The Trump administration on Tuesday gave Chevron 30 days to stop oil production in Venezuela after Washington accused President Nicolas Maduro of not making progress on electoral reforms and migrant returns.
The Maduro regime warns it could stop accepting returning migrants after the White House canceled Chevron’s oil-pumping license there.
President Donald Trump’s announcement marked an abrupt reversal of his administration’s outreach to Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro.
The US administration of Donald Trump is giving Chevron Corp. one month to stop producing oil in Venezuela, delivering a heavy blow to President Nicolas Maduro’s autocratic regime.
Donald Trump Jr. on Friday responded quickly to a report published online claiming that he was considering a run for president in 2028 to follow in the footsteps of his term-limited father, President Donald Trump.
President Donald Trump revoked a license granted to Chevron by his predecessor, Joe Biden, two years ago. Trump announced the decision in a late Wednesday post on Truth Social. The decision comes as Trump accuses Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro of failing to make the necessary headway on election changes and migrant returns.
The Associated Press - Business News on MSN10d
Trump cuts financial lifeline for Venezuela’s government by ending permit to export oil to USIt is unclear exactly how Maduro’s government has used that money as it stopped publishing almost all financial data several years ago. On Wednesday, opposition leader Maria Corina Machado in a podcast interview with Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr ...
President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is revoking the license that allows the Venezuelan government to export oil to the United States, claiming that the South American country has failed to take back Venezuelan deportees from the U.
President Donald Trump said he plans to revoke Chevron Corp.’s oil license to operate in Venezuela, threatening to torpedo the nation’s slow economic recovery.
During an interview with Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade , Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Nicolás Maduro is seen as a “horrible dictator who is instilling all kinds of instability.” And asked if Maduro “should go” and “leave,” Rubio suggested that there still is a path to remove the leader — whose election the United States disputes — from power.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio joins "The Brian Kilmeade Show" to discuss the Trump administration's posture toward Venezuela.
The Trump administration on Tuesday gave Chevron 30 days to stop oil production in Venezuela after Washington accused President Nicolas Maduro of ... Later that day, Donald Trump Jr. released ...
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