In a pivotal decision, the U.S. Supreme Court has granted the Trump administration authority to revoke temporary protected status (TPS) for more than half a million migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti, and Nicaragua. This ruling overturns a lower court’s block on ending humanitarian parole programs initiated under the Biden administration, exposing hundreds of thousands to immediate risk of deportation.
The decision halts an earlier order by District Judge Indira Talwani, who ruled that the government’s termination of the parole program required individualized review. Two justices, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor, issued strong dissents, warning of devastating humanitarian consequences. Jackson condemned the ruling as one that inflicts “needless human suffering” and forces affected migrants into an impossible choice—return to dangerous homelands or risk sudden deportation.
Under the Biden administration, humanitarian parole had offered temporary refuge and work authorization to migrants fleeing violence and instability. Though not a path to permanent residency, these protections provided stability and significant economic contribution—generating over $10 billion in income and $1.3 billion in federal taxes in 2021 alone.
The Department of Homeland Security argues that ending the program will facilitate faster deportations and deter unlawful border crossings. Meanwhile, families across the U.S. now face imminent separation, with ongoing legal battles likely to determine the final fate of TPS recipients.
Supreme Court Backs Trump: Temporary Protected Status Revoked for Over 500,000 Migrants
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