
The Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a decisive victory, ruling 8–1 in favor of his administration’s right to end Temporary Protected Status for roughly 300,000 Venezuelan migrants. The decision overturned a lower court’s block and reaffirmed the president’s authority over immigration policy, even gaining support from liberal justices. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem quickly moved to revoke TPS protections, arguing that Venezuela no longer faces “extraordinary conditions” and that continued residency was against U.S. interests.
The ruling marks a pivotal shift in immigration enforcement. Since Trump returned to office, DHS reports over 527,000 deportations and 1.6 million voluntary departures — figures expected to rise. Critics call the decision a humanitarian setback, while supporters hail it as a long-overdue assertion of executive control. Either way, the Supreme Court’s message was clear: the power to shape immigration lies firmly in the White House.