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US appeals court weighs Trump's authority to revoke legal status for thousands of migrants

UNITED STATES, JUL 29 – The Justice Department seeks to uphold the Trump administration's authority to revoke parole status for over 530,000 migrants granted work permits under a Biden-era program.

  • On Tuesday, the DOJ argued before an appeals court panel that the Trump administration should continue the Biden-era mass parole program, citing a May Supreme Court order.
  • Earlier this year, the Supreme Court stayed the district court’s injunction, and that stay remains until the appellate process concludes.
  • During the session, a three-judge First Circuit panel including Judges Gustavo Gelpi, Lara Montecalvo, and William Kayatta questioned the DOJ lawyer and coalition lawyer Justin Cox on court review and program grounds.
  • Amid a crowded emergency docket, the Supreme Court's unsigned majority last week said stays should guide equitable discretion but are not conclusive opinions.
  • A lopsided Supreme Court vote suggests the government is likely to prevail, and the stay remains until the appeals court rules or the justices take up the case.
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Reuters broke the news in United Kingdom on Tuesday, July 29, 2025.
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