Supreme Court Challenge: Trump's Bid to End Migrant Parole
President Donald Trump's administration has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to revoke temporary legal status for Venezuelan, Cuban, Haitian, and Nicaraguan migrants granted by Joe Biden. Trump's initiative seeks to terminate these immigration programs, aiming to deter illegal entries and implement fast-track deportation. Legal challenges argue this violates federal law.

The Trump administration has turned to the U.S. Supreme Court to help dismantle Biden-era policies granting temporary legal status to migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti, and Nicaragua. This week, Justice Department lawyers sought to stay a lower court's decision blocking the administration's attempt to revoke the migrants' status.
The case relates to Trump's hardline immigration agenda, which resumed immediately after his return to the White House. Approximately 530,000 migrants benefited from Biden's parole policy, which Trump argues undermines efforts to manage illegal immigration, a key election platform.
The Justice Department's appeal counters the ruling of a Boston-based district judge who deemed the broad termination of such relief illegal, requiring case-by-case evaluations. More than 400,000 individuals receiving temporary stay could soon face expedited deportation if the Supreme Court sides with Trump's approach.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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- Supreme Court
- deportation
- Venezuela
- Cuba
- Haiti
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