S-4809-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Tim Kaine (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of State to develop and submit to Congress a strategy for supporting free and fair elections in Venezuela, including monthly progress reports and benchmarks for democratic transition. It would also require the President to impose asset-blocking sanctions and visa bans on Venezuelan individuals determined to be complicit in gross violations of internationally recognized human rights. Waivers are available for national security, humanitarian purposes, and upon certification that a democratic transition has occurred.
Who benefits
Venezuelan democratic opposition leaders and activists who may gain U.S. diplomatic and strategic backing. Venezuelan civilians who could benefit from increased humanitarian assistance access and pressure to release political prisoners. U.S. policymakers and congressional committees who would receive regular reporting and oversight tools. Human rights organizations that have advocated for accountability measures. Edmundo González Urrutia and his supporters, whom the bill's findings explicitly recognize as Venezuela's legitimate president-elect. Neighboring countries in Latin America that have been affected by Venezuelan refugee flows, which could ease if political conditions improve.
Who is hurt
Venezuelan government officials and security forces who could be designated under the sanctions, having their U.S.-held assets frozen and U.S. entry blocked. U.S. companies with existing or potential business dealings in Venezuela's energy sector, which could face restrictions or uncertainty. Venezuelan nationals in the United States who have family or financial ties to designated individuals. Third-country businesses and financial institutions that transact with designated persons and could face secondary exposure. The Maduro government broadly, which would face increased diplomatic and economic pressure. U.S. diplomatic flexibility may be constrained by mandatory sanction requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the July 2024 Venezuelan presidential election was widely condemned by international observers, including the Carter Center, as failing to meet basic democratic standards, and that the Maduro government's violent crackdown on opposition supporters following the vote constitutes documented gross human rights violations. They contend that targeted sanctions paired with a clear diplomatic strategy — including benchmarks, monthly reporting, and humanitarian carve-outs — provide a structured, accountable framework that avoids broad economic harm to ordinary Venezuelans while holding specific perpetrators responsible. They further argue that congressional codification of these measures prevents executive branch inconsistency and ensures sustained U.S. commitment to democratic norms in the Western Hemisphere.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandatory sanctions with limited presidential discretion could undermine ongoing diplomatic negotiations and remove leverage that executive branch officials need to broker a negotiated transition — a concern backed by the mixed track record of Venezuela sanctions since 2015, which have not produced democratic change. They contend that the bill's congressional findings prejudge contested factual and diplomatic questions — such as formally naming González Urrutia as legitimate president-elect — in ways that could complicate U.S. relations with countries that have taken different positions, and that restricting energy agreement consultations to the opposition movement may conflict with the President's exclusive recognition and foreign affairs powers under Zivotofsky v. Kerry (2015).