Anonymous ID: 8f1b30 May 19, 2025, 11:50 a.m. No.23055459   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Supreme Court Backs Trump on Ending Temp Protected Status for 350,000 Venezuelans

https://www.newsmax.com/us/venezuelan-deportation-temporary/2025/05/19/id/1211500/

Monday, 19 May 2025 01:18 PM EDT

 

The Supreme Court allowed Donald Trump's administration on Monday to strip about 350,000 Venezuelans living in the United States of a temporary protected status given under his predecessor President Joe Biden, as the Republican president moves to ramp up deportations as part of his hardline approach to immigration.

 

The court granted the Justice Department's request to lift San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge Edward Chen's order that had halted Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's decision to terminate the deportation protection conferred to Venezuelans under the temporary protected status, or TPS, program.

 

The court's brief order was unsigned, as is typical when the justices act on an emergency request. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the sole member of the court to publicly dissent from the decision.

 

The action came in a legal challenge by plaintiffs including some of the TPS recipients and the National TPS Alliance advocacy group, who said Venezuela remains an unsafe country.

 

Trump, who returned to the presidency in January, has pledged to deport record numbers of migrants in the United States illegally and has taken actions to strip certain migrants of temporary legal protections, expanding the pool of possible deportees.

 

The TPS program is a humanitarian designation under U.S. law for countries stricken by war, natural disaster or other catastrophe, giving recipients living in the United States deportation protection and access to work permits. The designation can be renewed by the U.S. homeland security secretary.

 

The U.S. government under Biden, a Democrat, twice designated Venezuela for TPS, in 2021 and 2023. In January, days before Trump returned to office, the Biden administration announced an extension of the programs to 2026.

 

Noem, a Trump appointee, rescinded the extension and moved to end the TPS designation for a subset of Venezuelans who benefited from the 2023 designation. The Department of Homeland Security said about 348,202 Venezuelans were registered under that 2023 designation.

 

Chen ruled that Noem violated a federal law that governs the actions of agencies. The judge also said the revocation of the TPS status appeared to have been predicated on "negative stereotypes" by insinuating the Venezuelan migrants were criminals.

 

"Generalization of criminality to the Venezuelan TPS population as a whole is baseless and smacks of racism predicated on generalized false stereotypes," Chen wrote, adding that Venezuelan TPS holders were more likely to hold bachelor's degrees than American citizens and less likely to commit crimes than the general U.S. population.

 

The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on April 18 declined the administration's request to pause the judge's order.

 

Justice Department lawyers in their Supreme Court filing said Chen had "wrested control of the nation's immigration policy" away from the government's executive branch, headed by Trump.

 

"The court's order contravenes fundamental Executive Branch prerogatives and indefinitely delays sensitive policy decisions in an area of immigration policy that Congress recognized must be flexible, fast-paced, and discretionary," they wrote.

 

The plaintiffs told the Supreme Court that granting the administration's request "would strip work authorization from nearly 350,000 people living in the U.S., expose them to deportation to an unsafe country and cost billions in economic losses nationwide."

 

The State Department currently warns against travel to Venezuela "due to the high risk of wrongful detentions, terrorism, kidnapping, the arbitrary enforcement of local laws, crime, civil unrest, poor health infrastructure."

 

The Trump administration in April also terminated TPS for thousands of Afghans and Cameroonians in the United States. Those actions are not part of the current case.

Anonymous ID: 8f1b30 May 19, 2025, 12:02 p.m. No.23055502   🗄️.is 🔗kun

World Health Organization Looks Ahead to Life Without US

https://www.newsmax.com/world/globaltalk/world-health-org-united-states-china/2025/05/19/id/1211457/

Monday, 19 May 2025 08:08 AM EDT

 

Hundreds of World Health Organization officials will join donors and diplomats in Geneva from Monday with one question dominating their thoughts: How to tackle crises from mpox to cholera without their main funder, the United States.

 

The week-long annual assembly usually showcases the scale of the U.N. agency set up to tackle disease outbreaks, approve vaccines, and support health systems worldwide.

 

This year - since President Donald Trump started the year-long process to leave the WHO with an executive order on his first day in office in January - the main theme is scaling down.

 

"Our goal is to focus on the high-value stuff," Daniel Thornton, the WHO's director of coordinated resource mobilization, told Reuters.

 

Just what that "high-value stuff" will be is up for discussion. Health officials have said the WHO's work in providing guidelines for countries on new vaccines and treatments for conditions from obesity to HIV will remain a priority.

 

One WHO slideshow for the event, shared with donors and seen by Reuters, suggested work on approving new medicines and responding to outbreaks would be protected, while training programs and offices in wealthier countries could be closed.

 

The United States had provided around 18% of the WHO's funding but it was not on the list of attendees released on Sunday, and on Monday as the assembly began, the U.S. chair was empty in the main hall.

 

"We've got to make do with what we have," said one Western diplomat who asked not to be named.

 

Staff have been getting ready - cutting managers and budgets - ever since Trump's January announcement in a rush of directives and aid cuts that have disrupted numerous multilateral pacts and initiatives.

 

The year-long delay, mandated under U.S. law, means the U.S. is still a WHO member - its flag still flies outside the Geneva HQ - until its official departure on Jan. 21, 2026.

 

Trump - who accused the WHO of mishandling COVID, which it denies - muddied the waters days after his statement by saying he might consider rejoining the agency if its staff "clean it up."

 

But global health envoys say there has since been little sign of a change of heart. So the WHO is planning for life with a $600 million hole in its budget for this year and cuts of 21% over the next two-year period.

 

As the United States prepares to exit, China is set to become the biggest provider of state fees - one of the WHO's main streams of funding alongside donations.

 

China's contribution will rise from just over 15% to 20% of the total state fee pot under a pre-agreed overhaul of the funding system.

 

"We have to adapt ourselves to multilateral organizations without the Americans. Life goes on," Chen Xu, China's ambassador to Geneva, told reporters last month.

 

On Monday, host country Switzerland's health minister Elisabeth Baume-Schneider opened the assembly with a new voluntary donation of $80 million over four years.

 

Others have suggested it might be time for a broader overhaul.

 

"Does WHO need all its committees? Does it need to be publishing thousands of publications each year?” said Anil Soni, chief executive of the WHO Foundation, an independent fund-raising body for the agency.

 

There is also the urgent need to make sure key projects hold up during the immediate cash crisis. That meant going to donors with particular interests in those areas, including pharmaceutical companies and philanthropic groups, Soni said.

 

The ELMA Foundation, which focuses on children's health in Africa, has already stepped in with $2 million for the Global Measles and Rubella Laboratory Network - more than 700 labs which track infectious disease threats, he added.

 

Other business at the assembly includes rubber-stamping a historic agreement on how to handle future pandemics and drumming up more cash from donors at an investment round.

 

But the focus remains on funding under the new world order.

 

In the runup to the event, one WHO manager emailed staff asking them to volunteer, without extra pay, as ushers.