The Supreme Court has granted President Trump a legal victory in his war against unfettered immigration and activist judges.
This from thegatewaypundit.com.
On Friday, the Court ruled the Trump Administration could end ‘temporary’ worker protections and work authorizations for more than 500,000 “migrants” from these four countries: Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. This decision reversed a ruling by an Obama judge just two days ago.
The 7-2 ruling will remain in place pending a court challenge.
The two worst justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented. Jackson whined the Court “botched” the analysis of when emergency relief is warranted. She added it draws attention to the “real harm to real people.”
As The Gateway Pundit reported earlier this month:
[T]he Trump Administration previously appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, demanding the revocation of temporary legal status for these migrants.
The move aimed to untangle the migratory mess left by The Obiden Regime, which unleashed a flood of entries under the questionable guise of “humanitarian parole.” This program, known as CHNV, allowed roughly 532,000 “migrants” from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to stay in America.
As TGP readers know:
CBP data previously found over 1 million illegal aliens have been allowed into the U.S. through what [The Obiden Regime] defined as ‘legal’ means.
The Regime used both the CBP One App and the CHNV program to allow illegal aliens entry into the U.S.
A federal judge named Indira Talwani of Massachusetts on Wednesday demanded the Trump administration resume processing applications from those “migrants” who are seeking work permits or renewing their status.
Talwani, an Obama appointee, rejected the Trump administration’s claim that suspending the parole programs was within its broad discretion to direct immigration policy. She also blocked the Trump Administration from revoking these “migrants’” legal status in April.
Talwani claimed:
[T]he DHS failed to interpret the law properly and asserted the migrants have a right to be in the U.S.
Trump earlier this year announced he would strip the status of 532,000 “migrants” living in the United States who were flown in on Biden’s parole program.