The U.S. Supreme Court has cleared the way for the Trump administration to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for roughly 350,000 Venezuelans, lifting a legal block and potentially opening the door to deportations.
TPS is a federal program designed to grant legal residency and work permits to nationals from countries suffering armed conflict, natural disasters, or other extreme disruptions. Venezuelans were granted TPS in response to the country’s economic collapse and political instability under Nicolás Maduro’s regime.
The Biden administration had extended protections through October 2026, citing continued unrest. But in early 2025, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem reversed the extension, arguing that the presence of certain Venezuelan nationals posed threats to public safety and national interests, including alleged associations with criminal gangs and strain on local resources.
The Supreme Court’s unsigned order overturns a lower court decision that had temporarily preserved TPS protections. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter, warning of the disruption this move could bring to families and communities built over years.
The Justice Department appealed to the Supreme Court after a San Francisco-based federal district judge put the efforts on hold, finding they “appear predicated on negative stereotypes.”
Only Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, former President Biden’s appointee to the court, publicly dissented from Monday’s order to lift that judge’s block. Neither Jackson nor the majority explained their decision.
It marks another significant legal victory for the Trump administration, which has brought a flurry of emergency appeals to the Supreme Court after district judges across the country have blocked President Trump’s various policies.
The court on Friday handed the administration a loss, however, by blocking it from swiftly deporting a group of Venezuelan migrants it claims are gang members.
Nevertheless, Monday’s decision fits within the broader contours of the Trump administration’s approach to immigration enforcement. It also signals a willingness to invoke longstanding laws, such as the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, to streamline removals of individuals classified as national security threats. Civil liberties advocates warn that these tools risk eroding due process.
With legal advocacy groups preparing new challenges, the fate of Venezuelan migrants now hangs on upcoming court battles and political negotiations. For now, the administration is expected to begin case-by-case assessments for deportation, prioritizing individuals with criminal records or expired documentation.
This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
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A law is a law. In fact since the law in question has survived intact for centuries means to me it is a solid law. A good law. A law with purpose. A law to be used and obeyed.