Supreme Court allows Trump to restart swift deportation of migrants away from their home countries
- On Monday, June 23, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 6-3 to permit the Trump administration to continue deporting migrants to third countries—places other than their home nations—without providing advance notice or allowing them to contest their removal.
- This reversed a lower court injunction that required migrants be given time to contest potential harm, amid ongoing political tensions over mass deportation policies and migration increases.
- Deportations have resulted in migrants being sent to nations such as El Salvador, Libya, and South Sudan—places often experiencing political turmoil or armed conflict—raising concerns about their protection and legal entitlements.
- In fiscal year 2024, the Trump administration deported over 270,000 migrants, focusing largely on those with serious criminal backgrounds; however, immigrant advocates and dissenting Supreme Court justices warn that such policies may infringe on due process protections.
- The ruling enables the administration to accelerate mass deportations per its enforcement goals, but legal challenges and dissent from liberal justices led by Sonia Sotomayor continue over due process concerns.
90 Articles
90 Articles
The Trump administration had appealed to the highest court after a federal judge had suspended the evictions, arguing that the defendants could not assert their rights. The Court's decision allowed them to resume pending a decision on appeal.
The US wants to send migrants to countries like Libya or South Sudan – regardless of their origin. In front of the Supreme Court, the government now got right with 6:3 votes. A liberal judge criticized this sharply.
The U.S. authorities wanted to deport several migrants to South Sudan. A judge stopped the operation first. But now the U.S. Supreme Court has decided: The government is allowed to continue for the time being.
Supreme Court sides with Trump admin. on third-country deportations
In a win for the Trump administration's mass deportation plans, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, June 23, that deporting migrants to countries other than their own can continue. It comes after a judge had previously ruled that migrants be given the chance to contest their removals to other countries. SCOTUS ruling The high court ruled 6-3 in favor of pausing that judge’s ruling, with the three liberal justices –– Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Ja…
Supreme Court's Pause Allows Fast, Third-Country Deportation
The Supreme Court on Monday put a lower court's order on hold, allowing the Trump administration to resume deporting migrants to countries that are foreign to them—without giving the deportees an opportunity to make a case that they'd face persecution or death. The brief, unsigned ruling lifts Judge Brian...
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