Cámara de Representantes rechaza una resolución que buscaba limitar las acciones militares de la Casa Blanca en Venezuela

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Por Veronica Stracqualursi y Riane Lumer, CNN

La Cámara de Representantes rechazó este jueves una resolución bipartidista que buscaba restringir a la Casa Blanca el poder de tomar cualquier acción militar adicional en Venezuela sin la aprobación del Congreso.

La resolución, presentada por los representantes demócratas Jim McGovern y Joaquin Castro y el representante republicano Thomas Massie, no fue aprobada, con un empate de 215-215. Massie y el representante republicano Don Bacon se unieron a los demócratas para votar a favor de la resolución.

La iniciativa siguió al “ataque a gran escala” del Gobierno de Trump contra Venezuela y la captura de Nicolás Maduro. Desde entonces, el presidente Donald Trump ha dicho que Estados Unidos jugará un papel central en el Gobierno de Venezuela y no ha descartado la participación militar en la nación, un punto de controversia en el Capitolio.

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Cómo se pudo generar una tormenta invernal tan potente y qué tiene que ver la crisis climática con ella

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Por Andrew Freedman, CNN

Las temperaturas gélidas, la gran cantidad de nieve y la mortal tormenta de hielo que se está formando al este de las Rocosas pueden parecer contradictorias con la vida en un planeta que se calienta rápidamente. Pero todas estas cosas siguen ocurriendo, incluso con la crisis climática, y algunas de ellas podrían ser incluso más graves que antes, cuando las condiciones son propicias.

El frío intenso está volviéndose menos común y potente a medida que el mundo se calienta —un pobre consuelo para los millones de personas a punto de vivir un período prolongado de temperaturas gélidas. El invierno es la estación que más rápido se está calentando en Estados Unidos, e incluso en este invierno hasta ahora los récords de temperaturas cálidas han superado en número a los récords de frío en los 48 estados continentales.

Esto se debe en gran parte a que muchos estados del Oeste están teniendo su invierno más cálido alguna vez registrado, sin nieve en zonas de esquí en Colorado y otros típicos destinos deportivos de la región.

Relativamente pocos récords de bajas temperaturas se han establecido hasta ahora en comparación con los récords cálidos en el Oeste, dijo Bernadette Woods Placky, meteoróloga jefe de la organización de investigación sin fines de lucro Climate Central. Pero no se puede negar que este clima es inusualmente frío, dijo, describiéndolo como más parecido a los inviernos que el Medio Oeste y el Noreste estaban acostumbrados a vivir hace algunas décadas.

Investigadores de Climate Central analizaron las tendencias en la temperatura más baja del año en ciudades de todo EE.UU., mostrando que han aumentado rápidamente con el cambio climático. Por ejemplo, en Minneapolis, la temperatura más baja del año ha aumentado alrededor de 6,7 °C desde 1970.

Y en Cleveland, la temperatura más fría del año ha subido 6,2 °C desde 1970, según la investigación. Esto significa que los inviernos simplemente ya no han sido tan fríos como solían ser, haciendo que este episodio de frío sea más raro, aunque aún está por verse si muchos récords históricos de bajas temperaturas serán igualados o superados.

Otros expertos señalan la tormenta invernal y, en particular, el frío ártico que le seguirá y afirman que la propia crisis climática podría estar desempeñando un papel en su aparición. Jennifer Francis, investigadora del Woodwell Climate Research Center que ha estudiado los cambios en el vórtice polar a medida que el mundo se calienta, dijo que está viendo evidencia de esto en la tormenta.

“Aunque el calentamiento global está causando inviernos más cálidos en general, los eventos de clima invernal duro siguen siendo posibles —y tal vez incluso más probables— porque el calentamiento no es la única consecuencia del cambio climático causado por el hombre”, dijo. “Otros ingredientes que preparan el escenario para el clima invernal extremo están en aumento, y muchos de ellos están en juego esta semana”.

El aire frío que invade desde el Ártico llega gracias al vórtice polar, mientras sus lóbulos helados giran alrededor de un remolino principal cerca de la Bahía de Hudson en Canadá.

El vórtice polar es una muralla rugiente y circular de viento que normalmente confina el aire gélido al Ártico. Pero cuando se estira, puede descender hacia el sur y llevar el aire frío consigo. Eso es lo que está ocurriendo ahora en EE.UU. con una gran caída, o vaguada, en la corriente en chorro a través de los estados centrales y orientales.

Judah Cohen, científico investigador en el MIT, dijo que el estiramiento del vórtice está vinculado en parte a la pérdida de hielo marino en

New ICE warrant policy disregards a fundamental American right, experts say. Here’s what we know

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By Michael Williams, CNN

(CNN) — With an Immigration and Customs Enforcement memo that allows officers to enter homes without a judicial warrant, the Trump administration is seeking to usurp guardrails that are enshrined in the Fourth Amendment and have protected Americans’ civil liberties for centuries, experts in constitutional law and immigration policy told CNN.

