WASHINGTON.- The United States Supreme Court authorized President Donald’s government on Friday Trump revoke the legal status of 532,000 migrants of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, which had temporary permanence permit, known as “Parole.”
The highest court “grants the request for suspension” filed by the Administration to raise an order of a lower court that prevented the Government from ending the humanitarian protections for migrants from these four countries arrived in the United States under a program launched by the former Democratic President Joe Biden.
The ruling of the Supreme Court is temporary, while the case continues to litigate in an appeal court, after the executive order of President Trump.
Petition to the Supreme Court
The decree was ranked at first with a blockade ordered by a federal Massachusetts judge who understood that the administration could not take this type of mass measures without a case evolution.
The Secretary of National Security, Kristi Noem, raised a petition to the high court, waiting for what happens in lower instances, according to the CNN chain.
This is the second judicial victory achieved by Trump in immigration matters in May.
The Supreme Court had already allowed in another prior decision to eliminate the temporary protection status for Venezuelans.
The Republican leader has advocated from his return to the White House for limiting this type of “benefits” that allowed the entry of more than 13 million people from all over the world, including tens of thousands of criminals, murderers, gang members and terrorists.
During their electoral campaign, millions of voters asked Trump to close the border and reinforce security together with the deportation of millions of people who did not pass the due and rigorous review process during a massive entrance. Trump described Biden’s policy as “an invasion of migrants in the US.”
From the first day, the president fulfills his promise of deportations before the claims of dozens of millions of Americans who chose him for the White House.
Meanwhile, Joe Biden had already deported 4.6 million immigrants during his government, taking into account the rejections on the border through title 42, established at the time of the Covid-19 Pandemia and extended for almost two more years.
The chaos of Joe Biden’s immigration policy
The IDEN administration’s immigration policy cost taxpayers more than 220,000 million dollars directly and indirectly.
In March, the Government tried to revoke the legal status of these migrants arrived in the United States under a program launched by the former Democratic President Joe Biden and also called ChNV, by the initials of the countries.
In October 2022, the Democrat’s government granted a permit for a quota from Venezuelans to legally enter, provided that they would go through an investigation into their criminal records, they had a sponsor in the country to provide financial support and be vaccinated.
In January 2023 he extended the measure to Haiti, Cuba and Nicaragua.
The government of President Trump asked the Supreme Court to raise an order of a Boston activist judge, Indira Talwani, who prevented in April revoking the legal status of immigrants from these four countries.
The highest court granted this request to the Government.
Only the “progressive” (left) judges of the Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor, disintegrated.
“The court has clearly failed in this evaluation,” they wrote.
Immigrants “now face two options. On the one hand, they could choose to leave the United States voluntarily and on the other, they could remain in the United States (…) and risk an imminent expulsion from the government, with the serious consequences that this entails,” both the magistrates explained.