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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DOJ leans on Supreme Court in bid at appeals court to end migrant parole
The Justice Department argued before an appeals court panel on Tuesday that the Trump administration should be allowed to continue with a Biden-era mass parole program for hundreds of thousands of migrants, leaning on a Supreme Court order issued in…
Dozens rally in Boston in support of immigrant TPS holders as Trump administration moves toward removing legal status - The Boston Globe
TPS holders from Nepal are set to lose their legal status and work authorization on Aug. 5 and those from Honduras and Nicaragua will lose their status Sept. 8, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
DOJ leans on Supreme Court in bid to end migrant parole
The Justice Department argued before an appeals court panel on Tuesday that the Trump administration should be allowed to continue with a Biden-era mass parole program for hundreds of thousands of migrants, leaning on a Supreme Court order issued in May as part of the argument. The three-judge panel on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit heard arguments in the DOJ’s appeal of a lower court’s order, which had blocked the Trum…
US appeals court weighs Trump's authority to revoke legal status for thousands of migrants
President Donald Trump's administration on Tuesday urged a U.S. appeals court to rule that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem acted lawfully when she revoked the temporary legal status of hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans living in the United States.
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