
What the 2026 World Cup...
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text css=""]This Sunday, the 2026 FIFA World Cup comes to a close. Two teams will take the field for the final, and...
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By: Victoria Walker, Policy Analyst
Please note that TPS designations, related litigation, and government guidance are subject to change. The information and dates included in this blog are current as of July 16, 2026, and may change as courts issue decisions or the government releases additional guidance.
On June 25, 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court fundamentally altered the future of Temporary Protected Status (TPS). In a 6-3 decision in Mullin v. Doe, the Court allowed the Trump administration to move forward in ending TPS for Syria and Haiti, while limiting the ability of federal courts to review whether those decisions complied with statutory requirements. While the ruling did not eliminate the TPS program itself, it significantly expanded the federal government’s ability to terminate TPS designations for most countries while legal challenges continue, leaving hundreds of thousands of people in legal limbo.
The Court’s decision marks another departure from the ideals long associated with this nation’s identity as a place of refuge.
Mounted inside the pedestal of America’s Statue of Liberty is a bronze plaque bearing Emma Lazarus’s enduring words:
 “Give me your tired, your poor,
 Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
 The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
 Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
 I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”
Many often reference these words when talking about immigration to the United States, and for good reason. For generations, these words have symbolized an aspiration: that the United States would serve as a refuge for people fleeing persecution, disaster, and violence. While our nation’s immigration history has often fallen short of that ideal, Lazarus’s poem has endured as a moral compass, reminding us that our policies should reflect our shared humanity.
Today, that compass feels increasingly absent.
In many ways, the TPS program reflects the spirit of Lazarus’s words: offering protection to those who cannot safely return home. Established by Congress in 1990, the program allows eligible people already present in the United States to remain and work legally when returning to their home countries would place them at risk because of armed conflict, environmental disaster, or other extraordinary conditions.
When the case was argued before the Supreme Court on April 29, 2026, USCRI warned that the outcome could threaten the stability of nearly 1.3 million people protected under TPS. With the Court’s decision, we may now see one of the largest de-documentation events in U.S. history. This decision has deepened uncertainty for hundreds of thousands of TPS holders, many of whom have built lives, raised families, and strengthened communities across the United States over decades.
In the weeks since the ruling, that uncertainty has begun to translate into tangible consequences, as TPS holders and their families await clarity on the future of their protections, their ability to work, and whether they will be allowed to remain in the communities they support and call home.
The landscape for Temporary Protected Status is unsettled. The Mullin v. Doe ruling allows the Trump administration to end TPS for Haiti and Syria, impacting at least 330,000 Haitian nationals and 6,000 Syrians. Unless district courts intervene, TPS for Syria and Haiti will likely end on July 27, 2026, 32 days after the Court’s decision.
While litigation over the Administration’s efforts to terminate several TPS designations continues, federal agencies have begun issuing guidance that directly affects TPS holders, particularly regarding their authorization to work legally in the United States.
On July 10, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) updated the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) webpage to reflect changes for TPS beneficiaries from Haiti, Syria, South Sudan, Yemen, Ethiopia, Burma (Myanmar), and Somalia. The updates include expiration dates for Employment Authorization Documents (EADs) as follows:
These dates are not final and are current as of July 16, 2026. USCIS notes that these cases remain the subject of ongoing litigation. As court proceedings continue, these dates could change, making it essential for TPS holders, employers, and service providers to monitor the webpage and official USCIS announcements for the latest information.
The impacts of terminating TPS are not only felt by beneficiaries themselves, but by communities across the country where industries such as health care and hospitality rely on the labor, expertise, and economic contributions of TPS holders. Beyond protecting individuals from being returned to dangerous conditions, extending TPS helps maintain a stable workforce, supports local businesses, and prevents unnecessary disruption for communities that have long benefited from TPS holders’ contributions. Recognizing these impacts, Members of Congress and political leaders from both parties have increasingly urged the Administration to extend TPS protections, and in some cases, introduced and supported legislation to provide an extension or provide greater stability for affected communities.
Following a successful discharge petition led by Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), the House passed bipartisan legislation (H.R. 1689) that would, if passed into law, authorize a three-year extension of TPS for Haiti. A companion bill (S. 4814) has been introduced in the Senate, but at current writing has not yet received committee consideration or a vote. Following the Supreme Court’s decision, swift passage of this legislation is critical to prevent hundreds of thousands of people from being forced to return to Haiti as the country grapples with one of the most dire humanitarian crises in the world.
Lawmakers are also pressing the Administration to act on TPS for El Salvador. On July 9, Representative Jim McGovern (D-MA) led 80 Members of Congress in a letter urging Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Mullin to extend El Salvador’s TPS designation. Earlier, on June 22, Representative Tom Suozzi (D-NY) sent a separate letter to the Secretary calling for the same action. In his July 2 response, Secretary Mullin acknowledged that a decision on El Salvador’s designation would need to be made by July 11. However, no public decision has yet been announced. Representative Suozzi subsequently sent a follow-up letter reiterating the need for a timely extension and greater certainty for Salvadoran TPS holders. Should the Administration not heed these calls, over 170,000 Salvadorans could lose protection.
Four country designations remain in effect based on actions previously taken by DHS rather than because of court-ordered protections:
Despite the Trump administration’s move to end TPS for many designated countries, some still have valid TPS due to ongoing lawsuits. However, the Supreme Court decision could impact these cases where a termination has been temporarily paused due to court order. For many TPS holders, the consequences of this uncertainty are already being felt.
Processing delays, failures to update USCIS databases, and inconsistent implementation of policy changes have caused some employers to mistakenly believe TPS work authorization has ended for certain countries. As a result, beneficiaries from countries including El Salvador, Haiti, Sudan, and Ukraine have reported employment disruptions, including wrongful suspensions and early termination from their jobs despite remaining eligible to work.
These administrative failures have real consequences. Families who have lived, worked, and contributed to their communities for years are facing unnecessary instability and impossible decisions.
As litigation continues and we await designation decisions from DHS, the future of TPS remains uncertain. For the hundreds of thousands of people who rely on these protections, each delayed decision, court ruling, and administrative update carries profound implications for their ability to work, support their families, and remain safely in the communities they call home.
The Supreme Court’s decision has changed the legal landscape, but it has not eliminated our collective responsibility. Congress retains the authority to provide lasting solutions, and the Administration can extend protections where conditions are still unsafe.
You have the power to act. Urge your Senators and Representatives to support legislation that protects TPS holders and legislation that creates permanent pathways to stability. Urge them to call on the Administration to extend existing designations and reverse terminations where conditions remain unsafe.
The ideals inscribed at the base of the Statue of Liberty and throughout this country have never been self-executing. They endure only when our laws, our leaders, and our communities choose to turn them into action. At this pivotal moment, the question is not simply what the courts have decided; it is what we, as a nation, choose to do next.

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