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Portugal Golden Visa: Approvals down, family permits up in 2024

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating

Panoramic view of the capital of Madeira island Funchal, Portugal.

proslgn // Shutterstock

 

Portugal’s Golden Visa (ARI) program issued fewer residence permits in 2024 than the previous year, but family reunification permits linked to the program nearly doubled. The shift, documented in Portugal’s latest official migration reporting, marks a notable change in the program’s profile after years of policy revisions. Movingto analyzed the latest official migration data to track these changes.

The numbers

In 2024, Portugal issued 2,081 ARI residence permits, down from 2,901 in 2023—a 28% decline year over year, according to the Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum (AIMA)’s annual migration and asylum report.

At the same time, family reunification permits linked to ARI rose to 2,909 in 2024, up from 1,554 in 2023—an 87% increase.

Chart showing how many Golden Visa permits were issued by Portugal.

Moveto

 

Chart showing number of Family Reunification Permits issued by Portugal

Moveto

Who’s applying?

The most recent nationality breakdown, published for 2023, shows the United States led with 567 permits, followed by China with 306.

Historical context

The Golden Visa—formally the Autorização de Residência para Atividade de Investimento (ARI)—launched in October 2012. Official reporting from the program’s first decade shows:

  • More than €7.3 billion in total investment (October 2012–October 2023)
  • Over 12,700 main applicants
  • More than 33,000 total beneficiaries, including family members
  • Real estate routes accounting for roughly 88%–90% of historical investment

The 2022 annual reporting (RIFA 2022) provides a granular snapshot: €654.3 million in total ARI investment that year, with property purchases representing €534.6 million across 1,008 investments.

What may explain the shift?

The program has undergone significant changes in recent years, including restrictions on real estate investment routes and the administrative transition from Serviço de Estrangeiros e Fronteiras (SEF) to AIMA. These changes created a complex operating environment that can influence year-to-year totals.

The data doesn’t explain causation, but it shows a clear pattern: fewer new ARI permits, more family reunification.

Methodology

This story summarizes publicly available reporting from Portuguese migration authorit

Santa Barbara County First Responder Chiefs Annual Meeting with One805 Focuses on Mental Wellness Endowment

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Earlier this month, at the annual One805 Chiefs’ Luncheon, Santa Barbara County Sheriff and First Responder Chiefs convened to review 2025 outcomes and establish priorities for the year ahead. The annual […]

The post Santa Barbara County First Responder Chiefs Annual Meeting with One805 Focuses on Mental Wellness Endowment appeared first on edhat.

A pesar del fallo favorable de esta semana, el limbo judicial sobre el TPS para venezolanos continúa. El miedo, también

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Por Uriel Blanco, CNN en Español

En el último año, el Estatus de Protección Temporal (TPS, por sus siglas en inglés) se ha convertido en uno de los frentes del Gobierno de Donald Trump en su ofensiva contra la inmigración y, por decir lo menos, en un enorme obstáculo para miles de venezolanos.

Desde los primeros días de su segundo mandato, el Gobierno de Trump revocó el TPS —que protege a inmigrantes frente a la deportación y les permite obtener permisos de trabajo— para alrededor de 600.000 venezolanos que accedieron a este estatus de manera legal en 2021 (un primer grupo) y luego en 2023 (el segundo grupo).

Desde entonces, se ha librado una larga batalla legal entre el Gobierno estadounidense y los grupos de derechos humanos que defienden a los inmigrantes con TPS. Mientras la lucha sigue en los tribunales inferiores y en la Corte Suprema de EE.UU., muchos venezolanos que obtuvieron ese estatus siguen atrapados en la incertidumbre, en riesgo de deportación y sin un permiso de trabajo que les permita obtener un ingreso para su día a día.

El miércoles, la batalla sobre el TPS abrió un nuevo capítulo: una corte federal de apelaciones dictaminó que el Gobierno de Trump actuó ilegalmente al terminar las protecciones del TPS para cientos de miles de venezolanos y haitianos.

Para Adelys Ferro, cofundadora y directora ejecutiva del Venezuelan American Caucus —una ONG que aboga por los derechos de los inmigrantes venezolanos y que ha estado en la primera línea de defensa del TPS—, la reciente dictaminación en la corte de apelaciones es una “victoria” porque, como en decisiones anteriores en los tribunales, “demuestra que nuestro caso es sólido”.

