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Tag: TPS

  • Haitian TPS holders in Florida get green light to renew driver licenses

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    People wait outside a driver license office for their appointments on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026, in Hialeah Gardens, Fla. As of Feb. 6, 2026, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles requires all driver license knowledge and skills examinations to be conducted exclusively in English.

    People wait outside a driver license office for their appointments on Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026, in Hialeah Gardens, Fla. As of Feb. 6, 2026, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles requires all driver license knowledge and skills examinations to be conducted exclusively in English.

    mocner@miamiherald.com

    Haitians in Florida with Temporary Protected Status can continue renewing their driver licenses, Miami-Dade County said, citing updated state guidance.

    But the directive only applies until March 15 or when a court makes a decision in the ongoing appeal process filed by the Trump administration following the decision by a federal judge earlier this month to halt the end of the protections. TPS has allowed more than 300,000 Haitians to live and work in the United States on a temporary basis due to ongoing political, security and humanitarian crisis in their homeland.

    The Miami-Dade County Tax Collector’s Office said it is assisting eligible residents in accordance with a directive from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles. Individuals with TPS or a pending application and present an expired Employment Authorization Document will remain eligible for a driver’s license through March 15. Those seeking issuance beyond that date must provide alternative proof of lawful presence, consistent with the advisory.

    Immigration advocates warn that Haitians should check their state’s requirements and in some cases may need to seek other alternatives to driving like public transportation or carpooling to avoid a traffic infraction and possible detention by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    The guidance follows a ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Ana C. Reyes, who earlier this moth temporarily halted the federal government’s efforts to end TPS after five Haitian nationals sued the Department of Homeland Security. DHS asked Reyes to lift her order, and last week she declined while also ordering the administration to update its systems so that Haitians with driver’s licenses can remain eligible to drive.

    In addition to appealing to Reyes herself, DHS has also filed a separate appeal in the case, Miot et al vs. Trump, now before a federal appellate court.

    Lawyers for the plaintiffs have submitted briefs supporting Haitian TPS holders from the AFL-CIO and 10 affiliated labor unions as well as from 17 states and the District of Columbia. Among the roughly 50,000 TPS holders who work in healthcare, many are employed in Massachusetts, where “40% of the front-line staff in nursing homes are foreign born, many from Haiti,” lawyers wrote.

    Massachusetts, boasts the third-largest population of Haitians in the U.S. after Florida and New York. The other states that have joined the brief are California, New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Main, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and the District of Columbia.

    The states, led by New York Attorney General Letitia James, argue that stripping Haitians of TPS would harm their economies, which would likely face a wave of mortgage foreclosures, decline in tax revenues and souring of their economies.

    In the court filing, they said TPS-eligible Haitians contribute $3.4 billion annually to the U.S. economy; 14.5% of TPS holders are entrepreneurs, compared with 9.3% of the U.S.-born workforce, and TPS holders pay taxes “on property having a total value of $19 billion.”

    They also noted that TPS holders from all countries, including Haiti, paid $3.1 billion in federal taxes and $2.1 billion in state and local taxes.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Federal judge maintains block on ending Haitian TPS, responds to death threats

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    Linda Joseph, a community activist, shields her eyes while in prayer during the candlelight vigil as public officials from Miami-Dade County, the City of Miami and North Miami, along with community members, gathered for a TPS candle light prayer vigil at the Little Haiti Cultural Complex on Feb. 3, 2026, in Miami. The event, held in support of the local TPS community, included prayer, reflection and calls for unity and hope.

    Linda Joseph, a community activist, shields her eyes while in prayer during a candlelight vigil in support of Haitians with Temporary Protected Status. The event was held at the Little Haiti Cultural Complex in Miami on Feb. 3, 2026.

    cjuste@miamiherald.com

    In a hearing that highlighted the increasing pressure the federal judiciary is facing in high-stakes immigration cases, a Washington, D.C. judge on Thursday declined to reverse her decision that blocked the Trump administration from ending immigration protections for more than 300,000 Haitians.

    “I am denying the government’s motion to stay,” U.S. District Court Judge Ana Reyes said.

    The judge said she would issue a written order in time for an appellate court to hear the government’s appeal. The government, in an unusual move last week, appealed both to the appellate court and to Reyes herself, asking her to reverse her decision. The federal appeals court has given lawyers representing the Department of Homeland Security until April 19 to provide briefs.

    After delivering her decision, Reyes said she wanted to address what had followed after her Feb. 2 ruling pausing the termination of Haiti’s Temporary Protected Status designation. The ruling gave a temporary reprieve to more than 300,000 Haitians, who would have faced the loss of their right to continuing living and working in the United States, leaving them vulnerable to deportation back to Haiti.

    “I do feel compelled to clarify a couple of misconceptions,” Reyes said as she went on to list some of the accusations some people have made about her, and the threats she has received.

    Yes, she is an immigrant herself, she said. No, she did not hide that fact from any of the agencies tasked with investigating her, including the White House, the FBI or the Senate Judiciary Committee when she was nominated to the federal bench by President Joe Biden.

    Reyes , who was born in Uruguay and came to the U.S. as a child, said she didn’t mind the messages that referred to her as “illiterate,” even as they failed to note she graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School and spent 22 years litigating high-profile federal issues. What she does object to, Reyes said, are the death threat against her that have been posted on social media and sent to her email.

    Death threats

    “I hope you die today,” she said, reading from a lengthy email. “Enjoy choking on your tongue.”

    On social media others called for the hanging of judges, while using other offensive adjectives to refer to her.

    It is common for judges these days to receive such threats, Reyes said, and some have received even worse. But she added that, like her colleagues on the bench, she will not stop from upholding the law, acting without fear and favor.

    “To those who disagree with me, I say ‘Thank you,’” Reyes said. “Judges should be questioned, the politicians should be questioned. I welcome the government’s appeal because appellate courts are a necessary part of the democratic system.”

    But for those who threaten judges, Reyes said, “We will not be intimidated.”

    Her remarks came after a contentious hearing in which she made clear she would not reverse her earlier order. Throughout the proceedings, she sharply questioned the government’s lawyer. In one exchange, lawyers for the five Haitian plaintiffs in the case told her that some TPS holders were having difficulties renewing their driver’s licenses, because federal systems showed that their protections had expired.

