US President Donald Trump has attacked the American judiciary after a federal judge paused the government’s plan to withdraw legal protections to half a million migrants residing in the country.
Earlier this week, US District Court Judge Indira Talwani blocked the Trump administration’s bid to revoke legal protections called immigration parole on April 24.
However, Talwani halted the deportation notices issued by the government and blocked officials from rescinding the immigration parole—legal protection granted by the Biden administration to over half a million individuals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
Talwani said, “The early termination, without any case-by-case justification, of legal status for noncitizens who have complied with DHS programs and entered the country lawfully undermines the rule of law.”
In a Truth Social post, the US president the judge’s ruling, saying, “Can you believe it? A Judge ruled against us on 530,000 illegal migrants (that Joe Biden flew over the border in his program to transport illegals into the country by airplane) saying that they can’t be looked at as a group, but that each case has to be tried individually. Based on the court system, that would take approximately 100 years. What is going on with our courts? They are totally out of control. They seem to hate ‘Trump’ so much, that anything goes!”
He added, “We are trying to bring our country back from the destruction caused by the Democrats and crooked Joe Biden. I won on a policy of common s, and what common sense do we have when we have to have 530,000 trials? This radicalised Judge is saying that sleepy Joe Biden can fly more than half a million illegals into America, in one day, but we have to hold many years of long and tedious trials to fly each and every one of them back home. Where is the justice here???”
Impact Shorts
More ShortsThe judgment safeguards the Biden administration-backed program called CHNV, under which 532,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela were authorised to fly to the US after they had secured sponsorships from US-based individuals. Following their entry into the country, the immigrants were granted parole and allowed to work in the US lawfully for two years.