Venezuela, Supreme Court and TPS
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Luis Cortes Romero a DACA recipient and immigration lawyer with Novo Legal explains implications of Supreme Court ruling to allow Trump administration to cancel protected status for Venezuelans. Trump officials asked the justices to lift a lower-court order that barred the administration from ending TPS for Venezuelans while litigation continues.
When TPS ends, those with pending asylum applications can legally remain in the U.S. while awaiting a decision. Many Venezuelans have been waiting for years for their asylum cases to be resolved. For them, the end of TPS will have little immediate effect, as they can continue to stay legally while their applications are processed.
The Supreme Court allowing the Trump administration to end TPS protections for Venezuelans may have implications for 350,000 living in the U.S.
When the U.S. Supreme Court said Monday the Trump administration could strip legal protections from 350,000 Venezuelans while litigation continues in the lower courts, the move sent shockwaves.
5hon MSN
Roughly 50K Venezuelans who arrived in Chicago over the last 2 years are in limbo after Monday's SCOTUS ruling.
South Florida immigration attorney on end of protections for Venezuelans 02:48. A Supreme Court decision has stripped legal protections for more than 350,000 Venezuelan migrants l
The Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump's administration a legal win by allowing the government to end TPS for Venezuelans.
Despite the Trump administration’s assertion that Venezuela is now safe for migrants to return, substantial evidence indicates that most holders of Temporary Protected Status would face dire consequences if repatriated.