Even in an administration that has always pushed an expansive vision of its law enforcement authority, the directive is notable for the way it tosses aside longstanding prohibitions against warrantless searches on private property — a legal concept that predates the creation of the United States and is among the country’s most foundational principles.

“The Bill of Rights, we thought, were the first 10 amendments,” said Mark Graber, a constitutional law scholar and University of Maryland professor.

With the newly discovered memo, he said: “I guess now we’re down to nine.”

Immigration officials had typically sought the arrests of undocumented people through two means: a judicial warrant, which is signed and authorized by a judge, or an administrative warrant, which is signed by people who work in the executive branch and fall under the purview of the president.

A critical difference between the two is that judicial warrants allow law enforcement to enter and search a person’s home or a non-public area of a business, while administrative warrants do not.

Most immigration arrests are carried out under administrative warrants because they require a lower bar to issue, and Trump administration officials have long harbored frustrations over limitations on officers pursuing targets on private property.

The internal memo, which was issued in May 2025 but revealed by a whistleblower complaint and first reported by the Associated Press on Wednesday, authorizes ICE officers to forcefully enter homes using only administrative warrants, essentially bypassing the neutral, third-party arbiters who would have reviewed evidence before signing a judicial warrant.

Administrative warrants are signed by ICE officers after an immigration judge orders the removal of an undocumented immigrant. But these immigration judges work for the Department of Justice at the pleasure of the attorney general, and the Trump administration refers to them as “deportation judges.”

“It would essentially be the same as if you were at the local police department, and the police officer that is both collecting the evidence and arresting you then goes and types up his own warrant to search your house because he thinks he has probable cause,” said Emmanuel Mauleón, an associate professor of law at the University of Minnesota.

“It’s deeply concerning, because there’s absolutely no safeguards and no accountability built into the system,” he said.

The history of the Fourth Amendment is rife with examples of local, state and federal law enforcement agencies seeking to challenge or whittle away its protections.

But this memo, Mauleón said, is “not the sort of incremental wearing down that we’ve seen over time.”

“It is what you might think of as crossing the Rubicon,” he said. “It is declaring that the fundamental protections that every court has recognized up to this point just don’t apply to DHS and to immigration stops.”

The Department of Homeland Security defended the directive in a statement in which spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said people who are served administrative warrants already had “full due process and a final order of removal.”

The administration’s own data shows hundreds of thousands of people last year were issued removal orders in absentia by immigration judges after they faile

As Trump zeroes in on Venezuela’s oil, Rodríguez moves to meet his demands

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By Sol Amaya, Michael Rios, CNN

(CNN) — Venezuelan lawmakers on Thursday backed a plan that would make it easier for foreign companies to participate in the country’s oil industry, in the latest move by Caracas to meet the demands of US President Donald Trump.

For almost two decades, much of the country’s oil industry has been nationalized under the government-controlled oil firm PDVSA, with foreign oil companies allowed only to operate in limited joint ventures with the public firm.

Under a proposed reform to the country’s hydrocarbons law, announced by acting President Delcy Rodríguez last week, foreign companies would be allowed to manage oilfields at their “own risk and cost,” Venezuela lawmaker Orlando Camacho said.

Venezuela’s National Assembly on Thursday gave its initial backing to the reform bill, which now faces a second round of debate before it can be adopted.

“Oil beneath the ground is useless,” said National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez, who is the brother of the acting president. “What good is it to say that we have the largest oil reserves on the planet if conditions … prevent an accelerated process toward production, toward increasing oil production? And we need to do it and do it now.”

In opening up access to US oil companies, the move would meet one of the main demands the Trump administration has made on Caracas following the capture by US forces of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this month.

The White House has previously announced agreements between Caracas and Washington for the sale of $500 million worth of Venezuelan crude, with Rodríguez on Tuesday saying that Venezuela had received $300 million of that figure.

The security issue

In what appeared to be another move to meet US demands, the lawmakers on Thursday backed another law aimed at boosting legal protections for businesses – one of the issues US oil company executives have told Trump is a condition for them to invest in the country.

Industry sources have previously told CNN that American oil executives are unlikely to dive headfirst into Venezuela for multiple reasons, including security and uncertainty over the country’s political and economic situation.

“The appetite for jumping into Venezuela right now is pretty low. We have no idea what the government there will look like,” one well-placed industry source told CNN earlier this month.

Venezuela has more proven oil reserves than any country on the planet. Yet oil companies say that to invest in far-flung drilling projects, they need confidence about what the operating environment there will look like years, if not decades, into the future.

Rodríguez also told a meeting of the Federal Government Council on Wednesday that there would be a public consultation on March 8 on plans for national infrastructure projects and improvements to “essential public services,” such as water, electricity and transportation.

That date – International Women’s Day – had been chosen “so that we may go forth with the spirit of our women, with the spirit of our warriors,” Rodríguez said.

Trump on Thursday offered a positive assessment of the acting president when asked by reporters if he would let her remain in power.

“But she’s shown very strong leadership so far, I have to say, and we’re moving in to the United States millions of barrels of oil as we speak,” Trump said of Rodríguez. “Well, right now

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