TPS is back in court and on the chopping block as courts and the Court debate ending protections for Haitians, Syrians, Venezuelans, etc. Quick bio: TPS is a U.S. policy protecting unauthorized foreign nationals from deportation for designated crises.
A string of court decisions has kept Temporary Protected Status in play as the Supreme Court weighs termination actions for Haiti and Syria. Rulings have required due process reviews amid broader political battles over humanitarian protections.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled unanimously that the government’s interpretation of the 1996 immigration law defies its plain text, affecting how immigrants detained under the policy are treated and potentially prompting further Supreme Court review as the White House defends the policy amid growing lawsuits.
Federal judges in New York and Washington have barred the Trump administration from terminating Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and Syrians. The administration is appealing, arguing DHS can end TPS, while opponents say the process was not followed. The cases affect hundreds of thousands and come as the Supreme Court weighs related immigration and asylum issues.
A federal judge has ruled that Trump-era USCIS restrictions on asylum, work permits, green cards and citizenship were unlawful, restoring standard adjudication and reopening backlogged applications. The decision centers on policies that limited decisions for millions of immigrants from 39 countries, leaving many in legal limbo and denying work authorization.