Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 8
Aaron Schock Returns to Venezuela for Promised Gold Mine as $100,000 Consulting Work Draws Scrutiny
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 8

Aaron Schock Returns to Venezuela for Promised Gold Mine as $100,000 Consulting Work Draws Scrutiny

1 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jun 8

Summary

  • Valencia, Venezuela, was Schock’s latest stop last month, with flight records showing he returned to Carabobo province to pursue a gold-mine opportunity he said was promised after a 2025 Caracas meeting.
  • That trip capped a yearlong effort to shape Trump-era Venezuela policy while chasing an eight-figure payoff, according to messages, calendars and associates who said Schock believed sanctions relief could unlock both oil business and gold access.
  • Schock had been hired in February 2025 for a one-time $100,000 strategic consulting payment by Florida donor Harry Sargeant III, while later logging $185,000 in business expenses tied to the Venezuela push.
  • The campaign also raises legal and ethical questions: Schock did not file under FARA despite contacts tied to Venezuelan interests, and former aide Benjamin Papermaster said Schock avoided registration to preserve House-floor access.
  • The return marks an unlikely second act for the ex-congressman, who resigned in 2015 amid spending scandals and has since tried to rebuild his image through real estate, MAGA politics and now overseas dealmaking.

Insights

Will Aaron Schock's high-stakes gamble in chaotic Venezuela lead to a gold mine or a federal indictment?
Did a disgraced ex-congressman's private lobbying actually influence the administration's dramatic policy shift on Venezuela?