Sovereignty Wins: Supreme Court Hands Trump Major 6-3 Win to End TPS Loophole for Haiti and Syria
Based Alito and the conservative majority tell corporate open-borders lobbyists to cope and seethe as executive authority is restored.

In a massive win for sovereignty and a devastating blow to the open-borders lobby, the Supreme Court ruled 6-to-3 along ideological lines that the President has the absolute, unreviewable power to end the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program. Justice Samuel Alito delivered the majority opinion, making it crystal clear that the courts have zero business micromanaging the executive branch when it decides to end these supposedly "temporary" immigration programs.
The TPS program was cooked up by Congress back in 1990 as a temporary humanitarian band-aid for fully vetted migrants whose home countries were dealing with natural disasters or wars. But like every other "temporary" government initiative, it quickly turned into a permanent loophole. Every administration since 1990, Republican and Democrat alike, went along with the grift, renewing the status indefinitely. Trump is the only president who actually tried to enforce the "temporary" part of the law, and now the Supreme Court has given him the green light to do it.
The immediate cope from the left is centered on the roughly 330,000 Haitian nationals and 3,800 Syrian nationals who will now have to face the music. Under this ruling, their legal status will expire, they will lose their work permits, and they will face deportation. Naturally, the corporate media is crying that some of them might have to leave their American-born children behind, completely ignoring the basic concept of national borders and legal status.
Predictably, the libs are crying that Haiti and Syria are too dangerous for deportations, pointing to the State Department's travel warnings about crime, kidnapping, terrorism, and civil unrest. But as the Supreme Court rightfully ruled, deciding whether a country is safe enough is the President's job, not the job of unelected activist judges. The Trump administration has already moved to strip TPS from 13 of the 17 countries that had it, and the remaining four—El Salvador, Lebanon, Sudan, and Ukraine—are likely next on the chopping block this fall.
The court's three liberal justices did their usual dissenting, while progressive activist groups went into absolute meltdown mode. "Revoking TPS protection is not just cruel; it is economic self-sabotage," whined Todd Schulte of FWD.us, a bipartisan open-borders group funded by tech billionaires who love cheap labor. They are absolutely malding because their endless supply of cheap, legal migrant labor is finally being turned off.
FWD.us released a bunch of panic-inducing stats, claiming that 200,000 Haitian TPS holders are in the workforce, including 15,000 farm workers, 13,000 nursing assistants, and 8,000 caregivers. They also claim these TPS holders generate $5.9 billion for the economy and pay $1.5 billion in taxes annually. But regular Americans know that a sovereign nation can't base its immigration policy on the demands of corporate employers who want to suppress wages.

