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The court temporarily blocks Trump’s shutter of the migrant entry program

A federal judge in Boston temporarily blocked the Trump management on Monday from the termination of a signature program for bidges era, with which hundreds of thousands of migrants from four difficult countries were able to enter the country and work legally.

The administration changed at the end of March to close the program until April 24, the migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti temporarily legally offered legally in the United States. Judge Indira Talwani from the Federal District Court in Boston said that the termination of the program has brought thousands of immigrants to the immediate risk of listening of deportation as soon as their legal status expires in less than two weeks.

Judge Talwani blocked the program’s wholesale. Otherwise, she wrote in her judgment, the migrants should “be forced to choose between two harmful options: continue to drive to the law and leave the country itself or wait for the cancellation procedure.”

Proponents of immigrants welcomed the decision as a victory for those who were concerned about the upcoming stripping of their status.

“This decision is not only a victory for our customers and those like you, but everyone who appreciates freedom welcomes to welcome,” said Karen Tumlin, director of the Justice Action Center, an immigrant interest. “Our customers – and our class members – have done everything that the government asked for them, and we are pleased to see that the government does not allow the government to maintain their side of the bargain.”

The White House did not immediately answer a request for comments.

The judge’s decision came when the Trump administration ended legal protection for migrants from many countries, including the closure of a program that grants Afghan and Cameroonian migrants a legal status. A separate effort to revoke the temporary protected status for Venezuelans in the United States was also blocked by a federal judge.

The program of the bid era made it possible to fly more migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti to the USA and to remain temporarily with access to work permits if they had a financial sponsor and said goodbye. They were allowed to stay up to two years.

The country entered more than 500,000 migrants as part of the program. Biden officials said it was part of the efforts to prevent migrants from these countries from being illegally transferred to the country and instead promote a legal process.

Trump officer announced the move to end the program last month that the program was added to immigration problems in the United States by granting some protective measures for “a significant population of extraterrestrials inside the United States without a clear path to a permanent status”.

(Tagstotranslate) Politics and government of the United States

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