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The US Supreme Court has backed President Donald Trump's decision to revoke temporary legal status for over 532,000 migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti, and Nicaragua, significantly impacting their residency in the United States. This ruling, issued on May 30, 2025, overturned a lower court's injunction that had blocked the administration's efforts to end the immigration "parole" granted under former President Joe Biden.
Immigration parole allows individuals to live and work in the US under "urgent humanitarian reasons." Trump's administration argued that rescinding this status would streamline deportation processes, facilitating what they termed "expedited removal." The decision faced dissent from Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor, who criticized the court's assessment, highlighting the severe human consequences for vulnerable migrants.
The ruling is part of a broader trend, as Trump has sought to implement stricter immigration policies since his return to office, including attempts to eliminate protections for migrants established by Biden. Legal representatives for the affected migrants claim the administration's actions violate existing federal laws by terminating their status without proper review.