WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's administration asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to allow it to end humanitarian parole for hundreds of thousands of immigrants from four countries, setting them up for potential deportation.
The emergency appeal asks the justices to halt a lower-court order keeping in place temporary legal status for more than 500,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela.
The Republican administration argues that the decision wrongly intrudes on the Department of Homeland Security's authority.
''The district court has nullified one of the administration's most consequential immigration policy decisions,'' Solicitor General John Sauer wrote.
The order from U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston blocked the Trump administration from putting an early end to the migrants' temporary legal status. Her ruling in mid-April came shortly before their permits were due to be canceled, opening them up to removal from the country.
Talwani, who was appointed by Democratic President Barack Obama, said that people in the program faced the option of ''fleeing the country'' or staying and ''risk losing everything.'' She said the government's explanation for ending the program was ''based on an incorrect reading of the law.''
The Justice Department went to the Supreme Court after an appeals court refused to lift Talwani's order.
Sauer argued that the judge was instead wrong on the law, including her finding that any revocations of parole must be made on a case-by-case basis. He argued that ending the program early allows the federal government to remove people from the country more quickly, in line with the Trump administration's policy goals.