Supreme Court weighs Trump's effort to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, Syrians
Source: NPR
Supreme Court weighs Trump's effort to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, Syrians
April 29, 2026 5:00 AM ET
Heard on Morning Edition
Nina Totenberg

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
President Trump could move forward with mass deportations of people who have been living legally in the U.S., many of them for more than a decade, if he prevails in two cases before the Supreme Court Wednesday.
At issue is the Temporary Protected Status program, which permits eligible individuals to live and work in the United States if they cannot return to their home countries because of natural disasters, armed conflicts, and other "extraordinary or temporary conditions." Congress enacted the TPS program in 1990 to establish criteria for selecting, processing, and registering people fleeing such turmoil.
Since then, every president, Republican and Democrat, has embraced the program, except Trump. He is trying to get rid of it.
The vehicle is the temporary status extended previously to eligible individuals from two countries: Haiti, where a devastating earthquake killed more than 300,000 people in 2010 and left the country with roving gangs, cholera epidemics, and without a functioning government conditions that persist today and Syria, where a relatively small group of 7,000 individuals has been granted protected status, as a civil war and Israeli bombing attacks continue in parts of the country.
How TPS works
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Read more: https://www.npr.org/2026/04/29/nx-s1-5794042/supeme-court-tps
Hat tip, Chris Geidner
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Chris Geidner
@chrisgeidner.bsky.social
OK. The morning is going to be complicated, b/c were both getting SCOTUS opinions at 10a and then immediately going into arguments over the Trump admin effort to end temporary protected status for people from multiple nations (Haiti and Syria in Wednesdays cases). Ill be at the court. Subscribe:
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12:19 AM · Apr 29, 2026
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OK. The morning is going to be complicated, b/c weâre both getting SCOTUS opinions at 10a and then immediately going into arguments over the Trump admin effort to end temporary protected status for people from multiple nations (Haiti and Syria in Wednesdayâs cases). Iâll be at the court. Subscribe:
— Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner.bsky.social) 2026-04-29T04:19:18.065Z