The Prague Post - US top court lets Trump revoke legal status for 500,000 migrants

EUR -
AED 4.167939
AFN 79.053576
ALL 98.566673
AMD 435.679525
ANG 2.030853
AOA 1041.145176
ARS 1343.119996
AUD 1.764513
AWG 2.043983
AZN 1.933594
BAM 1.958135
BBD 2.289911
BDT 138.584042
BGN 1.95528
BHD 0.425828
BIF 3375.795924
BMD 1.134758
BND 1.463933
BOB 7.836207
BRL 6.501715
BSD 1.134142
BTN 97.078912
BWP 15.233031
BYN 3.711493
BYR 22241.260943
BZD 2.278097
CAD 1.559328
CDF 3251.082686
CHF 0.932791
CLF 0.027899
CLP 1070.599431
CNY 8.175143
CNH 8.177272
COP 4714.920368
CRC 576.182026
CUC 1.134758
CUP 30.071093
CVE 110.396649
CZK 24.931085
DJF 201.669676
DKK 7.459678
DOP 66.950429
DZD 149.326762
EGP 56.2105
ERN 17.021373
ETB 151.760501
FJD 2.565734
FKP 0.842597
GBP 0.842934
GEL 3.109681
GGP 0.842597
GHS 11.624658
GIP 0.842597
GMD 81.702995
GNF 9826.631768
GTQ 8.71031
GYD 237.287606
HKD 8.897214
HNL 29.549238
HRK 7.534232
HTG 148.315561
HUF 403.770107
IDR 18574.516735
ILS 3.985889
IMP 0.842597
INR 97.099729
IQD 1485.671679
IRR 47801.690055
ISK 144.39842
JEP 0.842597
JMD 180.785589
JOD 0.804588
JPY 163.475582
KES 146.615074
KGS 99.235042
KHR 4542.376804
KMF 493.056748
KPW 1021.240484
KRW 1569.348346
KWD 0.348224
KYD 0.945119
KZT 579.836351
LAK 24505.006535
LBP 101614.885894
LKR 339.662057
LRD 226.818485
LSL 20.30964
LTL 3.350646
LVL 0.686404
LYD 6.212408
MAD 10.486221
MDL 19.676291
MGA 5186.138824
MKD 61.519211
MMK 2382.636413
MNT 4058.970959
MOP 9.161945
MRU 44.832241
MUR 51.926965
MVR 17.543791
MWK 1966.562477
MXN 22.055785
MYR 4.830103
MZN 72.522825
NAD 20.30982
NGN 1802.291504
NIO 41.739407
NOK 11.588758
NPR 155.325859
NZD 1.902393
OMR 0.434347
PAB 1.134132
PEN 4.108163
PGK 4.656738
PHP 63.285891
PKR 319.732567
PLN 4.250982
PYG 9061.806302
QAR 4.133994
RON 5.054671
RSD 117.725534
RUB 87.581498
RWF 1603.998651
SAR 4.257488
SBD 9.476102
SCR 16.133055
SDG 681.426477
SEK 10.883517
SGD 1.465885
SHP 0.891742
SLE 25.782127
SLL 23795.312556
SOS 648.167234
SRD 42.234003
STD 23487.203908
SVC 9.923747
SYP 14753.953307
SZL 20.303033
THB 37.22421
TJS 11.342075
TMT 3.977328
TND 3.390543
TOP 2.657722
TRY 44.569711
TTD 7.701116
TWD 33.948604
TZS 3058.17376
UAH 47.113452
UGX 4122.880246
USD 1.134758
UYU 47.228193
UZS 14480.842814
VES 107.627873
VND 29528.110798
VUV 135.596303
WST 3.139883
XAF 656.728581
XAG 0.034398
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.066741
XDR 0.816745
XOF 656.74017
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.711202
ZAR 20.433028
ZMK 10214.189682
ZMW 30.195476
ZWL 365.391681
  • RBGPF

    -0.2380

    65.43

    -0.36%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.22

    +0.59%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    45.2

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    -0.0100

    53.92

    -0.02%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    10.31

    -0.48%

  • RIO

    -0.7700

    59.43

    -1.3%

  • AZN

    1.9600

    72.83

    +2.69%

  • GSK

    1.0300

    41.03

    +2.51%

  • NGG

    0.8745

    71.39

    +1.22%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    29.1

    -0.24%

  • BCC

    -0.9700

    86.88

    -1.12%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.22

    +0.5%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.94

    +1.24%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    10.34

    0%

  • BCE

    0.3000

    21.8

    +1.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    11.65

    +0.6%

US top court lets Trump revoke legal status for 500,000 migrants
US top court lets Trump revoke legal status for 500,000 migrants / Photo: Stefani Reynolds - AFP/File

US top court lets Trump revoke legal status for 500,000 migrants

The US Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a major victory Friday in his immigration crackdown, giving his administration the green light to revoke the legal status of half a million migrants from four Caribbean and Latin American countries.

Text size:

The decision puts 532,000 people who came from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to the United States under a two-year humanitarian "parole" program launched by former president Joe Biden at risk of deportation.

And it marked the second time the highest US court has sided with Trump in his aggressive push to deliver on his election pledge to deport millions of non-citizens, through a series of policy announcements that have prompted a flurry of lawsuits.

But the opinion sparked a scathing dissent from two justices in the liberal minority who said the six conservatives on the bench had "plainly botched" their ruling and undervalued the "devastating consequences" to those potentially affected.

The revoked program had allowed entry into the United States for two years for up to 30,000 migrants a month from the four countries, all of which have dismal human rights records.

But as Trump takes a hard line on immigration, his administration moved to overturn those protections, winning a ruling from the Supreme Court earlier this month that allowed officials to begin deporting some 350,000 Venezuelans.

The latest case resulted from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem canceling an 18-month extension of the temporary protected status of the migrants, citing in particular the "authoritarian" nature of Nicolas Maduro's government in Venezuela.

The department gave them 30 days to leave the country unless they had legal protection under another program.

- 'Needless human suffering' -

"The court has plainly botched this assessment today," Justices Ketanji Brown Jackon and Sonia Sotomayor wrote in their dissent.

The justices said the migrants face being wrenched from family and returning to potential danger in their native countries -- or opting to stay and risking imminent removal.

"At a minimum, granting the stay would facilitate needless human suffering before the courts have reached a final judgment regarding the legal arguments at issue, while denying the government's application would not have anything close to that kind of practical impact," Jackson said.

None of the other justices gave reasons for their decision, and the court was not required to make the vote public.

The district court that barred the administration from revoking the migrants' status had argued that it was unlawfully applying a fast-track deportation procedure aimed at illegal immigrants to non-citizens protected by government programs.

At the Supreme Court, Justice Department lawyers said the "district court has nullified one of the administration’s most consequential immigration policy decisions" by issuing the stay.

The high court's decision means the Trump administration can go ahead with its policy change, even as the litigation on the merits plays out in lower courts.

Trump campaigned for the White House on a pledge to deport millions of undocumented migrants, evoking an "invasion" of the United States by hordes of foreign criminals.

Among other measures, he invoked an obscure wartime law to fly more than 200 alleged Venezuelan gang members to a prison in El Salvador.

But his program of mass deportations has been thwarted or restricted by numerous court rulings, including from the Supreme Court and notably on the grounds that those targeted should be able to assert their due process rights.

And the administration has been berated over its efforts to restrict immigration from poor countries with human rights concerns like Afghanistan and Haiti, while accepting white South African refugees amid baseless claims that they face "genocide."

The Trump administration systematically accuses judges who oppose his immigration decisions of plundering his presidential national security powers.

V.Nemec--TPP