Trump, appeals court
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The rulings against the levies in two federal courts – the U.S. Court of International Trade and the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. -- centered on Trump's unprecedented invocation of the International Economic Emergency Powers Act as a legal justification for tariffs.
15hon MSN
President Trump may seek to deport hundreds of thousands of immigrants who recently entered the United States under a two-year grant of parole, the Supreme Court decided Friday. Over two dissents, the justices granted an emergency appeal and set aside rulings by judges in Boston who blocked Trump's repeal of the parole policy adopted by the Biden administration.
The U.S. Supreme Court has acted in a series of cases involving challenges to executive orders signed by President Donald Trump and actions by his administration since he returned to office in January.
The order allows the Trump administration to move forward with revoking work permits and legal status for over 530,000 migrants flown into the United States.
The Trump administration's termination of TPS protections will allow it to remove hundreds of thousands of migrants living in the US under protected status
Over 400,000 immigrants are in Florida through a program known as humanitarian parole. The May 30 ruling puts them all at risk of deportation.
The administration had asked the court to allow it to end deportation protections for more than 500,000 people facing dire humanitarian crises in their home countries.
People from these four countries could see their temporary legal protections stripped away thanks to a new ruling from the Supreme Court on Friday.
The Supreme Court on Friday allowed President Donald Trump’s administration to suspend a Biden-era humanitarian parole program that allowed half a million immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to temporarily live and work in the United States.
The Supreme Court ruled that the Trump Administration can—for now—end a program used by over half a million migrants.
1don MSN
The Supreme Court has backed a multibillion-dollar oil railroad expansion in Utah in a ruling that scales back a key environmental law and could speed development projects around the country.