Venezuelans, Supreme Court and Trump
Digest more
1don MSN
The Supreme Court has rejected the Trump administration’s appeal to quickly resume deportations of Venezuelans under an 18th-century wartime law.
The U.S. Supreme Court allowed Donald Trump's administration on Monday to strip about 350,000 Venezuelans living in the United States of a temporary protected status given under his predecessor Joe Biden,
Roughly 50K Venezuelans who arrived in Chicago over the last 2 years are in limbo after Monday's SCOTUS ruling.
President Donald Trump said over the weekend that he would speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy today to try and negotiate a peace deal to end the three-year-long war.
Despite the Trump administration’s assertion that Venezuela is now safe for migrants to return, substantial evidence indicates that most holders of Temporary Protected Status would face dire consequences if repatriated.
Explore more
Sitting on a couch in her home in Maracay, Venezuela, Mirelis Cacique López watches her son Francisco Javier García Cacique on her cell phone in the first video released of a group of Venezuelans sent by the United States to El Salvador’s maximum-security prison Cecot.
South Florida immigration attorney on end of protections for Venezuelans 02:48. A Supreme Court decision said more than 350,000 Venezuelan migrants living in the U.S. under Tempor