All posts tagged: protected

Nearly 600,000 Venezuelans in limbo after losing temporary protected status – Focus

Nearly 600,000 Venezuelans in limbo after losing temporary protected status – Focus

To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement. Accept Manage my choices One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. To watch this content, you may need to disable it on this site. Try again FOCUS © FRANCE 24 Issued on: 06/05/2026 – 15:24Modified: 06/05/2026 – 15:24 06:00 min From the show Reading time 1 min In 2025, the US Supreme Court provisionally authorised the Trump administration to lift Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans living in the United States. This status had allowed them to work legally and remain in the country as long as their return to Venezuela was deemed dangerous. Nearly 600,000 people now live in a state of profound legal uncertainty. FRANCE 24’s Fanny Allard and Fraser Jackson report from Florida. Source link

James Comey; Temporary Protected Status; The Fed : NPR

James Comey; Temporary Protected Status; The Fed : NPR

Good morning. You’re reading the Up First newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox, and listen to the Up First podcast for all the news you need to start your day. Today’s top stories The Department of Justice has secured a two-count indictment against former FBI Director James Comey. The DOJ is accusing him of threatening President Trump in an Instagram photo he posted and then deleted last year. This is the second time Trump’s Justice Department has gotten an indictment against Comey. The photo Comey posted showed seashells on a North Carolina beach arranged to read “8647” — 86 being old slang for “get rid of,” and “47” seen by some as a reference to Trump, the 47th (and 45th) president. The grand jury has issued a warrant for Comey’s arrest, according to court documents. Former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey leaves the Rayburn House Office Building after testifying on Capitol Hill Dec. 7, 2018, in Washington, D.C. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images 🎧 NPR’s Carrie Johnson tells …

Spirit employees must be protected in any bailout: Union

Spirit employees must be protected in any bailout: Union

A union representing workers at Spirit Airlines said Friday that potential federal relief for the bankrupt carrier must protect its employees. The International Association of ​Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), the union representing the airline’s ramp service employees, said in a statement “that means no furloughs, no layoffs, and no shifting the burden onto the… Source link

Single Parents Are Being Failed. It’s Time The Equality Act Protected Us

Single Parents Are Being Failed. It’s Time The Equality Act Protected Us

The last few weeks as a single parent campaigner have been a whirlwind, from the celebrations of Single Parents Day to the reality-check of the latest child poverty data. The days leading up to Single Parents Day (21 March) were filled with celebrations in Parliament, local events, and online campaigns. By the time the day arrived, I was both exhausted and energised. More importantly though, I felt seen and – for a moment – the weight of solo parenting felt lighter. But fast forward less than a week later and data released by the government was a stark reminder that single parents are fighting a system stacked against them. A system that no amount of community can overcome. Almost 1.5 million children in single parent families – 41% – are living in poverty, compared with 23% of children in coupled families. Policies often aren’t designed for single parent families One driver of this stark difference in poverty rates is that policies aren’t designed for single parent families. Take the benefit cap, for example. The cap …

Lindsay Lohan questions why no-one protected her as a young star

Lindsay Lohan questions why no-one protected her as a young star

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Lindsay Lohan has opened up about her early career, questioning why she wasn’t better protected from the intense scrutiny of the spotlight. In a new interview, the Mean Girls actor told Vogue Arabia she often wonders: “Why didn’t anyone just go and take me out of there, protect me more?” Lohan, who relocated to Dubai in 2014, met her husband, Kuwaiti financier Bader Shammas, in the city. The couple welcomed their son, Luai, in July 2023. Describing her relationship with her husband, Lohan, now 39, told the magazine: “We’re so good together because he’s so calm and I’m like a firecracker. We have a great balance. “Being in Dubai is very grounding. I get to just spend time with my family. The city gives me a sense of being with what’s most important.” open image in gallery Lindsay Lohan in The …

Employment experts agree: Telework is a protected right

Employment experts agree: Telework is a protected right

President Trump’s January 2025 memorandum delivered a blunt operational directive: End broad remote work in the federal government and restore full-time, in-person duty stations.  Although many leaders treated it as a fast lane back to 2019 norms, employees who use telework as a disability accommodation read it as a civil rights test, because their workday depends on more than convenience.  … Source link

Trump Administration Ends Temporary Protected Status for Yemen

Trump Administration Ends Temporary Protected Status for Yemen

Feb 13 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald ⁠Trump’s ⁠administration has ended ⁠temporary protected status for Yemen, Secretary ​of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said on Friday, the ‌latest move targeting immigrants. The ‌decision to end humanitarian protections that ⁠grant ⁠deportation relief and work permits to more than a ​thousand Yemeni nationals was taken after determining that it was against the U.S. “national interest”, Noem said. TPS ​provides relief to people already in the U.S. ⁠if their ⁠home countries experience ⁠a ​natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event. The ​Trump administration has ⁠sought to end most enrollment in the program, saying it runs counter to U.S. interests. “After reviewing conditions in the country and consulting ⁠with appropriate U.S. government agencies, I determined that Yemen ⁠no longer meets the law’s requirements to be designated for Temporary Protected Status,” she said. Around 1,380 Yemeni nationals were covered by the temporary protected status as of March 31, 2025, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. The status was last extended ⁠in 2024 and was set to expire on …

Judge stops Noem from ending Haitians’ protected status, but fear of ICE remains

Judge stops Noem from ending Haitians’ protected status, but fear of ICE remains

(RNS) — In a last-minute ruling on Monday (Feb. 2), a U.S. district judge in Washington halted the Department of Homeland Security’s attempt to end temporary protected status for Haitian immigrants. TPS, which allows designated Haitian nationals to live and work in the United States, was set to expire on Tuesday (Feb. 3) for some 350,000 people.   In her ruling on Miot v. Trump, which was filed in July 2025, Judge Ana C. Reyes said the TPS termination announced by DHS Secretary Krisi Noem was “null, void, and of no legal effect.”  Reyes wrote that Noem’s claims that Haiti’s current situation didn’t justify an extension of the status didn’t align with the certified administrative record’s findings that the island was plagued by a “perfect storm of suffering” and “staggering humanitarian toll.” She also noted that Noem didn’t consult other agencies in making her decision and that she didn’t have unbounded discretion to end the status.  “Secretary Noem complains of strains unlawful immigrants place on our immigration-enforcement system. Her answer? Turn 352,959 lawful immigrants into unlawful …