Politics
Trump Floats Statehood For South American Country
President Donald Trump is floating a headline-grabbing idea that’s already setting Washington on fire: making Venezuela the 51st state.
In a phone call with Fox News anchor John Roberts on Monday, Trump said he is “seriously considering making Venezuela the 51st US state,” according to Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin.
Trump pointed to the country’s vast oil reserves as a driving factor, saying there is “$40 trillion in oil there” and adding that “Venezuela loves Trump.”
The blunt remarks quickly ricocheted across social media, fueling debate over whether Trump was signaling a real policy direction or deploying his trademark mix of provocation and political messaging.
The Venezuela statehood comments come amid a dramatically shifting landscape in the region following the arrest of longtime strongman Nicolás Maduro earlier this year. His removal from power marked a turning point after years of U.S. pressure, sanctions, and international isolation.

Since Maduro’s arrest, the U.S. has taken a more assertive posture toward Venezuela’s political and economic future, with renewed focus on stabilizing the country and tapping into its massive energy reserves.
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Venezuela holds some of the largest proven oil reserves in the world, a fact Trump has repeatedly emphasized as he pushes an energy-dominance agenda aimed at lowering costs and strengthening U.S. leverage globally.
The country has also been a major source of migration pressure at the southern border, another issue central to Trump’s second-term platform.
Trump did not outline any formal pathway for statehood, and there has been no official proposal from the White House. Turning a foreign nation into a U.S. state would require sweeping legal, political, and constitutional steps, making the idea highly speculative at this stage.
Still, the comment fits Trump’s pattern of thinking big and reframing geopolitical conversations in stark, transactional terms — especially when energy and national power are involved.
Whether serious or strategic, the president’s remarks have once again put Venezuela at the center of U.S. political debate.
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