Christie NoM, Secretary, Department of Homeland Security (DHS), ended exile protection for some Venezuela people, the Trump administration made the latest administration attempts to snatch the temporary protected position (TPS) following a series of damage by the court.
The expiration affected around 250,000 people, who were awarded the TPS through the 2021 declaration, otherwise it was determined to end on 10 September.
DHS spokesperson said in a release, “Given the sufficient role in running the irregular migration of Venezuela and the clear magnet effect created by the temporary protected position, the efforts of the Trump administration directly to maintain or expand TP for the citizens of Venezuela reduces the efforts of the Trump administration directly to secure our southern boundary and effectively manage the migration.”
“The weight of public security, national security, migration factors, immigration policy, economic views and foreign policy, it is clear that it is not in the best interest of the US to allow Venezuela citizens to remain temporarily in the United States.”
DHS can provide TPS for countries that experience natural disasters or civil disturbance.
Under the former President Biden, the then DHS Secretary Alejandro Mekorus honored the TPS for Venezuela twice, erasing the country for years citing comprehensive political instability and food insecurity, which ran away from millions.
The Trump administration had earlier abolished the TPS for 350,000 Venezuela affected by a separate rehabilitation in February.
A few days after a lower court’s verdict of a lower court, an appeal was announced that NOEM was found earlier attempts to “vacate” TP for Venezuela. Was illegal,
TPS can only be terminated after 60 days after notice in the federal register, where the administration needs to expand why it wonders that the country is safe enough to resume exile. The notice with Wednesday’s announcement was not posted on the site immediately.
In its judgment, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals found that the Congress had “established the termination process to create a system of temporary status, which was estimated, reliable and untouched by electoral politics,” wrote by a panel for the court.
The ruling also upheld the judgment of a lower court judge Vacatur of blocked noem Being effective in April, writing that her decision is “smack of racism” after writing that a series of comments about Venezuela.
California -based US District Judge Edward Chen wrote in his earlier judgment, “Generalization of criminality for the TPS population of Venezuela is a holistic mannerless and dedicated to generalized false conservations.”