US judge halts Trump plan to end protections for 350,000 Haitians
A US judge has stopped the government from ending protections for Haitians. This prevents over 350,000 people from being sent back to Haiti. The country faces severe gang violence and displacement. The judge ruled against the administration's move...

U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes in Washington, D.C., halted the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's effort to terminate Haiti's Temporary Protected Status. The move would have taken effect on Wednesday despite spiraling violence there that has displaced more than 1.4 million people.
Reyes, who was appointed by Democratic former President Joe Biden, issued the ruling in a class action lawsuit brought by Haitians seeking to stop the administration from exposing them to deportation by ending their legal status.
TPS is available to people whose home country has experienced a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event. It provides eligible migrants with work authorization and temporary protection from deportation.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has moved to end the status for about a dozen countries as part of President Donald Trump's crackdown on immigration, saying TPS was always meant to be temporary and not a "de facto amnesty program."
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The department at that time extended TPS for another 18 months through February 3, 2026, citing "simultaneous economic, security, political, and health crises" in Haiti, fueled by gangs and a lack of a functioning government.
Shortly after Trump took office, his administration tried to curtail those humanitarian protections for Haitians in February 2025, when Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem moved to truncate the Biden-era extension so it would expire that August.
After a federal judge in New York in July ruled Noem lacked statutory authority to do so, her department in November moved to terminate Haiti's TPS status, saying there were "no extraordinary and temporary conditions" in the country that would prevent migrants from returning.
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