The administration of President Donald Trump can temporarily revoke legal status of over 500,000 migrants living in the United States, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled on Friday.
The decision was placed on the day of the Seniah Federal Judge, which stops the administration to end the Immigration Program “Conditional”, establishing a former President Joe Biden. The program was protected by immigrants who have been wiring economic and political turmoil in registry countries.
The new command puts approximately 530,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela in danger of being deported.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomaior, two three liberal judges, disinted.
Palog program allows immigrants temporary status to work and live in the United States for two years due to “emergency humanitarian reasons or significant public benefits”, according to the US government.
The Trump administration filed an urgent appeal to the Supreme Court after the Federal Judge in Massachusetts blocked the administration to complete the program, known as the humanitarian slogan Chnv.
The white house “celebrated the opportunity to deport 500,000” occupiers “, Deputy Headquarters Staff Stephen Miller told CNN.” The Supreme Court just entered “.
In her disagreement, Justice Jackson wrote that the court order “Having lives half a million migrants will be detected throughout us before the courts decide their legal claims.”
He took a function on the day, Trump signed an executive command by a directing department for the security of the security to release probation programs. Then in March, the Homeland Security Secretary of Krista Noem announced the end of the ChnV humanitarian probationary game.
Several groups for real immigrants and migrants from the Program were sued by the Trump administration over the decision, arguing that they could “face serious risks, persecution, and even death” if deported in their home countries.
The verdict was ruled after the Supreme Court earlier this month allowed Trumps to revoke temporary protected status (TPS) – separate program – for about 350,000 Venezuelan immigrants living and working in the US.
Humanitarian probation programs used in decades to enable immigrants who escape war and other vulnerable conditions in their home countries to come to the United States, including Cubans in the 1960s following the revolution.
Biden administration also established a conditional free paring program in 2022. years for Ukrainians who flee after the invasion of Russia.