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jeudi 12 mars 2026

Trump Just Requested the Supreme Court Intervene and Let Him Revoke Temporary Protected Status for 300,000 Haitians — SCOTUS Needs To Overturn the Activist Judge — SEND THEM BACK


Trump Just Requested the Supreme Court Intervene and Let Him Revoke Temporary Protected Status for 300,000 Haitians — SCOTUS Needs To Overturn the Activist Judge — SEND THEM BACK


 President Trump is taking decisive action to restore order at our borders. He's filed an emergency request with the Supreme Court to overturn an activist judge's ruling that blocks ending Temporary Protected Status for around 350,000 Haitians. This program, expanded under Biden, was never meant to become permanent residency.


The original TPS was for genuine temporary crises, but it's been abused as a backdoor for mass migration. Haiti’s conditions, while difficult, don't justify indefinite stays here while American communities face strain from unchecked inflows. Ending this now upholds the law and puts Americans first.

The Supreme Court must step in and let the executive branch enforce immigration rules without rogue lower courts interfering. Deportation isn't cruelty—it's accountability. Time to send them home and secure our nation.



The image lines up Donald Trump and three Supreme Court justices — Gorsuch, Barrett, Kavanaugh — like a certification panel, under a headline that reads more like a petition: “INTERVENE,” “300K Haitians Biden brought in,” “activist judge,” “SEND THEM BACK.” It’s punchy, but it compresses a messy legal story into a command.

Let’s unpack. Temporary Protected Status for Haiti covers about 520,000 people as of this summer, according to DHS and reporting by Miami Herald/WSJ — not 300,000, and not all of them arrived under Biden. TPS for Haiti was first created in 2010 after the earthquake; Biden’s DHS redesignated and expanded it in 2021–24. Trump’s DHS tried to end TPS for Haiti and other countries in his first term; those terminations were blocked by federal courts that found the process violated administrative law. The cycle repeated: new terminations, new injunctions.

What’s happening now: In Trump’s second term, DHS again moved to end Haiti’s designation, and a district judge in September 2025 kept protections in place, calling the government’s rationale under-explained. The Justice Department asked SCOTUS to lift that order. That part is real — the government has requested emergency relief. But SCOTUS hasn’t ruled yet, and the headline’s “needs to overturn…SEND THEM BACK” is advocacy, not reporting.

Two more clarifications: TPS holders don’t get “brought in” by a president; people already here can apply after a designation. And an adverse ruling wouldn’t whisk 300,000 people onto planes overnight; it would end a temporary protection, shifting people into other statuses or back into removal proceedings.

So yes, there’s a case, and yes, it’s heated. The photo slaps faces on a docket and shortens the caption to a chant. The law, as usual, is slower and more careful with numbers.

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