    When she questioned the government’t lawyer, Reyes issued a stern warning after he told her the administration was trying to “avoid mass confusion,” since the case is on appeal.

    She told government lawyers she is not “one of those judges who is going to sit around and wait for you all to violate court order after court order. There will be serious consequences.”

    Frustrated judges

    The Trump administration has increasingly encountered resistance in federal court as it seeks to advance its mass deportation agenda, with some judges expressing frustration both at what they view as disregard for their rulings and at how government lawyers have characterized those decisions.

    Thursday’s hearing was no exception. Reyes pressed the government on its claim that it would suffer “irreparable harm” if it were not allowed to end TPS for Haitians.

    She questioned the government’s interpretation of her initial order in their appeal, and she pushed back on an administration attempt to compare her to President Biden’s handing of immigration benefits to a broad group of immigrants.

    “That Biden decision is not in front of me,” Reyes said, adding that the comparison was “legally meaningless.”

    She also stressed that if she were to stay her decision and a higher court were to later rule in favor of the Haitian plaintiffs, those deported to Haiti would have no legal path to return to the U.S. She also criticized the administration for what she said was a misleading interpretation of her ruling, in which she said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had failed to follow the law and consult with other agencies before deciding to end TPS for Haitians.

    “My determination is Congress required her to consult with appropriate agencies, and she did not consult with any agency, including the Department of State,” she said.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Trump promise to end TPS for Haitians blocked by judge

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    A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from forcing hundreds of thousands of Haitians to leave the U.S., a temporary blow to President Donald Trump’s campaign promise he made while spreading a ridiculous falsehood about Haitians eating pets in Springfield, Ohio.

    U.S. District Court Judge Ana C. Reyes in Washington, D.C., said in her Feb. 2 ruling it “seems substantially likely” that the administration decided to terminate Temporary Protected Status “because of hostility to nonwhite immigrants.”

    The ruling came a day before the federal protections for Haitians were set to expire in accordance with a Department of Homeland Security directive issued by Secretary Kristi Noem. Reyes’ ruling allows litigation to continue before the protections end.

    Temporary Protected Status, which allows people to temporarily live and work in the U.S., is provided to people from certain countries experiencing war, environmental disasters and epidemics. The U.S. first gave Haitians eligibility for the program following a 2010 earthquake. During the Biden administration, Haiti’s deteriorating conditions prompted the U.S. federal government to redesignate Haiti’s status , allowing more Haitians to become eligible. 

    More than 300,000 Haitians who have TPS live in the U.S., with the largest group residing in Florida. Many work in health care, manufacturing or agriculture.

    The judge’s ruling brought relief for Haitians and employers who rely on them. 

    The Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported days before the ruling that some of the senior citizens at Sinai Residences in Boca Raton, Florida, asked if they could hide Haitian staff in their apartments. About 9% of staff members are Haitians with Temporary Protected Status while 69% of the center’s staff are foreign-born.

    Springfield’s Republican Mayor Rob Rue said in a statement that the ruling provides stability for families who are part of the community. 

    “It reflects the reality that many individuals are working, paying taxes, raising families and contributing every day to the life of our City,” he said. 

    The Trump administration plans to appeal the ruling, which means that federal protections for Haitians remain in jeopardy.

    “Supreme Court, here we come,” wrote Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin.

    The class action lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s ending of TPS was filed on behalf of five Haitian TPS holders, including a nurse in Springfield, Ohio, a neuroscience graduate student in California, a software engineer who lives in New Jersey, a New York college student and a laboratory assistant in a toxicology department.

    Q: What did the judge rule?

    Reyes found that Noem’s decision to terminate TPS was “arbitrary and capricious” and ignored a requirement by Congress that she review conditions in Haiti after consulting with appropriate agencies.

    The federal government said in a November notice ending TPS that “there are no extraordinary and temporary conditions in Haiti” that prevent Haitian nationals “from returning in safety.”

    That conclusion runs counter to the evidence, Reyes found, pointing to the State Department warnings against travel to Haiti because of crime, terrorism and civil unrest.

    In an 83-page ruling, Reyes called out repeated anti-immigrant rhetoric by Noem and Trump.

    Noem’s decision to terminate TPS “was motivated, at least in part, by racial animus,” Reyes wrote. She noted statements by Noem calling people from certain countries “killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies,” and saying, “WE DON’T WANT THEM. NOT ONE.”

    During a December 2025 Pennsylvania rally, Trump said the U.S. allows in people from “shithole countries.” He added, “Why can’t we have some people from Norway, Sweden — just a few — let us have a few from Denmark.”

    The judge wrote, “It is not a coincidence that Haiti’s population is ninety-five percent black while Norway’s is over ninety percent white.”

    Q: What does the ruling mean for Haitians with TPS?

    For now, Haitians who have TPS can remain in the U.S.

    If the Trump administration were allowed to end TPS, immigration authorities could arrest TPS holders, terminate asylum proceedings and send Haitians to a third country the U.S. has an agreement with, such as Uganda, Ecuador, or Honduras, University of Miami law professor Irwin Stotzky told PolitiFact before the ruling.

    Q: Why does the Trump administration want to end the program?

    Trump promised to end protections for Haitians while campaigning in 2024 as he spread the falsehood that Haitians in Springfield were stealing and eating people’s pets. 

    City and county officials said repeatedly that was not happening. Rebuttals did not diminish the consequences, including dozens of bomb threats at schools, grocery stores and government buildings. PolitiFact named the statements by Trump and his running mate JD Vance the 2024 Lie of the Year

    About 10,000 Haitians with TPS now live in Springfield. Some news reports cite higher figures, but the population may have declined since Trump took office.

    McLaughlin, Homeland Security’s spokesperson, said after the Feb. 2 ruling, “Haiti’s TPS was granted following an earthquake that took place over 15 years ago, it was never intended to be a de facto amnesty program, yet that’s how previous administrations have used it for decades. Temporary means temporary and the final word will not be from an activist judge legislating from the bench.”

    Although TPS was originally designated because of the earthquake, it was redesignated multiple times including after the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse and other national upheaval.

