The Supreme Court ruled on June 25, 2026, that the Trump administration can end deportation protections for about 356,000 Haitians and Syrians living legally in the United States. The 6-3 decision also held that federal courts cannot review whether the administration followed the law in ending those protections, Reuters reported.
What Temporary Protected Status Is
Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, lets people from countries hit by war or disaster live and work in the United States legally until their home country is safe again. Haiti and Syria both qualified because of armed conflict and collapse.
TPS does not grant citizenship. It grants the legal right to stay and work, renewed in set periods, and holders pass background checks and pay fees to keep it.
The Court Shut the Courthouse Door
The most consequential part of the ruling is not that the protections can end. It is that no judge can check the decision. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito said the law bars courts from reviewing the secretary’s TPS calls.
“The secretary’s TPS designation decisions are not subject to judicial review.”
Justice Samuel Alito, majority opinion, June 25, 2026
That removes the main legal backstop people had against a sudden loss of status. It also fits a broader run of decisions that shrink judicial review, leaving fewer ways for courts to check executive action.
356,000 Haitians and Syrians can now lose the legal right to live and work in the U.S., with no court able to review how the decision was made.
Who Loses Their Status
About 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians are affected. Many have lived, worked, and paid taxes here for years on TPS that the government renewed again and again.
Without another form of protection, they lose work authorization and become subject to deportation, in many cases to countries the U.S. government itself still rates as too dangerous to visit. Haiti remains under a Level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory.
What You Can Do Now
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Call your members of Congress at (202) 224-3121 and ask them to pass legislation protecting TPS holders, such as the American Dream and Promise Act, which would give long-term TPS recipients a path to permanent status. The Court closed the courthouse door, so Congress is the remaining check.
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Contact the Senate and House Judiciary Committees and ask them to hold hearings on the use of the no-judicial-review provision to strip status from hundreds of thousands of legal residents without any court able to weigh in.
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Support legal aid for affected families. Groups like the National Immigration Law Center and local immigrant legal-aid organizations help people find other forms of protection before their status lapses.
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Use the letter below to tell your representatives that people who have lived and worked here legally for years should not be deported to active war zones without a hearing.
Sources
- Reuters: Supreme Court Lets Trump End Deportation Protections for Syrians and Haitians
- NBC News: Supreme Court Allows Trump to Remove Protections From Thousands of Haitian and Syrian Immigrants
- SCOTUSblog: Court Considers Whether the Trump Administration Properly Ended TPS for Haiti and Syria