Supreme Court to Review Trump Plan to End Migrant Protections
On Monday, the justices chose not to immediately remove protections for hundreds of thousands of people, allowing them to continue living and working legally in the United States for the time being.
The court has previously sided with the administration, permitting the end of similar safeguards for around 600,000 Venezuelans while related legal battles were still ongoing, leaving them potentially vulnerable to deportation.
The Trump administration filed urgent appeals after lower courts blocked the immediate termination of temporary protected status for roughly 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians.
Lower courts had ruled in favor of the migrants, halting the end of their protected status, prompting the government to request a reversal from the Supreme Court, which announced Monday that it will hear arguments during the second week of April.
Since May 2025, the Supreme Court has twice allowed the Trump administration to end protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans. However, the Syrian and Haitian cases represent the first instance in Trump’s second term in which the court will evaluate the legality of revoking temporary protected status on its merits.
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