Washington - The Supreme Court said Friday that it will allow the Trump administration Terminate the procedure This has left over 500,000 Cubans, Nicaraguans, Haitians and Venezuelans temporarily living and working in the United States while fighting a legal battle to end legal protection efforts.
The High Court agreed to requests for emergency relief from the Justice Department in response Federal District Court Order The decision to withdraw humanitarian parole to migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela through a special plan.
The parole program, known as CHNV, temporarily protects approximately 532,000 people from the risk of deportation.
Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson objected.
Jackson, who joined by Sotomayor, wrote that the moratorium on the lower court order “will promote unnecessary human suffering before the court makes a final judgment on the disputed legal argument,” she slammed the determination of most people as “in the public interest of revealing around half of our immigrants who have dismissed the court’s legal claims in our legal proceedings.”
White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said the government was confident in the legitimacy of its actions and believed that the Supreme Court would rule on its own liability if it was asked to decide on the merits of the Supreme Court's comprehensive secretary.
"As we have always said, Trump's President and Secretary Noim acted within the authority of the law, revoking temporary identities granted to hundreds of thousands of individuals during the Biden administration," she said in a statement. "The Biden administration's plan violates the black letter immigration law and inspires additional illegal immigration, and President Trump fulfills his promise by eliminating it."
The Department of Homeland Security said it is now possible to delete immigrants who are under humanitarian parole under the CHNV program "again".
President Trump's administration has been steadily turning to Supreme Court emergency relief as it has made more than 200 lawsuits against many policies on the president's second term agenda, although many court struggles involve his efforts toward immigration to the United States, leading to aggravating tensions with the federal judiciary.
Disputes on the government's attempt to revoke temporary legal status granted to 532,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans with other challenges to Mr. Trump's use of the Foreign Enemy Act are Venezuelan immigrationThis was blocked by some courts. The High Court also has it Allow Department of Homeland Security At present, the protected status of approximately 350,000 Venezuelans has been revoked.
Since 1952, federal immigration laws have allowed the administration to approve non-citizen parole for humanitarian reasons. The Department of Homeland Security created parole procedures for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans during the Biden administration in late 2022 and early 2023, requiring immigrants seeking parole to apply through legal sponsors in the United States and authorized them to work in the United States for two years.
The Biden administration has formulated the plan to address the growing number of immigrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border and says protections have promoted legal immigration. it Not allowed Those who came to the United States with temporary protection renewed parole for more than two years.
But shortly after Mr. Trump began his second term, he issued an executive order directing the Secretary of Homeland Security to terminate all parole programs, including CHNV. Noem, acting under the action order, announced that the Department of Homeland Security would end the CHNV program and that any grants for parole will actually expire on April 24.
The move is part of the president's broader effort to undermine immigrants' entry into the United States, a problem that has become central to his 2024 campaign for the second term in the White House.
23 people, including several CHNV parole and a nonprofit challenged Noem's termination of the program, and a Massachusetts federal district court judge agreed to stop Noem Noem's revocation of the temporary legal status of immigrants.
U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani found that the secretary could not terminate the grant for parole because federal law requires parole to be exercised on a case-by-case basis.
The Trump administration appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals, which refused to suspend the district court order, pending appeal. The Justice Department then sought the Supreme Court’s intervention.
Attorney D. John Sauer argued in court documents that the district court's injunction was invalid "one of the government's most destined immigration policy decisions."
The effect of the order was “unnecessarily critical immigration policies that were carefully calibrated to prevent illegal entry, tired of the privileges of the core administration, and to remove the democratically approved policies that were introduced extensively in the November election”, he wrote.
But attorneys for parole beneficiaries warn that without the relief granted by the magistrate, about 500,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans will legally become undocumented in the United States, conducting mass evictions at midnight on April 24 and conducting mass evictions at midnight on April 24. ”
“Otherwise, the secretary is not obliged to continue bringing class members here, but she must respect the required procedures and apply the law correctly before she can get rid of parole and elevate parole and elevate their lives and destroy their families, employers and communities on a large scale,” they told the Lady, keeping the forgers in constant trouble.