Several Venezuelans and three immigrant rights groups have sued President Donald Trump's administration over its decision to end temporary protections against deportation for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants living in the United States.
While portrayed by the Trump administration as hardened criminals, the Venezuelans returning to their home country in the deportation flights from the United States and Mexico are being welcomed back
Advocacy groups and Venezuelan immigrants have filed suit in federal courts over terminated removal protections for Venezuelans in the United States.
Venezuelans — have been flown back to Venezuela. Court records show about one-third had no criminal record, contradicting administration claims.
Around 350,000 Venezuelas in the U.S. will lose their Temporary Protected Status, but what is it? And why are they losing it?
Donald Trump has revoked Venezuela's oil license even as delusional leftists accuse him of catering to Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
Immigration advocates have filed two suits challenging the Trump administration’s stripping of deportation protection for some Venezuelans in the United States. The suits target a move by
After his special envoy's controversial comment that President Trump "doesn't want to do regime change" in Venezuela, Trump reversed course and tightened oil sanctions on that country's brutal dictatorship.
The lawsuit was filed against the Department of Homeland Security and its secretary, Kristi Noem. Earlier this month, Noem announced the end of deportation relief, known as Temporary Protected Status, for Venezuelans in the United States without permanent legal immigration status.
The suit seeks to rescind Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s decision earlier this month to strip 600,000 Venezuelans in the U.S. of the temporary protected status, or TPS, that keeps them
Will President Trump’s decision to end Temporary Protected Status for 300,000 Venezuelan immigrants dim Venezuelan Americans’ strong support for him?