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Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of Venezuelans

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Supreme Court allows Trump to revoke protected status for thousands of Venezuelans

As part of the Trump administration’s hard-line immigration policy, it seeks to reverse a Biden-era policy that extended protections for more than 300,000 Venezuelans.

Outside of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, DC on June 28, 2024.

The Supreme Court in Washington.Craig Hudson / The Washington Post / Getty Images file

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May 19, 2025, 9:36 AM MST / Updated May 19, 2025, 10:00 AM MST

By Lawrence Hurley

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday gave the Trump administration the green light to revoke special legal protections for thousands of Venezuelan immigrants, which could pave the way for them to be deported.

The high court granted an emergency application filed by the administration, meaning officials can move forward with reversing a decision made at the tail end of the Biden administration to extend protections for more than 300,000 Venezuelans under the federal Temporary Protected Status program.

The brief order noted that liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson would have denied the application. Litigation will now continue in lower courts.

As a result of political instability in Venezuela, the Biden administration in March 2021 said Venezuelans were eligible for temporary protected status under the federal program that has existed since 1990 to provide humanitarian relief to people from countries reeling from war, natural disasters or other catastrophes.

People accepted into the program have legal status in the United States and can get work authorization for up to 18 months, subject to extensions.

At issue before the Supreme Court was a subsequent designation made in October 2023 and extended in January just before Donald Trump took office. It is set to expire in October 2026.

In February, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sought to unwind those determinations, meaning the protections would expire this year instead.

California-based U.S. District Judge Edward Chen blocked the move, citing concerns that the decision was based in part on racial animus.

Noem’s actions meant the affected immigrants face “possible imminent deportation,” he wrote.

Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in the administration’s emergency application that the courts could not review Noem’s decision.

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“The court’s order contravenes fundamental executive branch prerogatives and indefinitely delays sensitive policy decisions in an area of immigration policy that Congress recognized must be flexible, fast-paced and discretionary,” he said.

The National TPS Alliance and individual Venez

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