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The Latest Supreme Court Decision Could Force Disney to Fire Even More Cast Members

  • On May 30, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court paused a lower court's injunction, enabling the Trump administration to rescind parole protections previously granted to migrants originating in four specific Latin American nations.
  • The stay permits ending Biden-era CHNV parole programs, which granted temporary legal status to about 532,000 migrants fleeing humanitarian crises, while litigation continues.
  • The Trump administration argues the migrants' presence harms national interests and challenges courts’ authority to block executive parole decisions en masse without individualized review.
  • Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, warning of “devastating consequences” that would “precipitously upend” nearly half a million migrants’ lives and criticizing the majority for botching legal analysis.
  • The ruling allows the administration to begin revoking work permits and pursuing deportations, marking a significant advance for its immigration crackdown despite ongoing court challenges.
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The U.S. Supreme Court of Justice allowed the Donald Trump administration to eliminate the humanitarian strike program and revoke the temporary legal status of some 530,000 migrants, including 117 thousand Venezuelans and 110,000 Cubans, according to data from the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP).What does the end of the strike mean for migrants from Cuba and Venezuela?The measure affects migrants who arrived legally in the U.S. wit…

·Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Immigrant defenders condemned Friday, May 30, the U.S. Supreme's decision to allow Donald Trump's government to put an end to temporary legal protection for more than half a million immigrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua and Haiti, calling the ruling “the largest delegalization” in the history of [...]

Several migrant associations warned this Monday of the dangers of the withdrawal of the ‘parole’ in the United States, a temporary humanitarian permit for migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela that benefits more than half a million people, and that in addition to separating families, will weaken the U.S. economy. “Society in general will pay for this with work interruptions, with the impact on the economy of Florida and the economy …

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Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly broke the news in on Sunday, June 1, 2025.
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