UNITED STATES-Widespread condemnation, outrage over US Supreme Court ruling

NEW YORK, CMC – Legislators and immigration advocates have strongly condemned and are expressing profound outrage over the ruling by […]

UNITED STATES-Widespread condemnation, outrage over US Supreme Court ruling

NEW YORK, CMC – Legislators and immigration advocates have strongly condemned and are expressing profound outrage over the ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) terminating the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) of hundreds of Haitians and Syrians living in the country.

“Again and again, this MAGA-corrupted Supreme Court has proven there are no lengths it will not go to disgrace itself in fealty and service of Donald Trump,” Democratic Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).

She said that Thursday’s “despicable ruling to allow the Trump administration to ignore the law and abandon any semblance of human decency by prematurely terminating TPS for Haiti and Syria is devastating on a scale that shocks the conscience”.

Clarke said that more than 350,000 TPS holders have now lost legal status and as a result “our communities will soon lose neighbors, loved ones, hardworking employees, and business leaders”.

She said America’s moral standing in the world “continues to collapse under the weight of this president’s relentless humanitarian betrayal”.

Clarke, who represents the predominantly 9th Congressional District in Brooklyn, New York, and who also chairs the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), said that from the moment they arrived here, Haitian and Syrian TPS holders, most of whom arrived at the invitation of our government, have dedicated themselves to contributing to the development of the country.

“They have built businesses, built families, and built up their communities. And, through their undeniable strength of character and resilient spirit, they have become an inseparable part of this country’s social fabric.”

Clarke said while the crises confronting Haitians and Syrians in their respective homelands continue to escalate, “they have come to embody exactly what it means to be Americans, just as the many waves of immigrants before them have done since this country’s founding”.

She said Haiti and Syria continue to face dire conditions, driven by natural disasters, civil unrest, rampant gang violence, and the collapse of governmental institutions.

“If our own State Department deems these nations too dangerous for Americans to travel to, how can we justify forcing nationals to return to those same conditions?. We cannot. There is no justification. And yet, with their legal status ripped out from beneath them, our neighbors are now facing deportation to the same desperate conditions they narrowly escaped with their lives.”

The Congresswoman said the conservative-led SCOTUS is “more than eager to prove to this president that it has no interest in serving its constitutional role as a check on the executive’s power, but instead only as an enabler of its worst abuses.

“Unfortunately, Congress has stood by and waited for this activist court to recalibrate its duty to the law and America’s well-being. That time has not come, nor will it ever in my humble estimation.

“It’s clear now that this legislative body must seize back the power that our increasingly unequal branches have stolen, and that must start with action to protect the hundreds of thousands of TPS holders whose lives depend upon it,” Clarke added.

In a separate statement, the CBC said that “the conservative supermajority on the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Trump administration, allowing it to continue its racist plan” to strip TPS from nearly 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians, subjecting many to deportation “amid Haiti’s extreme humanitarian, political, and economic crises.”

CBC noted that President Trump has “repeatedly disparaged Haitian communities with misinformation, dehumanizing rhetoric, and racist language.

“Instead of working to lower the cost of living for hardworking American families, President Trump has once again returned to the same racist playbook of targeting immigrant communities for political gain,” it said, warning that the decision to terminate TPS could be “a death sentence” for many Haitians living in the US.

“This administration would rather put the lives of hundreds of thousands of Haitians on the line than show any level of human decency. At our best, America stands as a beacon of hope—a country that welcomes and protects those fleeing humanitarian crises, political persecution, and economic hardship.”

In March, a bipartisan majority in the US House of Representatives successfully passed legislation to extend TPS for Haiti through a discharge petition led by Massachusetts Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley.

Given Thursday’s ruling by SCOTUS, CBC urged the US Senate to immediately take up the companion legislation led by Senator Edward Markey and Senator Lisa Blunt Rochester to protect Haitians from “the cruel and callous actions of the Trump administration”.

US Senate Democratic Leader Charles “Chuck” Schumer described SCOTUS’ ruling as “cruel and inhumane,” saying that “TPS exists for exactly this reason: to protect people when returning home is unsafe.

“Haiti and Syria remain unsafe today. Instead of showing basic humanity, Donald Trump and this court have chosen fear, chaos, and cruelty,” Schumer said, noting that he has introduced legislation to extend TPS for Haitians, and will keep fighting to protect Haitian and Syrian families from “being forced back into danger.

“America should not turn its back on people who came here seeking safety,” he said.

US House of Representatives Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who represents the 8th Congressional District in New York, which has a heavy concentration of Caribbean immigrants in Brooklyn and Queens, was also critical of the ruling.

He said SCOTUS has “recklessly rubber-stamped the Trump administration’s crusade to rip legal status from hundreds of thousands of Haitian and Syrian TPS holders, forcing them to return to a dangerous and deeply unstable environment where they know people are at risk.

“TPS holders from Haiti and Syria are our hardworking neighbors actively contributing to our communities, supporting our small businesses and filling critical labor needs,” he said.

“This decision harms them, their families, and the communities all across America that rely on their participation in the healthcare workforce and beyond. This cruel decision by a right-wing conservative majority on the Supreme Court may now expose 1.3 million people from 17 countries to the same unconscionable treatment.

