The U.S. Supreme Court has delivered a major victory for President Donald Trump’s administration, ruling 8–1 in favor of allowing the government to revoke Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for approximately 300,000 Venezuelan migrants. The decision overturned a lower court injunction that had blocked the administration’s efforts, with Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson as the lone dissenter.
The court stated that immigration decisions of this kind fall within the executive branch’s discretion and are tied to sensitive foreign policy matters. U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer argued before the Court that the lower court had overstepped its authority, calling its reasoning “untenable.” The justices largely agreed, clearing the path for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to proceed with implementing a February memo from Secretary Kristi Noem, which officially rescinded Venezuela’s TPS designation effective April.
According to DHS, the current conditions in Venezuela no longer meet the criteria for humanitarian protection as outlined in the Immigration and Nationality Act. The decision marks a reversal of policies established under the Biden administration. Former Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas had repeatedly extended Venezuela’s TPS designation, citing unsafe conditions that made deportations impossible. Those protections, initially set to expire in 2025 and 2026, have now been nullified by the Trump administration’s new directive.
As of late October 2025, DHS reports over 527,000 deportations since President Trump took office, with more than 1.6 million voluntary departures. Officials expect those numbers to rise as enforcement resources expand, solidifying immigration control as a central focus of the administration’s policy agenda.