    During Trump’s first term, the courts blocked his administration’s efforts to end TPS for Haitians. 

    RELATED: Immigration after one year under Trump: Where do mass deportation efforts stand?

    Q: Are people who have TPS eligible for government assistance?

    Business leaders and politicians — including Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican — said Haitian TPS holders contribute positively to the economy. TPS critics said Haitians are a drain on government resources.

    Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, told 10 WBNS in late January that ending the temporary protections “doesn’t necessarily mean (affected Haitians) have to go back to Haiti. They can go wherever they’d like, but we cannot continue to keep that many people that are predominantly reliant on our social safety net programs.”  

    We contacted Moreno’s office to ask which safety net programs he referred to and received no response.

    TPS holders are not eligible for federal benefits such as Temporary Assistance to Needy Families and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, according to the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute. (If someone had TPS but then obtained asylum or permanent residency, then that subsequent status determines their eligibility for federal benefits.)

    For Medicaid and the federal Children’s Health Insurance Program, TPS holders are eligible if pregnant or up to 21 years old in states that elect to cover these groups..

    Examining government services used by TPS holders is only part of the equation.

    Reyes wrote that Noem “failed to consider the impact Haitian TPS holders have on our economy” and “did not account for the $1.3 billion they pay annually in taxes, among their many other contributions.”

    RELATED: Tracking Trump’s campaign promises on our MAGA-Meter

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  • US appeals court says Secretary Noem’s decision to end protections for Venezuelans in US was illegal

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    A federal appeals court ruled late Wednesday that the Trump administration acted illegally when it ended legal protections that gave hundreds of thousands of people from Venezuela permission to live and work in the United States.A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling that found Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem exceeded her authority when she ended temporary protected status for Venezuelans.The decision, however, will not have any immediate practical effect after the U.S. Supreme Court in October allowed Noem’s decision to take effect pending a final decision by the justices.An email late Wednesday night to the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned.The 9th Circuit panel also upheld the lower court’s finding that Noem exceeded her authority when she decided to end TPS early for hundreds of thousands of people from Haiti.A federal judge in Washington is expected to rule any day now on a request to pause the termination of TPS for Haiti while a separate lawsuit challenging it proceeds. The country’s TPS designation is scheduled to end on Feb. 3.Ninth Circuit Judges Kim Wardlaw, Salvador Mendoza, Jr. and Anthony Johnstone said in Wednesday’s ruling that the TPS legislation passed by Congress did not give the secretary the power to vacate an existing TPS designation. All three judges were nominated by Democratic presidents.“The statute contains numerous procedural safeguards that ensure individuals with TPS enjoy predictability and stability during periods of extraordinary and temporary conditions in their home country,” Judge Kim Wardlaw, who was nominated by President Bill Clinton, wrote for the panel.Wardlaw said Noem’s “unlawful actions have had real and significant consequences” for Venezuelans and Haitians in the United States who rely on TPS.“The record is replete with examples of hard-working, contributing members of society — who are mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, and partners of U.S. citizens, pay taxes, and have no criminal records — who have been deported or detained after losing their TPS,” she wrote.Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, authorized by Congress as part of the Immigration Act of 1990, allows the Homeland Security secretary to grant legal immigration status to people fleeing countries experiencing civil strife, environmental disaster or other “extraordinary and temporary conditions” that prevent a safe return to that home country.Designations are granted for terms of six, 12 or 18 months, and extensions can be granted so long as conditions remain dire. The status prevents holders from being deported and allows them to work, but it does not give them a path to citizenship.In ending the protections, Noem said that conditions in both Haiti and Venezuela had improved and that it was not in the national interest to allow immigrants from the two countries to stay on for what is a temporary program.Millions of Venezuelans have fled political unrest, mass unemployment and hunger. The country is mired in a prolonged crisis brought on by years of hyperinflation, political corruption, economic mismanagement and an ineffectual government.Haiti was first designated for TPS in 2010 after a catastrophic magnitude 7.0 earthquake killed and wounded hundreds of thousands of people, and left more than 1 million homeless. Haitians face widespread hunger and gang violence.Mendoza wrote separately that there was “ample evidence of racial and national origin animus” that reinforced the lower court’s conclusion that Noem’s decisions were “preordained and her reasoning pretextual.”“It is clear that the Secretary’s vacatur actions were not actually grounded in substantive policy considerations or genuine differences with respect to the prior administration’s TPS procedures, but were instead rooted in a stereotype-based diagnosis of immigrants from Venezuela and Haiti as dangerous criminals or mentally unwell,” he wrote.Attorneys for the government have argued the secretary has clear and broad authority to make determinations related to the TPS program and those decisions are not subject to judicial review. They have also denied that her actions were motived by racial animus.

    A federal appeals court ruled late Wednesday that the Trump administration acted illegally when it ended legal protections that gave hundreds of thousands of people from Venezuela permission to live and work in the United States.

    A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling that found Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem exceeded her authority when she ended temporary protected status for Venezuelans.

    The decision, however, will not have any immediate practical effect after the U.S. Supreme Court in October allowed Noem’s decision to take effect pending a final decision by the justices.

    An email late Wednesday night to the Department of Homeland Security was not immediately returned.

    The 9th Circuit panel also upheld the lower court’s finding that Noem exceeded her authority when she decided to end TPS early for hundreds of thousands of people from Haiti.

    A federal judge in Washington is expected to rule any day now on a request to pause the termination of TPS for Haiti while a separate lawsuit challenging it proceeds. The country’s TPS designation is scheduled to end on Feb. 3.

    Ninth Circuit Judges Kim Wardlaw, Salvador Mendoza, Jr. and Anthony Johnstone said in Wednesday’s ruling that the TPS legislation passed by Congress did not give the secretary the power to vacate an existing TPS designation. All three judges were nominated by Democratic presidents.

    “The statute contains numerous procedural safeguards that ensure individuals with TPS enjoy predictability and stability during periods of extraordinary and temporary conditions in their home country,” Judge Kim Wardlaw, who was nominated by President Bill Clinton, wrote for the panel.

    Wardlaw said Noem’s “unlawful actions have had real and significant consequences” for Venezuelans and Haitians in the United States who rely on TPS.