“We believe that immigration enforcement in this country should be fair, just, and humane, and we will continue pushing back to protect our communities, including the vibrant Haitian Diaspora that calls New York City home.”

New York City Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani said that the US Supreme Court “just sparked one of the largest attacks on immigrants in modern American history.

“In one fell swoop, thousands of Haitians and Syrians now risk losing the right to live and work in the country they call home. These are people who fled earthquakes, famine, war, and political violence. People who came to this country seeking freedom, safety, and democracy. They built lives here. They raised families here. They opened small businesses, attended church and mosque, and looked after their neighbors. America is home.”

Mamdani warned that the court’s decision would cause “enormous pain” across the five boroughs of New York City.

“Here in New York, it falls hardest on our Haitian community, one of the largest in the country, alongside Syrian families. To the tens of thousands of New Yorkers with TPS who are watching the news, frightened about what comes next, hear me clearly: New York City is your home. You belong here. We will not turn our backs on you.

“You will not face this cruelty alone. This administration will stand alongside immigrant New Yorkers today, tomorrow, and every day that follows,” the New York Mayor added.

New York Attorney General Letitia James said the US Supreme Court’s ruling is “a betrayal of our values and of the promise our country made to protect people from displacement, repression, and harm.”

She said her office will continue to stand with Haitians and other immigrant communities and “fight for the people who came to this country seeking safety and helped build our state and nation in return.”

James led several amicus briefs opposing the termination of TPS for Haiti, including briefs filed with the Supreme Court.

On Thursday, New York State Assemblymember Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, who chairs the Brooklyn Democratic Party, joined Mayor Mamdani, Governor Kathy Hochul, New York Attorney General James and New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, the son of Grenadian immigrants, among other elected officials, at a massive rally in lower Manhattan following the “heinous ruling” of the US Supreme Court in Mullin v. Doe.

“Let me be entirely clear: this court did not find that Haiti or Syria is safe. They chose to lock the courthouse doors and hand the federal administration a blank check to upend the lives of over 350,000 individuals who have followed every single rule,” Bichotte Hermelyn said. “Today, we send a clear, united message: our immigrant workforce is here to stay. To our vibrant Haitian community and all TPS holders in my district: you are not alone, and this fight is far from over”.

She said that her office is “actively coordinating with our federal representatives, legal advocacy groups, and local partners to push for immediate legislative corrections in Congress and to protect your right to remain safely in the homes you have built.

“We will exhaust every single avenue to correct this injustice,” Bichotte Hermelyn vowed.

Roxanna Rivera, assistant to the president of the labor union 32BJ SEIU, said more than 98,000 New Yorkers are TPS holders.

“These are people – New Yorkers – who have come to this state to find a better life, people who have been contributing to this state and nation for years, many for decades,” she said, adding, “This action by the Supreme Court puts in jeopardy residents’ basic right to work and have a job.

“It is an attack on the almost 1.6 million workers across our country who hold TPS status today – and on their workplaces. We urge the administration to immediately reverse course and restore TPS protections for Haitians, Syrians, and others, to keep families together and safe.”

Yvonne Armstrong, president of 1199 SEIU, the nation’s largest healthcare union, said the court’s ruling is “a moral failure that will have devastating consequences for hundreds of thousands of law-abiding families and the neighborhoods in which they live.

“Nursing home residents will lose their aides, home care clients will lose their caregivers, and hospital patients will lose trusted and experienced staff. Innocent children and families will be forced out of communities they have grown up in,” she warned.

“The vilification of immigrants is one of the oldest tricks in the authoritarian playbook.1199 SEIU stands committed to fighting these injustices—which pit working people against each other and harm all of us— and will continue to organize in defense of our families and neighbors, for our constitutional rights, and in solidarity with immigrant communities.”

Murad Awawdeh, president and chief executive officer of the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), said the ruling has again allowed the Trump administration to violate the law, now and in the future, when trying to end Temporary Protected Status.

“The racial animus was clear, and clearly documented by the court’s dissenting justice. Our Haitian and Syrian neighbors with TPS face imminent loss of status, and this decision weakens protections for 1.3 million TPS holders from all countries nationally.

“Parents will be separated from their children, longtime residents will lose the livelihoods they have spent years building, and people who have contributed to this country for decades will be forced back to dangerous and unstable conditions,” Awawdeh said.

Assemblymember Souffrant Forrest, the Haitian-American chair of the Task Force on New Americans (TFNA), said: “As the daughter of Haitian immigrants, I stand with our neighbors who will pay the price of this decision.

“We must defend humanitarian protections, not eliminate them,” she said.

Siomara Umana, supervising immigration attorney at Make the Road New York, another immigrant advocacy group, said the court’s decision is “a devastating blow to the 1.3 million mothers, fathers, neighbors, coworkers, and friends living with Temporary Protected Status who have made their lives in this country”.

Guerline Jozef, executive director of the San Diego-California-based Haitian Bridge Alliance, said the US Supreme Court’s ruling “slammed the courthouse door on judicial review for most TPS terminations, but it did not erase the truth. That fight moves forward.”