Federal Judge Blocks Trump Administration's Plan to Strip Deportation Protections from Ethiopians
A federal judge in Boston has halted a plan by the Trump administration to strip deportation protections from thousands of Ethiopians living in the US. The decision, which comes just days before a February 13 deadline that would have forced over 5,000 Ethiopians to leave the country or face arrest, provides a temporary reprieve for those affected.
The ruling, issued by Judge Brian Murphy on Friday, delays the deadline and gives the Department of Homeland Security time to produce records explaining its decision-making process. Murphy stated his intention to "do everything I can" to keep the case going, indicating that he is likely to block the move for longer.
The decision represents a significant legal setback for the administration's broader push to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than one million people across multiple countries. The ruling comes on the heels of a similar decision earlier this week, when a federal appeals court found that the administration had unlawfully ended protections for 600,000 Venezuelans.
The case was brought by three Ethiopian nationals and the advocacy group African Communities Together, who filed suit after the DHS announced in December it was terminating TPS for Ethiopia. The lawsuit argues that the administration's decision to end the protections was unlawful, given the ongoing armed conflict in the African nation, and that Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem acted based on an "unconstitutional animus against non-white immigrants."
The termination of TPS for Ethiopia has been met with criticism from lawmakers and advocacy groups, who argue that it is unfair and threatens the lives of thousands of people who have lived in the US for years. The move comes despite a warning from the State Department about the safety risks facing Americans traveling to Ethiopia.
As protests rock the US against the Trump administration's deportation drive, following the killing of two American citizens by immigration enforcement agents in Minnesota this month, the decision represents a glimmer of hope for those who have been affected by the policy.
A federal judge in Boston has halted a plan by the Trump administration to strip deportation protections from thousands of Ethiopians living in the US. The decision, which comes just days before a February 13 deadline that would have forced over 5,000 Ethiopians to leave the country or face arrest, provides a temporary reprieve for those affected.
The ruling, issued by Judge Brian Murphy on Friday, delays the deadline and gives the Department of Homeland Security time to produce records explaining its decision-making process. Murphy stated his intention to "do everything I can" to keep the case going, indicating that he is likely to block the move for longer.
The decision represents a significant legal setback for the administration's broader push to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than one million people across multiple countries. The ruling comes on the heels of a similar decision earlier this week, when a federal appeals court found that the administration had unlawfully ended protections for 600,000 Venezuelans.
The case was brought by three Ethiopian nationals and the advocacy group African Communities Together, who filed suit after the DHS announced in December it was terminating TPS for Ethiopia. The lawsuit argues that the administration's decision to end the protections was unlawful, given the ongoing armed conflict in the African nation, and that Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem acted based on an "unconstitutional animus against non-white immigrants."
The termination of TPS for Ethiopia has been met with criticism from lawmakers and advocacy groups, who argue that it is unfair and threatens the lives of thousands of people who have lived in the US for years. The move comes despite a warning from the State Department about the safety risks facing Americans traveling to Ethiopia.
As protests rock the US against the Trump administration's deportation drive, following the killing of two American citizens by immigration enforcement agents in Minnesota this month, the decision represents a glimmer of hope for those who have been affected by the policy.