The US Supreme Court has ruled that the Trump administration can end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian migrants, putting roughly 356,000 people at risk of losing work permits and facing deportation. To discuss the impact on Haitians in the US, we’re joined by Francois Pierre-Louis of Faith in Action International in New York.

Supreme Court allows Trump to end protected status for Haiti and Syria, threatening family separation say advocates.

As the Supreme Court clears the way for Trump to potentially end Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, Doctors Without Borders witnesses a growing crisis.

Migrant-rights advocates fear for the future of Haitians and their U.S.-born children following Supreme Court ruling on TPS.

Haitian and Syrian immigrants with temporary legal protections could face deportation, and some are afraid to leave their homes.

“The human cost will be felt all across America,” one advocate warned.

A Supreme Court ruling gives the Trump administration space to strip this status from hundreds of thousands of more people from the few remaining countries with this program.

Hundreds of thousands of migrants in the United States face an uncertain future after the Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS)…

The US Supreme Court has ruled that the Trump administration can end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian migrants, putting roughly 356,000 people at risk of…

Thursday’s decision made it likelier that people who don’t have work permits or asylum cases will eventually be deported.