Woodruff also ahead, our politics monday team is here to talk about the new storm President Trump has kicked up over his proposed travel ban and its fate in the courts. All that and more on tonights pbs newshour. Major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by moving our economy for 160 years. Bnsf, the engine that connects us. And the william and flora hewlett foundation, helping people build immeasurably better lives. And with the ongoing support of these institutions and individuals. This program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. And by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. Woodruff 18 victims still in critical condition. The numbers headline the days developments in the London Bridge attack that killed seven people saturday night. Malcolm brabant is in london, and filed this report. Reporter police were in action in east london again this morning, raiding an apartment complex and a tire shop, detaining more people in
I was delighted to have a wideranging conversation with that great observer of both species, jane goodall. At this point in the program, i know that you are expecting my take, and i have that. We have a whole show coming to you from davos, but before that, i want to get to the breaking news, which comes out of venezuela. Right now, the United States is recognizing a different head of state than nicolas maduro, who has called this a coup. The United States is trying to get countries like britain to stop any kind of financial activity with the country of venezuela. Maduro threatened to expel all u. S. Diplomats, then backed down from that. Where do things stand now . We have from caracas a fellow. Michael benfold what is the status right now . As far as i can tell you, you have growing International Pressure on maduro. You have one important military person, the who has said maduro should step down and the army should not protect him but the rest of the army still seems to be backing the
If hope were a commodity, it would be trading high in Venezuela this season. Since the international approach to the Venezuelan crisis shifted from maximizing pressure on the Maduro regime through sanctions, threats and diplomatic isolation to a negotiated solution to the conflict, the Venezuelan people have remained firm in their determination to see the process through to an election, now set for July 28th.
Over the last year an unprecedented wave of Venezuelan immigrants flooded the US-Mexico border
prompting talk of a new migrant crisis. The Venezuelan migration to the US is part of the largest such
exodus in the history of the Americas. The scale and scope of the Venezuelan migration crisis raises
important questions. Why have so many Venezuelans opted to leave their country in recent years? How
have Venezuelan migrants fared in other countries and how in turn have they affected those countries
that receive them? What dangers and opposition do they face on their journeys? What is the future of
Venezuelan migrants in the US? And how is this phenomenon impacting US-Venezuelan relations? In
this article, we draw on dozens of semi-structured interviews and informal conversations conducted
between 2019 and the present by the authors with Venezuelan migrants in Colombia, Mexico, and the
United States. Combining these primary sources with other available academic and media-based
publications,