Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 4th October 2025, 7:48 AM
The United States Supreme Court on Friday ruled for the second time that the Trump administration may strip approximately 350,000 Venezuelan immigrants of their Temporary Protected Status (TPS), a programme that shields them from deportation.
The conservative-majority court had previously, in May 2025, granted an emergency request from the administration to remove TPS from Venezuelan migrants.
However, the three liberal justices of the Supreme Court dissented from Friday’s decision. The ruling effectively overrides a September 2025 decision by US District Judge Edward Chen in California, which had blocked the administration’s effort to revoke TPS for Venezuelans.
TPS is a form of immigration relief that:
Venezuela currently faces a deep economic crisis under a harsh leftist government widely viewed in the West as autocratic and corrupt, which was a key factor in granting TPS to its nationals.
In a brief order, the Supreme Court stated that, unless it or another lower court issues a new directive, Judge Chen’s order is temporarily frozen: “Although the posture of the case has changed, the parties’ legal arguments and relative harms generally have not. The same result that we reached in May is appropriate here.”
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, one of the three liberal justices, criticised her conservative colleagues: “We once again use our equitable power (but not our opinion-writing capacity) to allow this Administration to disrupt as many lives as possible, as quickly as possible.”
She argued that the Court prioritised the administration’s urgency over the lives of TPS holders and the reasoning of lower courts.
President Donald Trump is pursuing a broad immigration crackdown, fulfilling a campaign promise to expel millions of undocumented immigrants.
Key Points
| Topic | Details |
| Supreme Court Ruling | Allows Trump administration to revoke TPS for Venezuelans |
| Number of People Affected | ~350,000 |
| TPS Benefits | Protection from deportation; legal work rights |
| Original TPS Grant | By President Joe Biden, due to repressive Maduro regime |
| Lower Court Decision | US District Judge Edward Chen blocked revocation in September 2025 |
| Dissent | Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan |
| Administration’s Justification | Urgency of revoking TPS as part of broader immigration crackdown |
| Criticism | Liberal justices argue ruling prioritises administrative urgency over human impact |
This ruling marks a significant escalation in the Trump administration’s immigration policies, potentially disrupting hundreds of thousands of lives in the United States.
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