    “The record is replete with examples of hard-working, contributing members of society — who are mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, and partners of U.S. citizens, pay taxes, and have no criminal records — who have been deported or detained after losing their TPS,” she wrote.

    Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, authorized by Congress as part of the Immigration Act of 1990, allows the Homeland Security secretary to grant legal immigration status to people fleeing countries experiencing civil strife, environmental disaster or other “extraordinary and temporary conditions” that prevent a safe return to that home country.

    Designations are granted for terms of six, 12 or 18 months, and extensions can be granted so long as conditions remain dire. The status prevents holders from being deported and allows them to work, but it does not give them a path to citizenship.

    In ending the protections, Noem said that conditions in both Haiti and Venezuela had improved and that it was not in the national interest to allow immigrants from the two countries to stay on for what is a temporary program.

    Millions of Venezuelans have fled political unrest, mass unemployment and hunger. The country is mired in a prolonged crisis brought on by years of hyperinflation, political corruption, economic mismanagement and an ineffectual government.

    Haiti was first designated for TPS in 2010 after a catastrophic magnitude 7.0 earthquake killed and wounded hundreds of thousands of people, and left more than 1 million homeless. Haitians face widespread hunger and gang violence.

    Mendoza wrote separately that there was “ample evidence of racial and national origin animus” that reinforced the lower court’s conclusion that Noem’s decisions were “preordained and her reasoning pretextual.”

    “It is clear that the Secretary’s vacatur actions were not actually grounded in substantive policy considerations or genuine differences with respect to the prior administration’s TPS procedures, but were instead rooted in a stereotype-based diagnosis of immigrants from Venezuela and Haiti as dangerous criminals or mentally unwell,” he wrote.

    Attorneys for the government have argued the secretary has clear and broad authority to make determinations related to the TPS program and those decisions are not subject to judicial review. They have also denied that her actions were motived by racial animus.

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  • ‘Such a travesty.” Advocates for Haiti blast Trump administration’s move to end TPS

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    People stand near debris on a street on October 6, 2025 in the Solino neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, as residents have begun returning to the area after it was attacked by gang fighters in late 2024. More than 16,000 people have been killed in armed violence in Haiti since the start of 2022, the United Nations said on October 2, warning that "the worst may be yet to come". The poorest country in the Americas, Haiti has long suffered at the hands of violent criminal gangs that commit murders, rapes, looting, and kidnappings against a backdrop of chronic political instability. (Photo by Clarens SIFFROY / AFP) (Photo by CLARENS SIFFROY/AFP via Getty Images)

    People stand near debris on a street on October 6, 2025 in the Solino neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, as residents have begun returning to the area after it was attacked by gang fighters in late 2024. More than 16,000 people have been killed in armed violence in Haiti since the start of 2022, the United Nations said on October 2, warning that “the worst may be yet to come”. The poorest country in the Americas, Haiti has long suffered at the hands of violent criminal gangs that commit murders, rapes, looting, and kidnappings against a backdrop of chronic political instability.

    AFP via Getty Images

    The Trump administration’s decision to end Temporary Protected Status, TPS, for up to a half million Haitians prompted an immediate wave of criticism from non-profit organizations working in Haiti, community activists and some Democratic lawmakers.

    In its announcement on Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving, the Department of Homeland Security said it does not serve national interests to have Haitians legally living and working in the U.S. on a temporary basis, even though their unstable homeland faces one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

    DHS said Secretary Kristi Noem “has determined that there are no extraordinary and temporary conditions in Haiti that prevent Haitian nationals (or aliens having no nationality who last habitually resided in Haiti) from returning in safety.”

    The agency set a Feb. 3, 2026, deadline for leaving and said those who self-deport and use the CBP Home mobile application to report their departure will also be eligible for a complimentary plane ticket, a $1,000 exit bonus and noted there were potential future opportunities for legal immigration.

    But the administration has already set up barriers for that to happen. Haiti is one of 19 countries covered by a travel ban that restricts nationals from entering the United States. That restriction was introduced earlier this year by President Donald Trump and applies to any Haitian who currently doesn’t have a valid U.S. visa.

    Advocates for Haiti, from a Miami-Dade County commissioner to international groups, blasted the move in statement to the Miami Herald. It’s also likely to draw legal challenges:

    * “Is this the way to give thanks to a people whose ancestors fought for U.S. independence, a people who by defeating the Napoleon army, allowed the U.S. to double its size through the Louisiana Purchase, thereby contributing to its wealth ? A people who continue to give their all to make this nation great.

    “Haiti is going through one of the worst crisis in history; it is totally controlled by violent gangs , plagued by political violence and instability, with daily reports of killings, kidnappings, arson and collective gang rapes. Forcing anyone to return under these conditions could expose them to serious harm and possibly death.

    “TPS holders work hard to take care of their families, send remittances back home and contribute about $21 billion annually to the U.S. economy, in addition to paying $5.2 billion in combined federal, payroll, state, and local taxes. I urge the Trump administration to reverse course and Congress to work promptly in a bi-partisan manner to blaze a path to protect these most deserving families.” —Miami Dade County Commissioner Marleine Bastien.

    * “The Trump Administration, hellbent on ending TPS for Haitians, will be remembered for their cruelty and attacks against Haitians living lawfully in the United States. They must reverse course now.” — U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-New York, House Foreign Affairs Committee ranking member.

    * “At World Relief, we’re heartbroken by this decision to press ahead with the termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians currently residing and working lawfully in the United States—though, at this point, after the Department of Homeland Security has sought to terminate TPS for lawfully present individuals from Afghanistan, Syria, South Sudan, Burma and Venezuela, we’re no longer surprised.

    “As an organization that has operated in Haiti since 1988 in partnership with local churches, we are painfully aware that, whatever our government says, Haiti is not currently a safe place to which to deport hundreds of thousands of people, particularly after being hit hard by Hurricane Melissa less than a month ago. We pray that Secretary Noem will reconsider this decision and that Americans will both advocate for their Haitian neighbors in the U.S. and step up to provide further resources to come alongside brave Haitian leaders confronting one humanitarian crisis after another.” — Matthew Soerens, vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief.

