Workers marched on Miraflores. Rodríguez exceeds 90-day constitutional mandate with no election announced. And the collapse of the Islamabad talks has direct consequences for Venezuela’s oil future. Here’s what to watch for next
Brazil & the United States announce a new intelligence-sharing agreement on Friday targeting illegal arms trafficking from Florida to Brazil’s most powerful criminal organizations
FIFA names Katia Itzel García to the 2026 World Cup — a historic appointment that is being challenged in the Mexican fútbol world, not with celebration but with accusations that she is simply unqualified
The biggest anti-government demonstration since August 2024 filled the streets of Caracas on Thursday. Police blocked the march two kilometers from the presidential palace. The minimum wage is $0.27 a month. The acting president promised a raise — but wouldn’t say how much
In his first interview with a U.S. television network in decades, Cuba’s president told NBC’s Kristen Welker he would not resign. Outside the interview room, Cuba was experiencing its worst blackouts in history, its largest street protests since 2021, and a fuel blockade with no end in sight
Washington & Tehran agreed to stop shooting at each other on Tuesday. By Wednesday morning, Israel launched strikes on Beirut. The Strait of Hormuz remained closed. Islamabad talks begin Saturday. This is where things stand
José Antonio Kast took office March 11 with the most aggressive anti-immigration mandate in Chilean history. For the hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans who built lives in Santiago after fleeing Maduro, the new government’s message is unambiguous: your time is running out
Miami is not just a refuge for Cuban exiles. It is a stronghold — one that has shaped American foreign policy toward Cuba for 67 years, produced the most powerful Latino diplomat in U.S. history, and is influencing the current tensions with the island in real-time
Fans who paid Category 1 prices for World Cup tickets expecting touchline views are discovering their seats have moved to corners and behind goal. In Miami, where thousands bought tickets to watch Brazil, Colombia, and Uruguay, the scandal hits close to home
For over a decade, a transnational criminal organization kidnapped Cuban migrants in Mexico and called their families in Miami. The financial architect of that operation was just arrested in Cancún
The PCC has 40,000 members, operates in 90 countries, and earns nearly a billion dollars a year. The Trump administration wants to call it a terrorist organization. Brazil’s president is calling it a sovereignty threat — and voters are watching both men closely
The UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances made history last week — finding crimes against humanity in Mexico and referring the case to the General Assembly. President Sheinbaum called the report biased — the mothers disagree