Venezuela, US gas prices
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Ongoing tensions between the United States and Venezuela are having ripple effects in Georgia, including protests held in Atlanta over the weekend.
Venezuelans in Georgia are cheering the Trump administration’s capture of Nicolás Maduro. Could they go back, or will the U.S. allow them to stay?
Georgia’s congressional delegation is responding after President Donald Trump announced that U.S. forces carried out what he described as a “large-scale strike against Venezuela” aimed at capturing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
Foreign policy debates often feel distant: abstract disputes playing out thousands of miles away, disconnected from daily life. But recent U.S. actions toward Venezuela, including recent direct military intervention,
Georgia politicians are responding Saturday, mostly along party lines, after President Donald Trump announced airstrikes in Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife. Trump later said
Shalva Papuashvili, Speaker of the Parliament of Georgia, says recent developments linked to Venezuela highlight what he describes as the
Local lawmakers in Georgia and South Carolina are sharing their reactions to Saturday’s U.S. military operation in Venezuela. Early Saturday morning, President Trump
Georgia and South Carolina leaders and politicians from both sides of the aisle are speaking out after the U.S. carried out a major operation in Venezuela overnight, capturing President Nicolás Maduro.
WTVC NewsChannel 9 on MSN
Tennessee, Georgia lawmakers react to U.S. operations in Venezuela
Georgia and Tennessee officials took to social media following the news of the U.S. Army's strikes on Venezuela and the capture of Nicolas Maduro and his wife e
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene criticized President Donald Trump's Venezuela strikes capturing Maduro, arguing domestic policy should be priority over foreign intervention.