    Armed gang members on a motorbike patrol the streets in the Mariani neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on October 6, 2025. Mariani is near the Route Nationale 2, parts of which have been taken over by gangs. More than 16,000 people have been killed in armed violence in Haiti since the start of 2022, the United Nations said on October 2, warning that "the worst may be yet to come". The poorest country in the Americas, Haiti has long suffered at the hands of violent criminal gangs that commit murders, rapes, looting, and kidnappings against a backdrop of chronic political instability. (Photo by Clarens SIFFROY / AFP) (Photo by CLARENS SIFFROY/AFP via Getty Images)
    Armed gang members on a motorbike patrol the streets in the Mariani neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on October 6, 2025. Mariani is near the Route Nationale 2, parts of which have been taken over by gangs. More than 16,000 people have been killed in armed violence in Haiti since the start of 2022, the United Nations said on October 2, warning that “the worst may be yet to come”. The poorest country in the Americas, Haiti has long suffered at the hands of violent criminal gangs that commit murders, rapes, looting, and kidnappings against a backdrop of chronic political instability. CLARENS SIFFROY AFP via Getty Images

    * “Blown away by the hatefulness, which seems to pervade our government leadership. Protected status, ha! Such a travesty, half a million Haitians have nowhere to return to. Breaks our heart… This just adds to the displacement problem. When will this end?

    “America being great by disparaging the world’s most vulnerable people…really? So sad! Hope the challenges overwhelm the administration and they are forced to back down. This is a complete farce!!” — Dr. Ted Higgins, a retired vascular surgeon based in Kansas City who built and operates a medical center in Fond-Parisien along National Road 8, which connects Port-au-Prince to the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo

    * “As Mayor of North Miami, I am deeply disappointed by the administration’s decision to end Haiti’s TPS designation. Every day, I hear from residents who cannot safely return due to political violence and instability, and Haiti simply cannot absorb hundreds of thousands of people right now. Announcing this on the eve of Thanksgiving is especially cruel to families already living in fear. As one of the cities with the largest Haitian communities in America, we are devastated.

    “This moment demands compassion and responsible leadership. The Haitian community has shown remarkable resilience, and while this decision may shake us, it will not break our spirit.” — North Miami Mayor Alix Desulme

    This story was originally published November 26, 2025 at 9:11 PM.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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  • Trump says Haiti no longer meets requirements for TPS. Haitians have to leave

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    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem concluded that Haiti no longer meets the ‘statutory requirements for TPS.’

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem concluded that Haiti no longer meets the ‘statutory requirements for TPS.’

    TNS

    The Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday announced the end of temporary immigration protections for Haitians, adding them to a growing list of immigrant groups seeing their protected status revoked by the Trump administration.

    The decision, which becomes effective on Feb. 3, 2026, could affect more than a half million Haitians living in the U.S. under what is known as Temporary Protected Status. The designation was granted to Haiti after a string of natural and political disasters, starting with a catastrophic earthquake in 2010 that left the country and economy in ruins.

    Barring potential legal delays from lawsuits, Haitians now will face returning to an unstable country facing one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises as criminal gangs control all major roads in and out of the capital of Port-au-Prince, and aggressively spread their terror to other regions.

    DHS in its Federal Register notice acknowledged that “certain conditions in Haiti remain concerning.” But despite that, and the escalating violence “that has ‘engulfed’ Port-au-Prince‘, Secretary Kristi Noem “has determined that there are no extraordinary and temporary conditions in Haiti that prevent Haitian nationals (or aliens having no nationality who last habitually resided in Haiti) from returning in safety,” the agency wrote.

    “Moreover, even if the Department found that there existed conditions that were extraordinary and temporary that prevented Haitian nationals,” the agency added, “from returning in safety, termination of Temporary Protected Status of Haiti is still required because it is contrary to the national interest of the United States to permit Haitian nationals …to remain temporarily in the United States.”

    As of 11:59 p.m. February 3, 2026, all Haitian nationals who have been granted TPS, will lose the status and must leave.

    “After consulting with interagency partners, Secretary Noem concluded that Haiti no longer meets the statutory requirements for TPS,” the agency wrote in its announcement.

    “This decision was based on a review conducted by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, input from relevant U.S. government agencies, and an analysis indicating that allowing Haitian nationals to remain temporarily in the United States is inconsistent with U.S. national interests.”

    The numbers paint a terrible picture in Haiti. A record 5.7 million people — 51% of the total population — are currently experiencing acute levels of hunger, with children increasingly at risk for malnutrition, the World Food Program recently warned. Meanwhile, as many as 1 in 4 Haitians, 2.7 million people, are forced to live in gang-controlled neighborhoods, more than 1.4 million are internally displaced, according to the United Nations. Rape, kidnapping and gang-related killings, all over 4,000 this year, are daily realities of life.

    DHS said that the data indicates parts of the country are suitable to return to. That isn’t entirely true.

    Even in communities, where armed groups are not yet visibly a problem, the situation is critical. The northern port city of Cap-Haïtien, which until this month offered the only access for international flights amid an ongoing U.S. Federal Aviation Administration ban on U.S. carriers, is bursting at the seams. The southern regions are also struggling to recover from Hurricane Melissa.

    The storm’s recent passage unleashed widespread disruption and compounded existing problems with food and transportation, even though the country dodged a direct hit. At least 43 deaths were reported, mostly in the south, which is today completely cut off from the north and capital by road due to the presence of gangs that on Sunday once more forced the suspension of flights after firing on a domestic airline as it landed at the Port-au-Prince airport.

    “Many households rely on unsafe water sources and lack access to basic sanitation, increasing the risk of disease outbreaks,” the U.N. said about the situation in southern Haiti. “Health facilities are under-equipped, financially inaccessible for many, and unable to provide mental health support. As a result, preventable illnesses and malnutrition are on the rise, particularly among children and pregnant women. Vulnerable groups — including women, girls, and youth — face heightened protection risks, including exploitation and violence.”

    Though DHS previously announced the end of Haiti’s designation as of Feb. 3, the law requires the secretary to review country conditions at least 60 days before the expiration of TPS to determine whether the country continues to meet the conditions for designation.

