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Court Clears the Way: Trump Administration Gets Green Light to End Venezuelan 'Temporary Protected Status'


Updated: May 20, 2025 00:15

Image Source: NewsX
In a historic ruling on Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court permitted the Trump administration to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for nearly 350,000 Venezuelan immigrants, revoking an earlier judicial stay that had maintained deportation protections. The order, which was unsigned and common for emergency appeals, contained no reason and represented only one public dissent by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.
 
TPS, a program permitting migrants from countries where there was an extraordinary crisis to work and reside lawfully in the United States, had been extended for Venezuelans by the Biden administration because of continuing instability under President Nicolás Maduro. But Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem moved in February to end the protection, citing national interest and public safety concerns. A California federal court had earlier put the action on hold, citing potential racial animus and stereotyping in the administration's action.
 
With the Supreme Court verdict, the Trump administration is now able to go ahead with canceling TPS for Venezuelans with pending court cases still in lower courts. This may put hundreds of thousands of people in danger of deportation and loss of work permits as early as current protections run out. The court did add, however, that people can still challenge any move to cancel their work authorization or deport them.
 
This move is a major escalation of the Trump administration's hardline immigration policy, with experts cautioning of urgent humanitarian and economic impacts on Venezuelan families throughout the United States.
 
Source: The New York Times

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