A few dozen protestors came together at Senator Rick Scott’s Jacksonville office to voice concern over the capture of the Venezuelan president.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Several activist groups in Jacksonville filled part of Bay Street with picket signs and chants, protesting the strike in Venezuela and capturing of President Nicolas Maduro.
One of the chants was “cold and rain, we don’t care, U.S out of everywhere.”
There were about 50 people on the front steps of the Charles E. Bennett Federal Building for an emergency rally, with the sentiment that this wasn’t a situation for the U.S. to get involved in.
Some speakers questioned the true goals of the strike — whether it has more to do with natural resources like oil than the safety of the Venezuelan people.
Another pointed out we have issues here at home that need addressing, specifically referencing the waitlists at the homeless shelters in Jacksonville.
First Coast News asked one organizer what the ideal outcome of the rally would be.
“Our demands are for no war in Venezuela, for U.S. to take their hands out of Venezuela and no more blood for oil,” said Freedom Road Socialist Organization Member, Jamison Collins-Morita. “They have the power to forge the future of their own country and the U.S. did not need to intervene at all.”
The rally happened in front of Senator Rick Scott’s office, who shared his sentiment on the strike in two posts on X, saying in part: “A new day is here for Venezuela and Latin America. The United States and our hemisphere are safer because of President Trump’s leadership.”
Going on in a later post to say: “Maduro was indicted in a U.S. Court and was told to stop sending drugs into our country to kill our kids and grandkids, but he refused. This is peace through strength on full display.”
Senator Scott’s office didn’t immediately respond to a request for a statement on the rally at his office.