    “Based on the Department’s review, the Secretary has determined that while the current situation in Haiti is concerning, the United States must prioritize its national interests and permitting Haitian nationals to remain temporarily in the United States is contrary to the U.S. national interest,” the notice said.

    The administration’s decision isn’t surprising. Since taking office, President Donald Trump has moved to rollback immigration protections for Haitians and others, and ended TPS protections for millions of migrants from Venezuela, Nicaragua, Honduras, Syria, Nepal, Cameroon, Afghanistan, Burma, Somalia and Myanmar.

    The agency’s order, issued a day before the Thanksgiving holiday, was blunt: “If you are an alien who is currently a beneficiary of TPS for Haiti, you should prepare to depart if you have no other lawful basis for remaining in the United States.”

    But advocates for Haitians in the U.S. called the move poorly-timed and cruel.

    “If Haiti doesn’t warrant TPS, which country does?” said Guerline Jozef, co-founder of the Haitian Bridge Alliance, a San Diego immigrant rights group. “For this news to come on the eve of Thanksgiving is devastating.”

    Jozef pointed out that Washington has acknowledged both in recent communiqués and actions the crisis plaguing Haiti, which has been mired by repeated crises since its first designation. Among them: a deadly Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and a 7.2 earthquake in in 2021, five weeks after its president, Jovenel Moïse, was assassinated in the middle of the night.

    In justifying its decision, DHS quoted U.N. Secretary General António Guterres’s comments in August that “there are emerging signals of hope.” But in that same meeting, he also warned that they were in “a perfect storm” of suffering as state authority crumbled across Haiti and lawlessness and gang brutality paralyze daily life.

    In May, the Trump administration designated a powerful coalition of gangs, Viv Ansanm, and another group, Gran Grif, as Foreign Terrorists Organizations. In September, the U.S.’s new ambassador to the U.N. Mike Waltz, led an aggressive push at the U.N. Security Council for support for a new Gang Suppression Force to help in the fight against terrorist gangs. Despite DHS’ highlight of these decisions, little has improved in Haiti since the steps were taken. In fact, the situation has worsened.

    The deployment of the first contingent of the 5,500-GSF is still uncertain even as the U.S. pushes for general elections, which last took place in 2016, and last week gangs escalated their attacks. The latter, led the State Department on Monday to revoke the visa of a member of the ruling presidential council, Fritz Alphonse Jean. Jean has vehemently denied the accusations, and in a scathing press conference on Tuesday accused the U.S. of threatening him and others because they want to fire the prime minister over “incompetence.”

    A State Department spokesperson, responding to a Miami Herald inquiry about Jean’s claims, said “We will not comment on or speculate about private diplomatic discussions or unverified reports.”

    In another recent example reflecting conditions in Haiti: Over the weekend, a group of members of Congress, mostly Republicans, visited the Dominican Republic after canceling plans to travel to Port-au-Prince amid safety and logistics concerns.

    “It makes absolutely no sense for the U.S. to terminate TPS for Haiti at this critical time, where the admiration has acknowledged the ongoing political crisis in Haiti to the point of having a Level 4 ‘Do not travel’ warning to the country,” Jozef said. “They must protect the Haitian who have called the U.S. home for over a decade, those who are already here, who have families, who have businesses in their adoptive communities.”

    It’s not the first time the administration has tried to revoke TPS for Haitians. Soon after taking office this year, Trump attempted to rollback an extension given under the Biden administration. The decision was overridden by a New York federal judge, who said Noem had no authority to shorten the designation. The decision was part of a lawsuit spearheaded by a group of lawyers that, included Miami immigration attorney Ira Kurzban.

    The suit was amended earlier this year to prevent the administration from ending the designation. Kurzban, who also successfully sued DHS during the first Trump administration after it sought to revoke TPS for Haitians, said the administration’s rationale for ending TPS is based on “outright lies.”

    “Haiti is in political and economic turmoil due in large measure to U.S. foreign policy, including by the current administration. The reasons offered to terminate TPS are frivolous and include mischaracterizations and outright lies,” he said.

    “They are a product of Trump, [Vice President JD] Vance and Sec. Noem’s actions that demonstrate hatred of Haitians and racism toward Black refugees.”

    This story was originally published November 26, 2025 at 11:30 AM.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Analyst: Using This Metric In Ethereum Is Flawed, What’s The Alternative?

    Analyst: Using This Metric In Ethereum Is Flawed, What’s The Alternative?

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    Going by the handle “@bkiepuszewski,” one X user contends that the transaction processing speed (TPS) metric analysts rely on to measure how fast a blockchain network like Ethereum or the BNB Chain processes transactions is flawed.

    Laying out reasons on X, the decentralized finance (DeFi) researcher is convinced that using an alternative metric, the User Ops per second (UOPS), could paint a clearer picture of how well a blockchain is utilized at all times. 

    Measuring Network Utilization

    Typically, blockchain utilization measures how much a given network, for instance, Bitcoin or Ethereum, is being used at a given point. This is critical because it can be used to measure adoption levels since those with higher utilization rates tend to have a broader, active base, which can make it successful over the long haul. 

    Ethereum price trends to the upside on the daily chart| Source: ETHUSDT on Binance, TradingView

    To gauge activity, this metric considers the number of transactions processed every second when dealing with simple transfers or the total value locked (TVL) when dealing with smart contracts deployed. 

    As of November 1, the average network utilization rate in Ethereum, based on Etherscan data, is around 50%, down from about 100% registered in 2021. Meanwhile, the Bitcoin Transactions Per Day as of early November stood above 433,000, a nearly 2X increase from late October.

    Usually, in the case of Bitcoin, considering it is a transactional layer, whenever prices rise, more BTC-related transactions are expected as users hope to increase the emerging trend. 

    Ethereum network utilization chart| Source: Etherscan
    Ethereum network utilization chart| Source: Etherscan

    Whether the UOPS system will be adopted in the long term remains to be seen. However, what’s clear is that the UOPS will consider the number of user operations that the network in question can process every second, all while factoring in the level of complexity of that transaction.

    Out of the UOPS, analysts will instantaneously know how well the blockchain can handle user load without the risk of congestion, as usually is the case in Ethereum when markets are trending higher.

