The move threatens to cast a cloud of uncertainty over many migrants who applying for immigration benefits that would allow ...
There are hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans whose legal status is vanishing. 'I live in distress. I dream that I'm being deported.' ...
"I'm not a criminal and I came here with the proper permissions so I hope I can stay," said a 34-year-old Venezuelan who ...
Two weeks after President Donald Trump began his second term, the Chicago area Venezuelan community found themselves in ...
For nearly 350,000 Venezuelans benefiting from Temporary Protected Status, a federal program the Trump administration has ...
The Trump administration has revoked the Temporary Protected Status for thousands of Venezuelans in the U.S., leaving many with an uncertain future.
President Donald Trump has moved up the timeline to April to revoke temporary protected status, know as TPS, for Venezuelan migrants who arrived in recent years.
The decision means about 348,000 Venezuelans with Temporary Protected Status, more than half of all Venezuelans in the program, could be deported and lose work permits in April, according to a ...
Temporary Protected Status (TPS), enacted in 1990, is available to nationals of designated countries who are already present in the United States, but unable to safely return to their home country.
Trump took similar steps during his first term when he tried to end Temporary Protected Status for people from El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua and Sudan. But immigration advocacy ...
This past weekend, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem revoked one of two Temporary Protected Status designations for Venezuela, which the U.S. government had previously determined was too ...