Based SCOTUS Hands Trump a Massive W, Rejects Liberal Tears Over Haiti and Syria TPS Terminations
The conservative supermajority just ruled that 'temporary' actually means temporary in Mullin v. Doe, shutting down activist lawyers and union bosses.

In a massive win for national sovereignty and basic common sense, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, June 25, 2026, gave the green light to the Trump administration to strip Temporary Protected Status (TPS) from over 350,000 Haitians and 6,100 Syrians. The ruling in Mullin v. Doe officially shuts down the administrative state's favorite backdoor immigration loop, leaving open-border advocates and left-wing activists absolutely seething.
Let’s be real: TPS is supposed to be 'temporary.' It is literally right there in the name. But for decades, the establishment has treated it as a permanent pass to bypass our legal immigration system. Since Donald Trump returned to office in January 2025, his administration has been on a mission to clean up this mess, targeting the nearly 1.3 million TPS holders who have been hanging around indefinitely.
Naturally, the activist class couldn't handle it. When oral arguments went down on April 29, 2026, a bunch of union bosses, professional protesters, and TPS advocates staged a massive cope-fest outside the Supreme Court. But their crying did absolutely nothing to sway the court's 6-3 conservative supermajority, which clearly saw right through the drama.
The legal battle in Mullin v. Doe was a textbook case of federal overreach trying to stop a president from doing his actual job. The government's lawyers pointed out the obvious: when Congress originally wrote the TPS law, they specifically made sure that the executive branch had the final say. They argued that the judicial branch has no business second-guessing the president on foreign policy or immigration decisions.
On the other side, activist lawyers tried to claim that DHS didn't fill out the right paperwork and that Haiti and Syria are just 'too unsafe' for anyone to return. It’s the same old narrative designed to keep the program running forever. Thankfully, the Supreme Court wasn't buying the administrative excuses.
This victory follows the court's move last year, when it allowed the administration to strip TPS from over 300,000 Venezuelans. Now, with the Haitian and Syrian programs officially on the chopping block, analysts are panicking that this will trigger the 'biggest de-documentation move in history.' Good. That is exactly what happens when you actually enforce the law as written.
By ruling in favor of the Trump administration, SCOTUS has reaffirmed that the Constitution means what it says. Activist judges don't run our borders, and 'temporary' doesn't mean forever. The cope is real, but the law is the law.