    The Rise Of Ethereum Layer-2s

    At the same time, according to @bkiepuszewski, using UOPS instead of TPS brings clarity considering the widespread use of layer-2 solutions, including OP Mainnet, Base, and StarkNet, which bundles transactions offline before confirming them on the mainnet as a single transfer. The more dapps choose layer-2 solutions, the more flawed blockchain throughput calculation will be if TPS guides. 

    Presently, more developers are opting for layer-2 as their base to avoid scaling issues while accessing the latitude to deploy intensive dapps such as social media platforms, as seen with Friend.tech. According to L2Beat, Arbitrum and OP Mainnet have TVLs of over $6.5 and $2.9 billion, respectively.

    Feature image from Canva, chart from TradingView

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    Dalmas Ngetich

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  • TON hits world record for blockchain speed

    TON hits world record for blockchain speed

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    The TON team conducted public testing of the blockchain speed.

    The developers reported that during the 12 minutes of the experiment, about 42m transactions were carried out, and the maximum speed was 108,409 transactions per second (TPS).

    In 11 minutes, 43,012,970 transactions were reportedly sent on the test network of 256 validators.

    The maximum transaction speed per second is 108,409 (TPS), which is a record among all currently existing blockchains in the world. For example, this figure for Bitcoin is 5-7 TPS, for Ethereum – 15 TPS, Solana – 65,000 TPS (the previous record holder).

    TON now claims to be the fastest blockchain in the world, completing 104,715 transactions per second.

    At the time of writing, the Toncoin (TON) is trading near $2.18, gaining 3.14%.

    Source: CoinMarketCap

    In September, the appearance of the TON wallet in the Telegram messenger contributed to the growth of quotes for the Toncoin cryptocurrency. It came close to the $3 mark and entered the top ten digital assets with the largest market capitalization, ahead of Solana in this indicator.

    All Telegram Wallet users can get access to TON Space. Telegram Wallet is a bot that allows users to buy and sell cryptocurrencies, including bitcoins. From November, all Telegram users around the world will be able to access a self-storage wallet, with the exception of the USA and a number of other countries.


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    Anna Kharton

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  • Biden Lets Venezuelan Migrants Work

    Biden Lets Venezuelan Migrants Work

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    President Joe Biden’s administration moved boldly yesterday to solve his most immediate immigration problem at the risk of creating a new target for Republicans who accuse him of surrendering control of the border.

    Yesterday, the Department of Homeland Security extended legal protections under a federal program called Temporary Protected Status (TPS) that will allow as many as 472,000 migrants from Venezuela to live and work legally in the United States for at least the next 18 months.

    With that decision, the administration aligned with the consensus among almost all the key players in the Democratic coalition about the most important thing Biden could do to help big Democratic-leaning cities facing an unprecedented flow of undocumented migrants, many of whom are from Venezuela.

    In a series of public statements over the past few months, Democratic mayors in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and other major cities; Democrats in the House and Senate; organized labor leaders; and immigrant advocacy and civil-rights groups all urged Biden to take the step that the administration announced yesterday.

    Extending TPS protections to more migrants from Venezuela “is the strongest tool in the toolbox for the administration, and the most effective way of meeting the needs of both recently arrived immigrants and the concerns of state and local officials,” Angela Kelley, a former senior adviser to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, told me immediately after the decision was announced.

    Despite the panoramic pressure from across the Democratic coalition, the administration had been hesitant to pursue this approach. Inside the administration, as Greg Sargent of The Washington Post first reported, some feared that providing legal protection to more Venezuelans already here would simply encourage others from the country to come. With polls showing widespread disapproval of Biden’s handling of border security, and Republicans rallying behind an array of hard-line immigration policies, the president has also appeared deeply uncomfortable focusing any attention on these issues.

    But immigrant advocates watching the internal debate believe that the argument tipped because of changing conditions on the ground. The tide of migrants into Democratic-run cities has produced wrenching scenes of new arrivals sleeping in streets, homeless shelters, or police stations, and loud complaints about the impact on local budgets, especially from New York City Mayor Eric Adams. And that has created a situation where not acting to relieve the strain on these cities has become an even a greater political risk to Biden than acting.

    “No matter what, Republicans will accuse the administration of being for open borders,” Maria Cardona, a Democratic strategist working with immigrant-advocacy groups, told me. “That is going to happen anyway. So why not get the political benefit of a good policy that so many of our leaders are clamoring for and need for their cities?”

    Still, it was revealing that the administration paired the announcement about protecting more Venezuelan migrants through TPS with a variety of new proposals to toughen enforcement against undocumented migrants. That reflects the administration’s sensitivity to the relentless Republican accusation—which polls show has resonated with many voters—that Biden has lost control of the southern border.

    As Biden’s administration tries to set immigration policy, it has been forced to pick through a minefield of demands from its allies, attacks from Republicans, and lawsuits from all sides.

    Compounding all of these domestic challenges is a mass migration of millions of people fleeing crime, poverty, and political and social disorder in troubled countries throughout the Americas. In Venezuela alone, political and social chaos has driven more than 7 million residents to seek new homes elsewhere in the Americas, according to a United Nations estimate. “Venezuela is a displacement crisis approximately the size of Syria and Ukraine, but it gets, like, one one-thousandth of the attention,” Todd Schulte, the president and executive director of FWD.us, an immigration-advocacy group, told me. “It’s a huge situation.”

    Most of these displaced people from nations across Central and South America have sought to settle in neighboring countries, but enough have come to the U.S. to overwhelm the nation’s already strained asylum system. The system is so backlogged that experts say it typically takes four to six years for asylum seekers to have their cases adjudicated. If the time required to resolve an asylum case “slips into years, it does become a magnet,” encouraging migrants to come to the border because the law allows them to stay and work in the U.S. while their claims are adjudicated, says Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, a center-left think tank.

    Former President Donald Trump dealt with this pressure by severely restricting access to asylum. He adopted policies that required asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while their cases were decided; that barred anyone from claiming asylum if they did not first seek it from countries between their homeland and the U.S. border; and, in the case of the pandemic-era Title 42 rule, that turned away virtually all undocumented migrants as threats to public health.

