Senator John Fetterman isn't following the party line on Venezuela, and he's not being quiet about it. The Pennsylvania Democrat came out swinging this week in support of the military operation that ousted Nicolás Maduro, praising its execution while openly wondering why so many of his Democratic colleagues are either silent or actively critical.
"As a Democrat, I don't understand why we can't acknowledge a good development for Venezuelans—and how deft our military's execution of that plan was," Fetterman wrote on X. It's a pointed question, especially given that the Biden administration itself put a $25 million price tag on Maduro's head just months ago.
The Bounty That Keeps Growing
Here's where it gets interesting. Back in January 2025, the Biden administration announced that $25 million reward for information leading to Maduro's arrest. This came right after he was sworn in for a third six-year term, which drew international condemnation and outrage from Venezuelan opposition leaders.
That $25 million figure wasn't arbitrary. It was actually an increase from the $15 million the first Trump administration offered in 2020. The Biden team also dangled rewards for Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello and introduced a new $15 million bounty for Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino.
Then in August, the second Trump administration bumped the Maduro reward to $50 million after the U.S. Treasury designated the Cartel of the Suns as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist in July.
Democrats Cry Foul Despite Their Own Bounty
So you'd think removing someone your administration wanted arrested badly enough to offer $25 million would be celebrated, right? Not quite. The actual military operation drew fierce criticism from Democratic heavyweights including Senator Bernie Sanders, former Vice President Kamala Harris, and Senator Elizabeth Warren. They called Maduro's capture unconstitutional, reckless, and suggested it was driven by oil interests rather than genuine security concerns.
President Donald Trump, meanwhile, characterized the operation as a triumph over a "brutal dictator."
This isn't Fetterman's first rodeo breaking with his party. Back in November, he defended voting with Republicans to reopen the government after a shutdown and cautioned Democrats against moving toward political extremes. Seems like he's comfortable being the contrarian voice in his caucus.




