The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday allowed the Trump administration to remove temporary protected status (TPS) for over 300,000 Venezuelan migrants. This emergency order temporarily blocks a lower court ruling that had found the government acted improperly in ending protections for these immigrants. Three liberal justices dissented from the decision.
The emergency order remains in effect while the legal case continues. It halts a ruling by U.S. District Judge Edward Chen of San Francisco, who had ruled that ending TPS for Venezuelans was unlawful. Chen criticized the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for acting “with unprecedented haste” and following a predetermined plan to terminate TPS protections.
TPS is a federal program created in 1990 to protect immigrants from deportation when their home countries face civil unrest, natural disasters, or other dangerous conditions. It allows migrants to remain and work legally in the U.S., with protections typically granted in 18-month periods.
The Trump administration’s move to withdraw TPS is part of a broader effort to end legal safeguards for immigrants. It has already ended or attempted to end TPS for 600,000 Venezuelans and 500,000 Haitians, protections initially granted under President Joe Biden’s administration.
In May, the Supreme Court blocked an earlier attempt to terminate TPS for another 350,000 Venezuelans. That decision, like many emergency appeals, offered no explanation. On Friday, the court issued an unsigned order stating, “The same result that we reached in May is appropriate here.”
Lawyers for the migrants said many have already lost jobs and housing, and some have faced detention or deportation after the high court intervened the first time. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, criticizing repeated Supreme Court interference in lower-court cases. She called the order “yet another grave misuse of our emergency docket” and warned it puts lives at risk.
Lower courts have noted irregularities in how DHS handled the termination of TPS for Venezuelans. In one ruling, Judge Kim Wardlaw wrote that DHS officials made decisions first and searched for legal justification afterward. The appellate panel agreed that Chen correctly identified the administration’s “preordained purpose of expediting termination” of TPS.
Solicitor General D. John Sauer, representing the administration, argued that the May order should apply to this case as well. He said lower courts were increasingly ignoring the Supreme Court’s emergency docket decisions. According to Sauer, the new order prevents the “vacatur and termination of TPS affecting over 300,000 aliens based on meritless legal theories.”
TPS protections have long served as a lifeline for migrants from crisis-hit countries. Many Venezuelans depend on TPS to work, pay rent, and support families in the U.S. Advocates warn that ending protections could cause severe disruptions, including job losses, homelessness, and higher risk of detention or deportation.
The legal dispute highlights tension between executive authority and congressional intent. Congress designed TPS to provide temporary relief during crises, yet the Trump administration has sought to narrow its scope. Courts have repeatedly reviewed these actions, raising questions about due process and administrative overreach.
The Supreme Court’s emergency order allows the administration to continue its plan to end TPS while the legal battle progresses. The outcome could affect hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans currently living and working legally in the U.S.
TPS beneficiaries now wait as courts review the case. The ruling underscores the fragile nature of legal protections for migrants in the U.S. and the ongoing uncertainty faced by Venezuelans who have relied on TPS for safety and stability.
