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Supreme Court to Review Trump's Bid to End Protection for Haitian and Syrian Migrants
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The Supreme Court is set to decide whether the Trump administration may revoke temporary protected status for Haitians and Syrians, a move that could affect over a million immigrants.
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They ALWAYS vote as a group, or BLOCK, even that new, Low IQ person, that somehow found her way to the bench (Sleepy Joe!).
The Democrat Justices stick together like glue, NEVER failing to wander from the warped and perverse policies, ideas, and cases put before them.
If they lose Temporary Protected Status, then they no longer can work, and the companies can't employ them. That's a blow to the economy. It's a blow to the state.
What the employers have told me time and time again is we hired Haitians a year, two, three years ago, frankly because we couldn't fill these jobs.
It was never intended to be a de facto amnesty program, yet that's how previous administrations have used it for decades. Temporary means temporary and the final word will not be from activist judges legislating from the bench.
Haiti's TPS was granted following an earthquake that took place over 15 years ago.
By one estimate, H-2A workers account for a sixth of the United States' agricultural workforce.
I confirm that State has no foreign policy concerns with ending these TPS designations.
Why would Congress permit review of the procedural aspect when really what everybody cares about is the substance?
He declared illegal immigrants, which he associated with TPS, as 'poisoning the blood' of America.
And where he complained that the United States takes people from such countries instead of people from Norway, Sweden or Denmark.
We have a president say at one point that Haiti is a 'filthy,' 'dirty' and 'disgusting' 'shithole country,'
So do you agree the Assad regime change is a significant change in the history of that country and the Middle East more broadly?
sources
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.US under Donald Trump
- 3.2024 US Presidential Election
- 4.Organized crime
- 5.Protests
- 6.Immigration
- 7.US-India relations
- 8.Mexico under Claudia Sheinbaum
- 9.India under Modi
- 10.United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement
- 11.Kidnapping
countries
- 1.Haiti
- 2.Syrian Arab Republic
- 3.United States
- 4.Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of
- 5.Honduras
- 6.Ethiopia
- 7.Myanmar
- 8.South Sudan
- 9.Afghanistan
- 10.Denmark
- 11.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 12.Nicaragua
organizations
- 1.US Homeland Security Department
- 2.US State Department
- 3.FWDus
- 4.US Supreme Court
- 5.3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals
- 6.American Civil Liberties Union
- 7.Democratic Party
- 8.Inter-American Dialogue
- 9.Republican Party
- 10.American Business Immigration Coalition
- 11.Amnesty International
- 12.CARE International
persons
- 1.Donald Trump
- 2.John Sauer
- 3.Kristi Noem
- 4.Ahilan Arulanantham
- 5.Amy Coney Barrett
- 6.Bashar Al-Assad
- 7.John Roberts
- 8.Amy Fischer
- 9.Brett Kavanaugh
- 10.Emi Maclean
- 11.Geoffrey Pipoply
- 12.Guerline Jozef