Mon May 19 17:00:00 UTC 2025: Here’s a summary of the text, followed by a news article rewrite:

**Summary:**

The Supreme Court has granted the Trump administration the ability to reverse Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for over 300,000 Venezuelans, potentially leading to their deportation. This decision overturns an extension granted near the end of the Biden administration. The move is being challenged in lower courts, with opponents arguing it’s an attempt to evade judicial review and would lead to significant hardship. The Trump administration argues the decision falls under its executive authority and is necessary for immigration policy flexibility. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented. This decision comes shortly after the Supreme Court ruled against the Trump administration on a different immigration matter involving Venezuelan detainees.

**News Article:**

**Supreme Court Greenlights Trump Administration to Revoke Venezuelan Immigrant Protections**

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Monday cleared the way for the Trump administration to potentially deport over 300,000 Venezuelans by allowing it to revoke their Temporary Protected Status (TPS). The ruling grants the administration’s emergency application to reverse an extension of TPS granted at the end of the Biden administration, which provided legal status and work authorization to Venezuelans fleeing political instability in their home country.

The order, to which Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, allows the Trump administration to move forward with its plan to end the protections, arguing that it has the executive authority to do so in a flexible and fast-paced manner. Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued that courts should not review Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s decision to unwind the protections.

The decision is being challenged in lower courts by the National TPS Alliance and individual Venezuelans, who argue that the Trump administration is attempting to evade judicial review and that ending TPS will lead to job losses and deportations to a country deemed unsafe. Their lawyers stated that courts have the right to review executive branch decisions.

U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in California had previously blocked the Trump administration’s move, citing concerns about racial animus.

This ruling comes just days after the Supreme Court handed the Trump administration a defeat in a separate immigration case involving Venezuelan detainees and the Alien Enemies Act. The case will now continue in lower courts.

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