The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the Trump administration can revoke Temporary Protected Status for immigrants from Haiti and Syria. The 6-to-3 ruling puts more than 1.3 million immigrants under TPS across the United States, including roughly 147,000 in Texas, at imminent risk of arrest and deportation.
Writing the conservative majority’s opinion in Mullin v. Doe, Associate Justice Samuel Alito said TPS functions entirely at the discretion of the president and is not subject to review by the courts.
“Congress created TPS in 1990 to provide short-term humanitarian relief for aliens who cannot safely return to their home countries,” Alito wrote. “Although designed to afford temporary relief, TPS designations in practice have often lasted for decades.”
Alito added that Haitian immigrants had received a TPS designation after the 2010 earthquake in the Caribbean country.
“The Supreme Court is signaling that lower courts should not interfere with the executive’s authority, that when Congress grants a broad discretionary power to grant temporary status, the president should also have the same power to revoke the temporary status,” said Josh Blackman, a professor of constitutional law at South Texas College of Law Houston. “I think this is a very important case of presidential power.”
Seth Chandler, who teaches constitutional law at the University of Houston Law Center, said the ruling has dramatic consequences for Texas, which hosts one of the largest concentrations of TPS holders in the U.S.
“It basically streamlines the ability of the Trump administration to revoke TPS status, not just for the Haitians and Syrians who were litigating in the case the Supreme Court decided today, but with respect to Hondurans, Nepalis, Afghans, and perhaps critically for Houston, potentially Venezuelans as well,” Chandler said.
Alito also wrote that President Donald Trump’s statements with respect to Haitian immigrants, as well as statements by former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, were policy-based and not racially discriminatory as the plaintiffs had argued.
Associate Justice Elena Kagan, writing the dissenting opinion, countered that the majority ruling not only denied immigrants in the United States under TPS any sort of due process but violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which forbids governments from practicing racial discrimination.
“The evidence [the Haitian plaintiffs] have offered includes statements by the President so repellent and racially inflected that the majority declines to put them in print,” Kagan wrote.
The Trump statements that Kagan cited included accusations without evidence that Haitian immigrants were eating U.S. citizens’ household pets.












