the media hyperventilating over Trump’s statement that the U.S. would “run” Venezuela until a proper transition happens. But let’s be honest — is that worse than letting the same cartel-backed dictatorship run it into the ground for another decade? Trump says the quiet part out loud. It might not be polite, but it works.

🚨 NOW: It is absolutely ELECTRIC in Miami. Venezuelans are riding a PARTY BUS in pure celebration over what President Donald Trump just accomplished.USA and Venezuelan flags are flying everywhere. People are cheering chanting crying hugging strangers. This is real joy from real… pic.twitter.com/mpLCcq38u4

Should Venezuelans consider returning to rebuild their country now that Maduro has been captured?

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— ⁿᵉʷˢ Barron Trump 🇺🇸 (@BarronTNews_) January 4, 2026

Meanwhile, Venezuelans like Rosario García — a former lawyer who fled for fear of political persecution — were celebrating with tears and music at El Arepazo, a Doral mainstay turned freedom festival. She’s already started a new life in the U.S., even earning her green card. Still, she hopes to return one day and rebuild Venezuela’s broken legal system — maybe even teach a new generation of cops how to protect citizens instead of terrorizing them. Imagine that: justice with teeth, not strings.

And yet, for all the celebration, the situation is complex. Some Venezuelans feel torn between a country they escaped and a country they’ve adopted. Trump’s crackdown on immigration has sparked criticism, especially after his administration began winding down Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for over 600,000 Venezuelans. Deportation flights, tightened asylum policies, and “safe for return” memos sparked fear, even as Maduro was being dragged off the world stage.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth the left doesn’t want to admit: You can’t say Venezuela is a hellscape of corruption and tyranny and insist no one should ever go back, even when the dictator is gone and the rebuilding begins. Something has to give. And for people like Irasel Carpavirez, who once practiced law in Caracas and now sees a glimmer of hope, it’s time to stop waiting and start returning.

🚨 HEARTWARMING SCENES FROM VENEZUELA:

• Venezuelans thanking President Trump from the bottom of their hearts
• Venezuelans thanking the United States for standing with freedom
• Joyful crowds dancing, waving flags, and chanting “LIBERTAD!”
pic.twitter.com/zqNmrXHDN7

— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) January 3, 2026

“I think this is the moment to return to Venezuela and rebuild,” she said. And maybe she’s right. Doctors, engineers, teachers — all the people Venezuela lost in the great socialist exodus — are finally looking at the possibility of going home not to survive, but to build.

There are, of course, the usual critics — Cato Institute experts lamenting deportations, NGOs panicking about TPS, and progressive commentators wringing their hands over Trump’s style. But for once, policy has delivered something tangible: a dictator removed, a country on the edge of rebirth, and people — real people — celebrating not just with words, but with flags, family, and hope.

You don’t get that from hashtags. You get that from action. And say what you will about Donald Trump, but under his watch, history didn’t just happen — it landed in Manhattan wearing handcuffs.

Miami Herald

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