Supreme Court Gives Trump Admin Major Immigration Win

President Donald Trump scored a massive victory at the Supreme Court, even getting traditionally liberal justices in his favor.

On Monday, the court lifted a lower court injunction that was preventing the president from stripping the protected legal status of hundreds of thousands of migrants currently residing in the United States, Fox Newsย reported.

The decision was 8 โ€“ 1 in favor of what the president wanted, with the only dissent coming from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who former President Joe Biden appointed, Fox News reported.

โ€œThe decision clears the way for the Trump administration to move forward with its plans to terminate Biden-era Temporary Protected Status (TPS) protections for roughly 300,000ย Venezuelan migrantsย living in the U.S. and allows the administration to move forward with plans to immediately remove these migrants, which lawyers for the administration argued they should be able to do,โ€ the report said.

When U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer spoke before the Supreme Court this month, he said the lower court had overstepped its bounds.

โ€œThe district courtโ€™s reasoning is untenable,โ€ he said, saying that the program โ€œimplicates particularly discretionary, sensitive, and foreign-policy-laden judgments of the Executive Branch regarding immigration policy.โ€

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem revoked the Temporary Protected Status in a February memo with an effective date in April.

โ€œOn October 3, 2023, Venezuela was newly designated for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) due to extraordinary and temporary conditions preventing the safe return of Venezuelan nationals. After reviewing current country conditions and consulting with appropriate U.S. Government agencies, the Secretary of Homeland Security has determined that Venezuela no longer meets the conditions for the 2023 designation. Specifically, it has been determined that it is contrary to the national interest to permit the covered Venezuelan nationals to remain temporarily in the United States. Therefore, the 2023 TPS designation of Venezuela is being terminated,โ€ the memoย said.

โ€œOn March 9, 2021, then Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas designated Venezuela for TPS based on his determination that there existed โ€œextraordinary and temporary conditionsโ€ in Venezuela that prevented nationals of Venezuela from returning in safety and that permitting such aliens to remain temporarily in the United States is not contrary to the U.S. national interest,โ€ it said.

โ€œOn September 8, 2022, then Secretary Mayorkas extended the Venezuela 2021 TPS designation for 18 months,โ€ the memo said. โ€œOn October 3, 2023, Secretary Mayorkas extended the Venezuela 2021 TPS designation for another 18 months with an expiration date of September 10, 2025, and separately newly designated Venezuela for 18 months, a decision the former Secretary called a โ€˜redesignationโ€™ (Venezuela 2023 designation) with an expiration of April 2, 2025, resulting in two separate and concurrent Venezuela TPS designations. See Extension and Redesignation of Venezuela for Temporary Protected Status.

โ€œOn January 17, 2025, Secretary Mayorkas issued a notice extending the 2023 designation of Venezuela for TPS for 18 months. The notice was based on then Secretary Mayorkasโ€™s January 10, 2025 determination that the conditions for the designation continued to be met. See INA 244(b)(3)(A), (C), 8 U.S.C. 1254a(b)(3)(A), (C). In the January 2025 notice, Secretary Mayorkas did not expressly extend or terminate the 2021 Venezuela designation. Instead, the notice allowed for a consolidation of filing processes such that all eligible Venezuela TPS beneficiaries (whether under the 2021 or 2023 designations) could obtain TPS through the same extension date of October 2, 2026,โ€ the DHS memo said.

โ€œOn January 28, 2025, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem vacated former Secretary Mayorkasโ€™s January 10, 2025 decision, restoring the status quo that preceded that decision,โ€ it said.

U.S. District Judge Edward Chen of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California halted Noemโ€™s plan in March, saying that the portrayal of the migrants as possible criminals was โ€œbaseless and smacks of racism.โ€


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