U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Statement: USCRI Strongly Disagrees with the Supreme Court Ruling That Clears the Way to Strip TPS from Hundreds of Thousands

June 25, 2026

6-3 Decision in Mullin v. Doe Removes Legal Protections from Haitian and Syrian Nationals, Imperiling Families and Communities Across America 

 

Arlington, VA  — The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) strongly disagrees with today’s 6-3 decision from the Supreme Court in Mullin v. Doe which imperils Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for approximately 350,000 Haitian and 6,000 Syrian nationals living and working legally in the United States. Today’s ruling significantly weakens the judicial check on TPS termination decisions, leaving approximately 1.3 million people across 17 TPS-designated nationalities with less legal recourse to challenge future terminations.  

“Hundreds of thousands of people who hold legal status, who work, pay taxes, and raise families in our communities, now face the threat of forced return to countries still experiencing violence, crisis, and uncertainty,” said Eskinder Negash, President and CEO of USCRI. “Today’s decision leaves lives upended and will result in separated families. TPS exists because Congress recognized a simple truth: that people cannot safely return to a country that is not yet safe. The Court’s ruling must not erase that principle.” 

TPS was created by Congress in 1990 to provide humanitarian protection to nationals of countries experiencing armed conflict, natural disaster, or other extraordinary conditions. Every administration, Republican and Democrat, has upheld and extended the program for more than three decades. Haiti’s designation dates to the catastrophic 2010 earthquake; Syria’s reflects years of devastating civil war. Conditions in both countries remain dangerous as confirmed by the State Department’s own travel advisories. 

Today’s ruling comes as the Trump administration has moved to terminate TPS designations for 13 countries, placing more than one million people at risk of losing their right to live and work in the United States. By foreclosing meaningful judicial review, the Court has removed a critical check on politically motivated terminations, which could have harmful implications for pending litigation that challenges TPS terminations for other countries like South Sudan, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, and Cameroon. 

“We call on Congress, the Administration, and the American people to act with urgency to protect TPS holders and establish permanent protections for people who cannot safely return to their countries of origin,” said Negash. 

The House has already acted, passing H.R. 1689 with bipartisan support to direct the Department of Homeland Security to restore Haiti’s TPS designation. USCRI welcomes the introduction of companion legislation by Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) and 16 other Senators and urges the Senate to follow their House colleagues’ lead. USCRI also calls on state and local governments to expand access to legal services, preserve driver’s license eligibility, and ensure TPS holders can continue participating safely and fully in their communities. 

USCRI will continue to advocate alongside our partners and document the human consequences of this decision, including children separated from their families, workers removed from payrolls, and communities torn apart. We will continue to hold the government accountable to its moral and legal obligations.  

 

For more from USCRI: 

 

For press inquiries, please contact [email protected]. To learn more about USCRI, visit www.refugees.org


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