Supreme Court allows Trump to restart swift deportation of migrants away from their home countries
- On June 23, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a lower court injunction, allowing the Trump administration to continue sending migrants to nations other than their home countries for deportation.
- This ruling reversed a prior order requiring migrants destined for third countries to have notice and an opportunity to contest removal due to safety concerns, amid legal challenges over due process.
- Migrants have been deported primarily to El Salvador, Libya, and South Sudan, countries often unrelated to their nationality and sometimes politically unstable, raising safety and legal questions.
- Justice Sonia Sotomayor and two liberal justices dissented, calling the majority's ruling a 'gross abuse' and warning that thousands could suffer violence in remote locations without proper legal protections.
- The ruling enables a key part of the administration's mass deportation plans, implicating broader immigration policy and ongoing disputes over migrants' constitutional rights and international protections.
205 Articles
205 Articles
Catholic immigration advocate decries high court ruling allowing third-country deportations
WASHINGTON (OSV News) — A leading Catholic immigration expert expressed outrage over the Supreme Court’s June 23 ruling allowing the Trump administration to remove immigrants who lack legal authorization to live and work in the U.S., to countries not specifically identified in their removal orders — known as “third-country removals” — without advance notice. “It is rather shocking that the court would approve of the removal of a person to a coun…
Rep. Andy Ogles discusses immigration, national security, and the Supreme Court's deportation rulings
Congressman Andy Ogles from Tennessee shares his insights on pressing issues such as immigration, national security, and the recent Supreme Court ruling empowering the president's authority to deport individuals. Congressman Ogles discusses the implications of these rulings, the threat of sleeper cells in the U.S., and the importance of passing the 'big beautiful bill' to secure the border and strengthen the economy.
Trump's Evil Immigration Plan Just Got More Diabolical
Tim Miller talks to Aaron Reichlin-Melnick about how the Trump administration is aggressively deporting immigrants not to their home countries, but to unfamiliar third countries—often places facing severe unrest. This alarming tactic leaves people stranded, without resources or support, raising urgent human rights concerns.Leave a commentAs always: Watch, listen, and leave a comment. Bulwark+ Takes is home to short videos, livestreams, and event…
Under Trump, The Cruelty of Third-Country Deportation
A case with a weird title, D.H.S. v. D.V.D, merits a weird Supreme Court decision. In a ruling this week on its “shadow docket,” the Supreme Court summarily stayed a lower court injunction before the appeal was even heard and gave Trump permission to deport migrants to places other than their country of origin—countries where they had never set foot, where they might not speak the language, and even to countries where they might be tortured. It …
Judge vs. Supreme Court: The deportation battle that has Republicans furious
Eight illegal immigrants are living in a shipping container on a U.S. military base in the African country of Djibouti after a federal judge this week said a Supreme Court ruling allowing third-country deportations doesn't apply to them.
Trump To Deport Migrants To War-Torn And Conflict Zones
United States ruler, Donald Trump will be deporting migrants to war-torn third countries such as South Sudan in Africa, regardless of where they were born or came from before entering the U.S. The US Supreme Court has authorized the White House to deport immigrants to Libya as well. The decision handed down on Monday lifts an earlier order by a lower court that had blocked the emergency removals due to safety concerns. Trump has revived a series…
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