The US Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the Trump administration may terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian immigrants, clearing the way for potential deportations of over 356,000 people, according to reports from Disclose.tv. The decision upholds the administration's authority to end the Obama-era protections.
The US Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Thursday that the Trump administration may end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 356,000 Haitian and Syrian immigrants, according to reports from Disclose.tv and other outlets. The decision affirms the executive branch's authority to terminate the Obama-era program, which had granted temporary residency and work permits to nationals from countries affected by natural disasters or conflict. As The Zioneer reported on Thursday at 18:41, the ruling clears the way for potential deportation proceedings for affected individuals, though the timeline for any enforcement action remains unconfirmed. The ruling is the latest in a series of Trump administration immigration victories in the courts, following a federal appeals court decision on June 24 allowing the resumption of expedited deportations.
3 developments
- DevelopingFederal appeals court allows Trump administration to resume expedited deportations
- StrongReport: Trump administration presses Israel and Syria to resume security talks
- DevelopingTrump signs Secure America Act, providing $64B to ICE and Border Patrol
- DevelopingWhite House deputy chief of staff says US will stop accepting asylum seekers entirely
Source and signal
- Internal intake
