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Trump-era immigration rule temporarily upheld by Supreme Court as border crisis worsens

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White House maintains that while this issue is being litigated, they are moving forward with plans for Title 42 to be lifted.

The U.S. Supreme Court granted an 11th hour request Monday night to temporarily halt the end of Title 42.

A group of 19 Republican-led states are suing to keep the policy in place at the overrun border.

Title 42 which is the pandemic-era policy that prevented the entry of millions of migrants.

Meanwhile, border communities are still bearing the brunt of the crisis. New video shows masses of released migrants camped out in the El Paso airport, sleeping on the floors, on chairs—wherever they can find a space. That city’s Democratic mayor declared a state of emergency over the weekend.

Over four million migrants have crossed the south-west border since Biden took office in 2021. The White House is still insisting though the border is not open, but critics are just not buying it.

In the Big Apple, thousands of migrants are still arriving from Texas. New York City Mayor Eric Adams is now warning that critical city programs will disappear if federal officials don’t step in to cover the costs.

Details on how the Biden administration plans to manage the border when Title 42 is lifted have still not yet been released.

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