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Trump asks the Supreme Court to raise the deportation protection for Venezuelans

The Trump government asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to protect the protection for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants who were allowed to stay in the United States without a risk of deportation called Temporary Protected Status in the USA.

In February, Kristi Noem, the secretary of the home protection, ended an 18-month extension of the TPS protection, which Venezuelans were granted by the bidet management. People who were affected by the change sued and said that the move was violated against administrative procedures and influenced by racist prejudices.

In March, judge Edward M. Chen from the Federal District Court in San Francisco blocked the efforts of the administration to remove the protection of the Venezuelans during the case. He said that the plaintiffs had shown that they would probably be able to show that Ms. Noem's actions were “not legally authorized, arbitrary and moody and motivated by animus in unconstitutional”.

Richter Chen found that the termination of the initiative hundreds of thousands of people whose lives, families and living documents are strongly interrupted would harm irreparable damage, the United States cost billions of economic activities and violations of public health and security in the communities in the United States. “

The US Court of Appeal for the Ninth Circle rejected the government's application to pause the judge's decision.

The Supreme Court has set several other emergency applications with Mr. Trump's aggressive immigration policy. In one case, the government court ordered the return of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to facilitate, who had been incorrectly sent to El Salvador, where he stays. In another case, the judges temporarily blocked the removal of some Venezuelan immigrants according to the law on Alien Enemies, a law of the 18th century war.

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