It's a narrow ruling applicable to only to recipients of temporary protection status (TPS) on humanitarian grounds after U.S. recognized qualifying catastrophic event as defined in our immigration laws. It should be noted that TPS designations for countries are only valid for up to18 months but they end up being continuously renewed long after the catastrophic event is resolved.
DACA recipients recieved temporary protection because their parents brought them into the U.S. illegally or kept them in the U.S. illegally after their Visa expired. Also, DACA is an executive order, not a law.
Unfortunately, no.
It's a narrow ruling applicable to only to recipients of temporary protection status (TPS) on humanitarian grounds after U.S. recognized qualifying catastrophic event as defined in our immigration laws. It should be noted that TPS designations for countries are only valid for up to18 months but they end up being continuously renewed long after the catastrophic event is resolved.
DACA recipients recieved temporary protection because their parents brought them into the U.S. illegally or kept them in the U.S. illegally after their Visa expired. Also, DACA is an executive order, not a law.