Supreme Court Allows Trump Admin To End Protected Status For Venezuelan Migrants

Friday, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to move forward with the end of the protected status for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan nationals.
US District Judge Edward Chen, one appointed by Obama, concluded in September that the dismissal of the Department of Internal Security (DHS) of temporary protected status (TPS) for Venezuelan nationals violates the law.
“Although the posture of the case has changed, the legal arguments and the relative misdeeds of the parties have generally did not do so,” said the court order. “The same result we have achieved in May is appropriate here.”
In May, the Supreme Court raised another ordinance preventing the DHS from withdrawing TP for Venezuelan migrants.
“As long as the order of the District Court is in force, the secretary must allow more than 300,000 Venezuelan nationals to stay in the country, despite her reasonable determination that this is even temporarily temporarily” contrary to national interest “, wrote the Trump administration in her September request.
Judges Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson would not have granted the government’s request.
Jackson called the majority of the majority “yet another excessive use of our emergency file”.
“Rather having chosen to join the fray, the court clearly judges the irreparable factors and the factors of the balance of actions by favoring the bald affirmation of executive power without constraint on countless family pleas for the stability that our government has promised them,” wrote Jackson. “Because, respectfully, I cannot comply with our repeated, free and harmful ingrigence with affairs pending in the lower lessons while lives are at stake, I dissipate.”
This is a news and will be updated.

