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Dec. 11, 2025, 6:02 AM EST / Updated Dec. 11, 2025, 9:04 AM ESTBy Alexander SmithAfter escaping her country in secret, Nobel Peace Prize laureate María Corina Machado said Thursday that she received help from the United States government to leave hiding in Venezuela and collect her award.Machado, 58, credited President Donald Trump’s “decisive” actions in making the Venezuelan regime “weaker than ever,” her latest show of support for the White House as it builds military pressure against Caracas. And she vowed she would do her best to return home to end the “tyranny” of President Nicolás Maduro.“Yes, we did get support from the United States’ government,” Machado told a news conference in Oslo, Norway, speaking about the journey from her homeland that was fraught with risk and shrouded in secrecy.NBC News has reached out to the White House for comment on Machado’s statement that the U.S. helped her.She won the Peace Prize in October for being one of the most prominent opponents of Maduro’s regime. She has been in hiding for most of this year and is under a decadelong travel ban.“I cannot give details, because these are people that could be harmed,” she said of those who helped her. “Certainly, the regime would have done everything to prevent me from coming. They did not know where I was in hiding in Venezuela, so it was hard for them to stop me.”She called the operation to get her out “quite an experience” and said she hadn’t seen her children in two years, describing the reunion as “one of the most extraordinary spiritual moments of my life.”Machado spoke at a news conference in Oslo.Ole Berg-Rusten / AFP via Getty ImagesThough Machado failed to reach the Norwegian capital in time for Wednesday’s official ceremony — her daughter collecting it in her stead — she appeared hours later on the balcony of Oslo’s Grand Hotel, where she waved to crowds and joined them singing the national anthem. On Thursday she vowed to take the prize back to her homeland.“I came to receive the prize on behalf of the Venezuelan people and I will take it back to Venezuela at the correct moment,” she said while leaving the Norwegian parliament. “Of course I will not say when that is.”She said she hoped “we will turn the country into a beacon of hope, opportunity and democracy,” thanking both her fellow activists in Venezuela and also the Norwegian people.The choice of Machado has attracted significant criticism in addition to praise, after she dedicated her award to President Donald Trump, whose strategy on Venezuela she endorses.Alongside the fans on Oslo’s streets, there were also demonstrators outside the city’s Nobel Institute, with placards including “No Peace Prize for Warmongers.”Hours before she spoke in Norway, the U.S military seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela as the administration continues to escalate military activity in the region.At a news conference alongside Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, Machado was asked whether she would support a U.S. military intervention in Venezuela.”People talk about invasion in Venezuela, the threat of an invasion in Venezuela. And I answer, Venezuela was has been already invaded,” she said.”We have the Russian agents, we have the Iranian agents, we have terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas operating freely in accordance with the regime,” she said. “We have the Colombian guerrilla, the drug cartels that have taken over 60% of our populations, and not only involving drug trafficking, but in human trafficking, in networks of prostitution.”She said these networks had “turned Venezuela into the criminal hub of the Americas,” with trafficking of drugs, arms and humans, alongside the oil black market, funding the regime’s “repression system.”Without mentioning Trump by name she said, she had “asked the international community to cut those forces.”The protesters’ criticisms are shared by the Venezuelan government, which denies any involvement in crime and the charges of authoritarianism.Jorge Rodríguez, president of the Venezuelan parliament, said this week that giving the Nobel to someone “who calls for military action against Venezuela and celebrates the killing of human beings in the Caribbean” showed “the hypocrisy of peace organizations.”The U.S. oil tanker seizure was “blatant theft” and “an act of international piracy,” Venezuela’s foreign affairs minister, Yván Gil Pinto, said on social media.Alexander SmithAlexander Smith is a senior reporter for NBC News Digital based in London.Hannah Peart and Megan Lebowitz contributed.

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Machado won the prize for opposing the Venezuelan regime of President Nicolás Maduro.



