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The Supreme Court will enable the Trump administration to end the TPS program for Venezuelans

Washington – The Supreme Court announced on Monday that the Trump government would end the temporary protection status program, which protects around 350,000 Venezuelan migrants from the deportation, while the legal proceedings continue to move.

The High Court granted the administration's application to initially raise the injunction of a lower court who blocked the revocation of the temporary protection status program from Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, for Venezolans. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson said that she would refuse to offer the offer for emergency aid.

Noem Ended the designation -The War-in February would have a step that would have clarified the Venezuelans to lose their work permits and deportations on April 7th. A federal judge in California, but a federal judge in California Blocked the action At the end of March and said their decision to terminate the TPS program for the Venezuelan migrants, seemed to be taken into account “on negative stereotypes” and possibly motivated by unconstitutional animus.

A Federal Court of Appeal refused to do an emergency aid to the Trump administration and to pause the order of the district court and to apply for the Trump administration to intervention by the Supreme Court.

“As long as the arrangement is in force, the secretary must allow hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan citizens to stay in the country, despite their reasonable decision that this” corresponds to the national interest “, General Prosecutor D. John Sauer wrote in the government's emergency room at the High Court.

Tricia McLaughlin, DHSS deputy secretary for public affairs, described the judgment of the Supreme Court as “victory for the American people and the security of our communities”.

The Congress in 1990 founded the program with which the federal government experienced migrants from countries that experience wars, natural disasters or other “extraordinary and temporary” conditions, temporarily offering immigration protection that make it dangerous to send deported there. The program enables the beneficiaries to apply for renewable work permits and deportation shifts.

During the bid administration, the then security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas Venezuela described Venezuela for the temporary protection status program and quoted “extraordinary and temporary” conditions that prevented the Venezolans from returning to their home country. Mayorkas extended the name that lasted in October 2023 to 18 months.

The bidges administration was not only created Venezuela for TPS for TPS or extended programs for Afghanistan, Cameroon, Haiti and Ukraine. The Venezuelan program is the largest and covers around 600,000 people with two separate names, although in this case before the Supreme Court, only the name from 2023 questions.

After Mr. Trump had taken office for his second term, NoEM cleared the extension for more than 350,000 Venezuelans and found that it was “opposed to the national interest” to continue the program. The termination should be effective on April 7th. The Trump administration also revokes TPS protection for tens of thousands of Haitians, with this step effective in August.

TPS -privileged and the National TPS Alliance submitted a lawsuit in February in which the decision of NoEM was contested to end the protection of the Venezolans, and the US district judge Edward Chen decided in their favor and ended the termination of NoEM to enter into force nationwide.

In a registration at the Supreme Court, Sauer said that the order of the district court “held control of the nation's immigration policy from the executive department and imposed his own perception of the court”.

“The decision of the district court undermines the inherent powers of the executive in relation to immigration and foreign matters,” he wrote, describing the injunction of the under court “poorly considered”.

In response to the application, the lawyers for TPS -privileged informed the Supreme Court in a registration that the cancellation of the interim decision of the district court would harm almost 350,000 people who would immediately lose their right to life and work in the USA

“The order of the district court would cause much more damage than it would stop,” they wrote. “It would change the status of quo radically, remove the plaintiffs of their legal status and demand that they return to a country. The Foreign Ministry considers it too dangerous to be visited by themselves.”

They said that the TPS statute of the Minister of Homeland is not granted an extension, and the termination of TPS extensions from NoEM for Venezuela and Haiti are the first and second times in which a secretary put an extension aside in the history of the statute.

The application for emergency aid of the Trump administration is one of more than one dozen in which Mr. Trump's second-term agenda has landed in front of the Supreme Court, and one of several in which its immigration plans are involved.

The Supreme Court heard arguments On May 15th on the request of the Trump government, nationwide congestion astonishment too narrowly Boss citizenship.

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