NEW YORK — In the days since the Trump administration ousted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a late-night military raid, Alejandra Salima has spoken to fellow Venezuelan migrants in her role as an advocate. Like her, most voice feelings that seesaw between joy and trepidation, she said.
The removal of Maduro is ''a first step, but we're nervous,'' said Salima, who fled to the U.S. three years ago with her 7-year-old son and assists other Venezuelans at the Miami office of the National TPS Alliance. With the regime that Maduro led still in place, ''at this moment, returning would put me and my son at risk,'' she said.
For more than 770,000 Venezuelans living in the U.S., reactions to Trump's forceful moves in the country they left behind — and the one that has taken them in — are as intense as they are complicated.
Many are thrilled by the removal of Maduro, who harassed and jailed political opponents while presiding over an economic collapse, driving millions of Venezuelans from the country. But as they try to figure out what's next for them and for families and friends still in Venezuela, many share Salima's conflicted feelings.
The Trump administration's move to deport Venezuelans without permanent residency has increased worry. Many were allowed to stay in the U.S. after they were granted Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, a designation Trump revoked after taking office. At the same time, the fear instilled by the government Maduro left behind makes many wary of returning.
''First, they grabbed Maduro, and I feel happy, happy, happy, grateful to the Trump administration,'' said Manuel Coronel, a lawyer who left Venezuela in 2017 and now lives just north of Salt Lake City. But he worries the change will be too limited.
''They got him, but the criminals are still there,'' said Coronel, who is 54 and works at an immigration law practice. ''There's no new government. Everything's exactly the same.''
No rush to return