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The US Supreme Court said it would allow the Trump administration to terminate the deportation of about 350,000 Venezuelas in the United States.
The decision raised a detention, which was set by a California judge, who maintained a temporarily protected status (TPS) at a venewel residents, whose status “would expire last month.
Temporary protective status allows people to live and work in the United States legally if their home countries are considered dangerous because of things such as countries that are firing wars, natural disasters or other “exceptional and temporary” conditions.
The decision notes victory for US President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly tried to use the Supreme Court to adopt immigration policy decisions.
The Trump Administration wanted to terminate the defense and permits for the work of migrants with TP in April 2025, more than a year before they initially ended in October 2026.
The US government lawyers claim that the Federal Court of California, the US District Court for the Northern California District, has undermined “the inherent powers of the executive to immigration and foreign affairs” when the administration has stopped defenses and permits to work in April.
Ahilan Arulanantham, which represents TPS holders in this case, told the BBC that it believes it is “the greatest single action that undresses any group of non-immigration status in modern US history.”
“The Supreme Court authorizes this action in an order for two paragraphs without reasoning, it is really shocking,” said Mr. Arulanantam. “The humanitarian and economic impact of the court’s decision will feel immediately and reflect generations.”
As this was an emergency complaint, the Supreme Court judges did not provide reflection on the decision.
The court’s order noted only the disagreement of a judge, justice Ketandji Brown Jackson.
In August, the Trump administration is also expected to cancel TPS defense for tens of thousands of Haitians.
The Supreme Court’s decision on Monday notes the last in a series of decisions on immigration policies from the Supreme Court, which the Trump administration has left them to rule.
Last week, the administration asked the Supreme Court to terminate the humanitarian conditional release for hundreds of thousands of Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuela immigrants.
Together with some of their successes, the Trump administration was applied on Friday, when the Supreme Court blocked Trump to use the Enemy Enemy Enemies Act of 1798 to deport immigrants to North Texas.
Trump wanted to use the centuries -old law to quickly deport thousands of the United States, but the Supreme Court judges asked whether the president’s action was legal.