Trump officials have called Biden's use of parole illegal. Even without policy changes, pathways to stay in the U.S. legally are limited.
SAN DIEGO — Migrants waiting to enter the US using former Joe Biden’s CBP One app broke down in tears after their appointments were canceled the moment President Trump took office Monday – just the first of the sweeping border actions the new administration prepared for the first day.
Illegal crossings at the southern border were lower in December 2024 than in December 2020, Border Patrol data showed.
A bill to strictly limit two powers used by the Biden administration is getting a renewed push in Congress as the Trump administration narrows immigration programs.
While TPS designations can be revoked by the DHS secretary — as long as the government provides a 60-day notice — President Joe Biden’s move ... “unfortunate that President Biden didn’t also redesignate TPS for Nicaragua and Ecuador.”
The move would delay any attempts by President-elect Donald Trump to sunset those protections. Read more at straitstimes.com.
When Donald Trump takes control of the White House on Monday, he will inherit something his voters hardly would have expected during a long campaign of berating outgoing President Joe Biden on immigration: a U.S.-Mexico border with the lowest number of illegal crossings in five years.
President Joe Bidens administration has renewed deportation protections for 900,000 immigrants from Venezuela, El Salvador, Ukraine, and Sudan through the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program. This move extends
One of Joe Biden’s final acts on immigration was to extend four grants of Temporary Protected Status – covering nearly one million immigrants from Venezuela, El Salvador, Ukraine, and Sudan – through to 2026.
More than a million migrants who were allowed to enter the United States during the Biden administration can have their temporary stays revoked and be rapidly deported, according to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement document that became public Friday.
The offices were designed to give migrants legal immigration options and dissuade them from crossing the U.S. southern border illegally.
Ryan Corbett and William McKenty were freed in exchange for an Afghan Taliban member who had been serving a life sentence in California.