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Thursday 23 April 2026 13:48:36 GMT
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ideal.printer0
ideal bike tour :
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2026-04-25 10:43:35
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arslansami1986
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2026-05-21 05:33:42
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Zubair :
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Faheem Khan :
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2026-04-27 06:18:42
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মোছা সোহানা আক্তার জান্নাত😘😘 :
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2026-04-24 16:50:22
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STARメSAMEER💫💫💫 :
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mohomad imran :
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2026-04-24 09:31:19
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Today, the Supreme Court issued two major rulings with far-reaching consequences for immigration policy and executive power. In a 6–3 decision, the Court allowed the Trump administration to revive a policy that lets officials turn away many asylum seekers at U.S. ports of entry, preventing them from even beginning the asylum process at the border. Instead, many will be required to remain in Mexico while they wait, if they’re allowed to pursue a claim at all. In a separate 6–3 ruling, the Court also allowed the administration to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 350,000 Haitians and roughly 6,000 Syrians living legally in the U.S. TPS provides temporary protection from deportation and work authorization for people from countries facing war, natural disasters, or other extraordinary conditions. Many TPS holders have lived in the U.S. for years, built families and careers, and work in essential industries—including health care. As their protections expire, many could lose authorization to work and become vulnerable to deportation to third countries, even if they have little or no connection to those countries, while legal challenges proceed. Critics warn the decisions could make it easier to implement sweeping immigration policies before courts have fully ruled on their legality and could have significant consequences for immigrants and families across the country. Together, these decisions expand the administration’s authority over immigration by limiting access to asylum at the border and allowing humanitarian protections for hundreds of thousands of people to end. #news #politics #humanrights #viral #fyp
Today, the Supreme Court issued two major rulings with far-reaching consequences for immigration policy and executive power. In a 6–3 decision, the Court allowed the Trump administration to revive a policy that lets officials turn away many asylum seekers at U.S. ports of entry, preventing them from even beginning the asylum process at the border. Instead, many will be required to remain in Mexico while they wait, if they’re allowed to pursue a claim at all. In a separate 6–3 ruling, the Court also allowed the administration to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 350,000 Haitians and roughly 6,000 Syrians living legally in the U.S. TPS provides temporary protection from deportation and work authorization for people from countries facing war, natural disasters, or other extraordinary conditions. Many TPS holders have lived in the U.S. for years, built families and careers, and work in essential industries—including health care. As their protections expire, many could lose authorization to work and become vulnerable to deportation to third countries, even if they have little or no connection to those countries, while legal challenges proceed. Critics warn the decisions could make it easier to implement sweeping immigration policies before courts have fully ruled on their legality and could have significant consequences for immigrants and families across the country. Together, these decisions expand the administration’s authority over immigration by limiting access to asylum at the border and allowing humanitarian protections for hundreds of thousands of people to end. #news #politics #humanrights #viral #fyp

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