    Fitfully, Biden has undone most of Trump’s approach. (The Migration Policy Institute calculates that the Biden administration has taken 109 separate administrative actions to reverse Trump policies.) And Biden and Mayorkas, with little fanfare, have implemented a robust suite of policies to expand routes for legal immigration, while announcing stiff penalties for those who try to enter the country illegally. “Our overall approach is to build lawful pathways for people to come to the United States, and to impose tougher consequences on those who choose not to use those pathways,” Mayorkas said when he announced the end of Trump’s Title 42 policy.

    Immigration advocates generally express confidence that over time this carrot-and-stick approach will stabilize the southern border, at least somewhat. But it hasn’t yet stanched the flow of new arrivals claiming asylum. Some of those asylum seekers have made their way on their own to cities beyond the border. At least 20,000 more have been bused to such places by Texas Governor Greg Abbott, hoping to produce exactly the sort of tensions in Democratic circles that have erupted in recent weeks.

    However they have arrived, this surge of asylum seekers has created enormous logistical and fiscal challenges in several of these cities. Adams has been the most insistent in demanding more help from the federal government. But he’s far from the only Democratic mayor who has been frustrated by the growing numbers and impatient for the Biden administration to provide more help.

    The top demand from mayors and other Democratic interests has been for Biden to use executive authority to allow more of the new arrivals to work. “There is one solution to this problem: It’s not green cards; it’s not citizenship. It’s work permits,” Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney told me earlier this week. “All these people need work. They wouldn’t be in [a] hotel, they wouldn’t be lying on streets, if they can go to work.”

    That answer seems especially obvious, Kenney continued, because “we have so many industries and so many areas of our commerce that need workers: hotels, restaurants. Let them go to work. [Then] they will get their own apartments, they will take care of their own kids.”

    The obstacle to this solution is that under federal law, asylum seekers cannot apply for authorization to work until 150 days after they filed their asylum claim, and the government cannot approve their request for at least another 30 days. In practice, it usually takes several months longer than that to receive approval. The Biden administration is working with cities to encourage asylum seekers to quickly file work applications, but the process cannot be streamlined much, immigration experts say. Work authorization through the asylum process “is just not designed to get people a work permit,” Todd Schulte said. “They are technically eligible, but the process is way too hard.”

    The inability to generate work permits for large numbers of people through the asylum process has spurred Democratic interest in using the Temporary Protected Status program as an alternative. It allows the federal government to authorize immigrants from countries facing natural disasters, civil war, or other kinds of political and social disorder to legally remain and work in the U.S. for up to 18 months at a time, and to renew those protections indefinitely. That status isn’t provided to everyone who has arrived from a particular country; it’s available only to people living in the U.S. as of the date the federal government grants the TPS designation. For instance, the TPS protection to legally stay in the U.S. is available to people from El Salvador only if they were here by February 2001, after two major earthquakes there.

    The program was not nearly as controversial as other elements of immigration law, at least until Trump took office. As part of his overall offensive against immigration, Trump sought to rescind TPS status for six countries, including Haiti, Honduras, and El Salvador. But Trump was mostly blocked by lawsuits and Biden has reversed all those decisions. Biden has also granted TPS status to migrants from several additional countries, including about 200,000 people who had arrived in the U.S. from Venezuela as of March 2021.

    The demand from Democrats has been that Biden extend that protection, in a move called “redesignation,” to migrants who have arrived from Venezuela since then. Many Democrats have urged him to also update the protections for people from Nicaragua and other countries: A coalition of big-city mayors wrote Biden this summer asking him to extend existing TPS protections or create new ones for 11 countries.

    Following all of Biden’s actions, more immigrants than ever are covered under TPS. But the administration never appeared likely to agree to anything as sweeping as the mayors requested. Yesterday, the administration agreed to extend TPS status only to migrants from Venezuela who had arrived in the U.S. as of July 31. It did not expand TPS protections for any other countries. Angela Kelley, now the chief policy adviser for the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said that providing more TPS coverage to any country beyond Venezuela would be “a bigger piece to chew than the administration is able to swallow now.”

    But advocates considered the decision to cover more Venezuelans under TPS the most important action the administration could take to stabilize the situation in New York and other cities. The reason is that so many of the latest arrivals come from there; one recent survey found that two-thirds of the migrants in New York City shelters arrived from that country. Even including this huge migrant population in TPS won’t allow them to instantly work. The administration will also need to streamline regulations that slow work authorization, experts say. But eventually, Kelley says, allowing more Venezuelans to legally work through TPS would “alleviate a lot of the pressure in New York” and other cities.

    Kerri Talbot, the executive director of the Immigration Hub, an advocacy group, points out the TPS program is actually a better fit for Venezuelans, because the regular asylum process requires applicants to demonstrate that they fear persecution because of their race, religion, or political opinion, which is not the fundamental problem in Venezuela. “Most of them do not have good cases for asylum,” she said of the new arrivals from Venezuela. “They need TPS, because that’s what TPS is designed for: Their country is not functional.”

    Biden’s authority to expand TPS to more Venezuelans is likely to stand up in court against the nearly inevitable legal challenges from Republicans. But extending legal protection to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans still presents a tempting political target for the GOP. Conservatives such as Elizabeth Jacobs, the director of regulatory affairs and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, have argued that providing work authorizations for more undocumented migrants would only exacerbate the long-term problem by encouraging more to follow them, in the hope of obtaining such permission as well.

    Immigration advocates note that multiple academic studies show that TPS protections have not in fact inspired a surge of further migrants from the affected countries. Some in the administration remain uncertain about this, but any worries about possibly creating more long-term problems at the border were clearly outweighed by more immediate challenges in New York and other cities.

    If Biden did nothing, he faced the prospect of escalating criticism from Adams and maybe other Democratic mayors and governors that would likely make its way next year into Republican ads denouncing the president’s record on immigration. That risk, many of those watching the debate believe, helped persuade the administration to accept the demands from so many of Biden’s allies to extend TPS to more undocumented migrants, at least from Venezuela. But that doesn’t mean he’ll be happy about this or any of the other difficult choices he faces at the border.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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