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Dec. 11, 2025, 3:08 PM ESTBy Steve KopackFor the first time since President Donald Trump rolled out his sweeping global tariff program in April, month-over-month customs receipts declined in November.Last month, the U.S. government collected $30.75 billion in import duties. This was down from $31.35 billion collected in October. Over the last few months, the monthly increase in tariff money collected by customs has slowed, but November’s total marked the first month with collections lower than the previous month. Trump rolled out his tariffs in early April, on what he called “Liberation Day.” That month, import duties collected surged to $15.6 billion. These revenues have steadily climbed over the course of the year, but in recent months they have stopped rising as fast as they did earlier in the early months of the tariff regime. In August and September, net tariff revenues were a little more than $29 billion per month. In October, revenues reached their peak of the year.Several factors may have helped trigger the recent reversal in the trend of ever-increasing tariff revenues. But looming large for the Trump administration is a cost-of-living crisis that pushed the administration to announce roll backs of a number of food-related tariffs in mid-November.Those included tariffs on coffee and bananas, which the U.S. does not readily produce. The reversal also included tariffs on beef, a household staple whose cost has soared this year. In January, the average price per pound of ground beef was $5.54, according to data from the Consumer Price Index. In the latest edition of CPI, published in September, that cost had surged nearly 15% to $6.32. More recent CPI data will not be released until Dec. 18 due to the government shutdown.Over the last 5 years, the cost of beef has skyrocketed by 55%. But not all of that has to do with tariffs. Since the summer, ranchers have been struggling with a flesh-eating parasite that has been infecting livestock. And while consumers may not yet be seeing a drop in retail prices for these items, it appears that Trump’s tariff reversals have already started to impact the government’s bottom line.Traditionally, a minor drop in monthly tariff revenues would not set off alarms at the Treasury Department.But unlike previous administrations, Trump has made some big promises to voters about what this additional tariff revenue might provide for average Americans.The president has floated the idea of using tariff revenue to justify eliminating the individual income taxes. He has also repeately proposed using some of the customs receitps to send each American a stimulus — loosely based on the wildly popular stimulus checks that his first term administration distributed during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. Trump has also said tariff revenue will help reduce the national debt.However, from January through November only $236.2 billion of tariff money has been collected. Even if the administration were to put that entire amount toward reducing the national debt, it would cover less than 1% of America’s current $38.38 trillion in outstanding obligations. A White House spokesperson did not immediately reply to a request for comment on the tariff revenue dip and how Trump plans to deploy the customs duties.People pass by the National Debt Clock in New York on July 1, 2025.Brendan McDermid / Reuters fileThe tariff money could, however, cover the $201 billion of interest annually on that debt — but only one year’s worth. In the meantime, the tariff revenue is helping to reduce the budget deficit. In November, the government spent just $173 billion more than it took in, which is less than half the amount of the deficit for the same month a year ago. It’s unclear if the tariff revenue funds will be used for many of Trump’s proposals. But on Monday, the president did put some of the money to work.Starting next year, the federal government says it will use $12 billion of the tariff money to fund an aid package for farmers impacted by the president’s trade war with China. The majority of that package, $11 billion, will be in the form of direct one-time payments, which should start to go out in the new year.The future of a large swath of Trump’s tariffs also hangs in the balance at the Supreme Court. Through late September, the most recently available data shows that about $90 billion of the $174 billion in tariff money collected up to that point was done via presidential authority granted under a law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA.If the Supreme Court finds that IEEPA did not, in fact, grant Trump the power to impose those unilateral tariffs, and the court strikes them down, it’s possible that most or all of the import taxes collected under the IEEPA law would need to be refunded to the importers who paid them. This would wipe out a significant amount of the tariff revenue that has been collected this year. Steve KopackSteve Kopack is a senior reporter at NBC News covering business and the economy.
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Nov. 21, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Sahil KapurLAS VEGAS — Matt Payan, who co-owns and operates a rare Hispanic-owned brewery in Nevada, said it was a “very slow, scary summer” for the economy in this city.“As the summer is slowly fading, business is slowly picking up, though, but not as much as we were anticipating compared to last year’s numbers,” he said.Payan said his business avoids politics in the taproom of his North 5th Street Brewing Co. But he said they feel the financial strain of President Donald Trump’s tariffs, which have forced the company to scale back canning its own beers, making it harder to distribute the product.“The canning prices went up so high, we can’t keep up with that cost. So unfortunately, we can’t can as much as we really should to keep up with demand,” Payan said, while hoping the tariffs can be reversed to make the finances more manageable.