After a short pause, Trump’s deportation is finally going to get back on track as thee Supreme Court has given him the go ahead to proceed with what he started when he resumed office.
Donald Trump has canceled the legal status of 900,000 migrants who were living in the U.S. under a program known as humanitarian parole.
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Many affected migrants learned about the cancellation through an email from the Department of Homeland Security, which informed them that their parole had been revoked.
This sudden decision puts hundreds of thousands of individuals at risk of deportation, many of whom have been working, paying taxes, and contributing to their communities for years.
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The cancellation was announced just hours before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to allow Trump to resume deportations under the rarely used Alien Enemies Act, a wartime law dating back to 1798.
The law is now being applied to deport migrants that the administration claims are associated with foreign gangs or criminal networks, particularly targeting Venezuelan nationals.
While the Supreme Court did permit deportations to proceed, the justices established one key condition: detainees must be allowed to challenge their removal in court.
This small safeguard provides an opportunity for legal defense, but immigration advocates warn that the rapid cancellations could still lead to mass removals.
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