Venezuela Quakes Devastate

Deadly back-to-back earthquakes rocked Venezuela, triggering a search for survivors.

L 41%
16 of 39 articles on this topic (41%) were written by left-leaning sources.
C 41%
16 of 39 articles on this topic (41%) were written by centrist sources.
R 18%
7 of 39 articles on this topic (18%) were written by right-leaning sources.

Main Story

Left-Center
The core narrative of this topic, summarized from reporting across multiple outlets. This captures the key facts that most outlets agree on.

Two powerful earthquakes struck northern Venezuela within seconds on Wednesday evening, collapsing buildings in Caracas and coastal communities and killing at least 188 people, with hundreds injured, trapped or missing. The quakes, measured around magnitude 7.2 and 7.5, were among the strongest to hit the country in more than a century and left rescue teams digging through rubble as officials warned the toll could rise sharply. Search-and-rescue crews rushed toward the shattered northern coast while survivors were pulled from debris, including children shown climbing out of collapsed structures. The disaster prompted a state of emergency, widespread displacement and urgent efforts to assess damage across miles of affected neighborhoods.

ABC News
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Common Dreams

Coverage Angles

Different angles and perspectives that emerge naturally from how outlets cover this topic. These aren't forced into left vs. right boxes—they reflect what different outlets choose to emphasize.

Doublet Science

Left-Center

Seismologists described the Venezuelan disaster as a rare “doublet,” with two similarly powerful quakes beginning just 39 seconds apart in the same region. Experts said the shallow, back-to-back shocks amplified destruction in vulnerable urban areas and raised questions about whether the event should be understood as two quakes or one complex rupture.

Associated Press
CNN
El Pais
NBC News
NPR

Global Aid

Center-Right

Governments and public figures offered solidarity and assistance as the United States, Cuba, Iran and others moved to support rescue and relief work. Venezuelans in the U.S. organized donation drives, while the Trump administration’s pledge to help tested Washington’s disaster-relief capacity and its shifting relationship with Caracas.

Associated Press
Epoch Times
PJ Media
Semafor
The Guardian

Survivor Accounts

Polarized

Residents described terrifying moments as walls cracked, elevators shook and buildings collapsed, forcing many to sleep outdoors or in cars while searching for relatives. Venezuelans at home and abroad recounted scenes of fear, grief and frantic efforts to confirm whether loved ones had survived.

Al Jazeera
Breitbart News
CBS News
New York Post
The Guardian