“The cost of living has been a real toll on all of us, including our employees as well. As demand and cost gets higher, our employees need to make more money in order to just survive,” he added. “Also, the average patron that comes in is now dealing with higher cost of living, which mean our regulars tend to shy away, because now they have to save and use their resources for other important needs.”Concerns about the economy and the cost of living and shifts among Latino voters powered Trump to victory in 2024 in Nevada, which flipped to the GOP in a presidential election for the first time in two decades.The economy topped the list of Nevada voter concerns, and those who cited it as the issue that mattered most backed Trump over Kamala Harris by a 3-to-1 margin, according to NBC News exit polls. Latinos, who made up about one-fifth of voters, voted for Trump by 2 points over Harris after Joe Biden carried the group by 26 points in 2020.These dynamics paid dividends for Trump in other battleground states across the country as well, helping him retake the White House.One year later, there are warning signs that Latino voters are souring on the GOP. In two blue-leaning states, Virginia and New Jersey, they voted overwhelmingly for Democratic candidates for governor earlier this month. And recent polling finds deep economic concerns persist among Latino voters in battleground districts ahead of next year’s midterm elections, when control of the House is at stake.The bipartisan Unidos U.S. Latino Vote Initiative poll found that the cost of living and inflation remains by far the top issue for Hispanic voters in battleground districts across six key states. Among these voters, 31% approved of Trump’s job performance while 64% disapproved. And 83% said their current personal financial situation is either “about the same” or “worse,” while 14% said it is “better.”Democrats argue Trump is paying a price for overpromising that he would bring down costs on Day 1 of his presidency.“I think that many voters who trusted in what the president said when he was campaigning feel betrayed by his policies,” said Rep. Steven Horsford, D-Nev., who represents a swing district in the Las Vegas area. “He promised that costs would come down. They’re going up. He said that life would be easier. It’s harder.”Jeff Burton, a lobbyist and longtime strategist for Republican leaders, said Trump and the GOP-controlled Congress have until the end of the first quarter of 2026 to bring prices down.“The American people expected inflation to go down, and costs to go down — and they haven’t,” he said. “If they don’t, then it’s really going to affect the midterms. It’s the No. 1 issue. And the [House] majority is at stake.”Burton said the Treasury Department ought to quickly implement Trump’s “no tax on tips” policy that was included in his so-called “big, beautiful bill” earlier this year, and the president’s team needs to show that it’s delivering. The idea, which Trump embraced in his 2024 campaign, caught Democrats by surprise, and they have since backed versions of it.“The cost of goods, and inflation, is going to determine who’s in the majority next year. Everything else is around the edges,” Burton said, warning that immigration has fizzled as an electoral issue for Republicans and that New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani won’t be the “national super boogeyman that Republicans want” in 2026.Other Republicans counter that the voter shifts in Nevada have been gradual and that the state has moved further toward the GOP overall in every presidential election since 2008. A National Republican Congressional Committee spokesperson said its candidates will continue to work to win over Latinos, who could swing crucial House races across the country.“Democrats have ignored Hispanic communities for over a decade while millions of families rejected their radical, socialist agenda. Republicans are working relentlessly to earn Hispanic support by delivering on No Tax on Tips, lowering everyday costs, and protecting the opportunity to achieve the American dream,” NRCC Hispanic press secretary Christian Martinez said in an email.Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., who held her own with Latinos and won re-election in 2024 on the same ballot as Trump, said there’s also a backlash in the community to the president’s aggressive immigration raids.“What I’m hearing from them now is always the same thing: affordability and opportunity, plus what’s happening on immigration — the cruelty, the fear that has spread within the community,” Rosen said in an interview. She added that the one-two punch of tariffs and immigration policies has brought tourism down and is “hurting everyone.”Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., who would face re-election in 2028, said Trump has “done just the opposite” of what he promised in terms of bringing down costs.“You can’t tell people what they’re seeing and feeling at the grocery store is a hoax,” she said.Peter Guzman, the president of Nevada’s Latin Chamber of Commerce, said that overall his member companies feel that the economic situation is about “the same” as it was last year. Concerns linger about prices — fueled by high gas prices and high interest rates — as well as slowing tourism.“Inflation’s got to come down,” he said. “Cost of goods and services — we rely heavily on construction here, and if it costs too much … then we’re not going to have construction and that’s going to have devastating effects on the rest of the economy.”Guzman added that there are some immigration-related concerns in the hospitality industry. “There’s a little bit of a concern with my smaller restaurant owners because they’re seeing less people in the restaurants and more in grocery stories,” he said. “And that could be because of immigration fears.”Guzman said Trump could use his bully pulpit to push the Federal Reserve to keep lowering interest rates. He praised the tax break for tips, saying it should be bigger than the $25,000 deduction under the law — perhaps even unlimited. Workers can deduct up to that amount if they itemize and don’t use the standard deduction.Ted Pappageorge, the secretary treasurer of the influential Culinary Union, which represents hospitality workers who power the Las Vegas economy, said the “concerns about the economy have gotten worse” since Trump took office.“They were real [in 2024], and as I told you last year, Democrats unfortunately were somewhat tone-deaf, and it cost them the election, at least nationally and at the top of the ticket” he said. “The Trump slump is here and happening. The same bad move Biden made with trying to tell people the economy is good — Trump’s doing the same thing.”Still, Pappageorge said he’s dissatisfied with national Democrats and that the party has more work to do to show Nevada voters they’re serious about addressing the costs of housing, health care, groceries and car insurance.“What we’re seeing now is the rebirth of ‘The Great Gatsby’ and the Gilded Age,” Pappageorge said. “The question is: Are the Democrats going to step up to the plate in a clear, coherent message that they’re with us?”Sahil KapurSahil Kapur is a senior national political reporter for NBC News.
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