Sin embargo, la dictaminación del miércoles “no significa un cambio en el estatus de ninguno” de los beneficiarios del TPS, dijo Ferro a CNN.

Por lo tanto, el TPS sigue en el limbo judicial. Y ahí se mantendrá más tiempo, explicó Ferro, ya que esperan que el Gobierno de EE.UU. presente otro recurso legal próximamente y lleve de nuevo el caso a la Corte Suprema, que primero decidirá sobre la reciente dictaminación de la corte de apelación y luego tomará una decisión final respecto al TPS.

“Pero no sabemos de tiempo, la Corte Suprema no te da tiempos, así que tenemos que esperar (…) e ir un proceso a la vez. Mientras tanto, sigue pasando el tiempo y los venezolanos siguen sin la protección del TPS”, añadió Ferro.

El Gobierno de Joe Biden instauró las protecciones que brinda este estatus. Biden designó a Venezuela para el TPS primero en 2021 por “condiciones extraordinarias y temporales” en Venezuela, entre las que se incluyen el hambre y la desnutrición generalizadas, la creciente influencia y presencia de grupos armados no estatales, la represión y el deterioro de las infraestructuras; y luego extendió el TPS para venezolanos con una nueva designación en 2023. Según datos recabados por el Foro Nacional de Inmigración, entre las designaciones de 2021 y 2023, había más de 605.000 venezolanos con TPS hasta marzo de 2025

Mientras que el Gobierno de EE.UU. terminó con la designación del TPS para venezolanos de 2021 en septiem

Blue Origin says it is pausing space tourism trips to focus on moon landing

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By Jackie Wattles, CNN

(CNN) — Blue Origin announced Friday that it is pausing flights aboard its suborbital space tourism rocket New Shepard. Since 2021, New Shepard has provided 10-minute flights to the edge of space for wealthy thrill seekers, celebrities and special guests.

The company, founded by Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos, said in a Friday statement that it’s halting the joyrides for at least two years in order to “shift resources to further accelerate development of the company’s human lunar capabilities.”

Blue Origin and Elon Musk’s SpaceX each hold a NASA contract to develop a vehicle capable of ferrying astronauts from deep space to the lunar surface.

As of now, SpaceX is slated to supply the lander that will complete NASA’s first moon-landing mission since the Apollo era, called Artemis III, that is currently scheduled to take off by 2028 but could suffer additional delays — in part because the SpaceX lander may not be ready in time.

Transportation secretary Sean Duffy issued warnings to the dueling companies in October, when he was also serving as NASA’s acting administrator. He indicated that NASA may use Blue Origin’s lander for Artemis III if SpaceX’s lander is too far behind schedule.

“If SpaceX is behind, but Blue Origin can do it before them, good on Blue Origin,” Duffy told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” in October. “But … we’re not going to wait for one company. We’re going to push this forward and win the second space race against the Chinese.”

A new space race

Hawkish lawmakers on Capital Hill have increasingly emphasized that they believe NASA must put astronauts back on the moon before China does. China is currently slated to take its Taikonauts to the lunar surface for the first time by 2030.

The first crewed flight of the Artemis program — a mission that will circumnavigate the moon but will not land on its surface — is slated to take off as soon as February 8.

The exact timeline for NASA to potentially alter its deal with SpaceX or bring on a new contractor for the Artemis III lunar lander was not made clear by Duffy.

The agency’s newly installed administrator, Jared Isaacman — a billionaire entrepreneur who has twice flown to space on SpaceX capsules — has not offered more specifics since taking office in December.

In January, Isaacman said in a social media post that he had met with SpaceX and Blue Origin to “understand the latest plans to accelerate NASA’s Artemis timeline.”

Blue Origin said Friday that its decision to stop flights of its suborbital New Shepard space tourism rocket reflect the company’s “commitment to the nation’s goal of returning to the Moon and establishing a permanent, sustained lunar presence.”

It’s not clear how many people hold tickets for future New Shepard flights and who may now have to wait years. Blue Origin also does not disclose the price of its tickets.

Since its first crewed trip in 2021, which lifted off with Blue Origin founder Bezos and several other passengers, the New Shepard rocket has carried a total of 98 people past the the Kármán line, which lies at 62 miles (100 kilometers) above sea level and is commonly used to mark the boundary of outer space. Its passengers have included actor William Shatner, NFL star Michael Strahan, journalist Gayle King and singer Katy Perry.

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The post Blue Origin says it is pausing space tourism trips to focus on moon landing appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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