Federal Judge Blocks Trump Administration Move to End Ethiopian Protected Status
In Brief
The ruling halts planned deportations and affects thousands of Ethiopians with temporary protected status in the U.S.
Key Facts
- A federal judge issued an order preventing the Trump administration from ending temporary protected status (TPS) for Ethiopians.
- Judge Brian Murphy, appointed by President Biden, found that the Department of Homeland Security did not follow proper protocols in its attempt to terminate TPS.
- The decision blocks the deportation of thousands of Ethiopian migrants who currently hold TPS.
- The Trump administration had sought to roll back TPS protections for several immigrant groups, including Ethiopians.
- The ruling represents a legal setback for the administration's broader efforts to change immigration policy.
What Happened
A federal judge blocked the Trump administration's attempt to terminate temporary protected status for Ethiopians, citing procedural issues with the Department of Homeland Security's actions.
Why It Matters
This decision temporarily prevents the deportation of thousands of Ethiopians and signals ongoing judicial scrutiny of executive immigration policy changes.
What's Next
The administration may appeal the ruling or attempt to address the procedural issues cited by the judge. Further legal proceedings are expected.
Sources
- Al Jazeera — Judge bars Trump administration from nixing protected status for Ethiopians(13h ago)
- Fox News — Federal judge blocks Trump admin effort to end temporary protected status for Ethiopia(23h ago)
- Fox News — Biden-appointed judge at center of repeated clashes with Trump admin issues new immigration block(14h ago)
