US Supreme Court lets Trump revoke ‘parole’ status for migrants
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The US Supreme Court's move potentially exposes 532,000 migrants to rapid removal from the United States.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - The US Supreme Court on May 30 let President Donald Trump’s administration revoke the temporary legal status of hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan, Cuban, Haitian and Nicaraguan migrants living in the United States, bolstering the Republican leader’s drive to step up deportations.
The court put on hold a federal judge’s order halting the administration’s move to end the immigration “parole” granted to 532,000 of these migrants by Mr Trump’s predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden, potentially exposing many of them to rapid removal, while the case plays out in lower courts.
Two of the court’s three liberal justices, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson and Judge Sonia Sotomayor, dissented from the decision.
Immigration parole is a form of temporary permission under American law to be in the country for “urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit” allowing recipients to live and work in the US. Mr Biden used parole as part of his administration’s approach to deter illegal immigration at the US-Mexican border.
Mr Trump called for ending humanitarian parole programmes in an executive order signed on Jan 20, his first day back in office. The Department of Homeland Security subsequently moved to terminate them in March, cutting short the two-year parole grants. The administration said revoking the parole status would make it easier to place migrants in a fast-track deportation process called “expedited removal”.
The case is one of many that Trump’s administration has brought in an emergency fashion to the nation’s highest judicial body, seeking to undo decisions by judges impeding his sweeping policies, including several targeting immigrants.
The Supreme Court on May 19 let Mr Trump end a deportation protection called temporary protected status that had been granted under Mr Biden to about 350,000 Venezuelans living in the United States, while that legal dispute plays out.
In a bid to reduce illegal border crossings, Mr Biden starting in 2022 allowed Venezuelans who entered the US by air to request a two-year parole if they passed security checks and had a US financial sponsor. Mr Biden expanded that process to Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguans in 2023, as his administration grappled with high levels of illegal immigration from those nationalities.
The plaintiffs, a group of migrants granted parole and Americans who serve as their sponsors, sued administration officials claiming the administration violated federal law governing the actions of government agencies.
Boston-based US District Judge Indira Talwani in April found that the law governing such parole did not allow for the programme’s blanket termination, instead requiring a case-by-case review. The Boston-based 1st US Circuit Court of Appeals declined to put the judge’s decision on hold.
In its filing, the Justice Department told the Supreme Court that Judge Talwani’s order had upended “critical immigration policies that are carefully calibrated to deter illegal entry”, effectively “undoing democratically approved policies that featured heavily in the November election” that returned Mr Trump to the presidency.
The plaintiffs told the Supreme Court they would face grave harm if their parole is cut short, given that the administration has indefinitely suspended processing their pending applications for asylum and other immigration relief.
They said they would be separated from their families and immediately subject to expedited deportation “to the same despotic and unstable countries from which they fled, where many will face serious risks of danger, persecution and even death”. REUTERS

