CA, US & World
Immigration Attorney Explains Broader Impacts of Supreme Court TPS Ruling
PALM DESERT, Calif. — The clock is ticking for thousands of Haitian and Syrian nationals living in the United States under Temporary Protected Status following a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling. In a six-to-three decision, the high court sided with the Trump administration, clearing the way for the definitive termination of the humanitarian programs. However, legal experts warn that the ultimate fallout from the decision will extend far beyond the specific groups named in the lawsuit.
Immigration attorney Matthew Hanley, an expert in federal immigration law, stated that the ruling did not come as a surprise to many in the legal community, but its everyday impact will be widespread. Hanley noted that the end of work authorizations under the program will disrupt local communities in unexpected ways, pointing out that many people fail to realize everyday community members, such as youth pastors at local churches, rely on TPS to legally work and serve.
Temporary Protected Status is a provisional humanitarian designation that serves as an agreement from the federal government to defer deportations and grant work permits during a specific window of crisis, such as active warfare or catastrophic natural disasters. While these protections have historically been renewed periodically for decades by presidents of both major political parties, the current administration has consistently pushed to wind down the programs.
According to Hanley, the high court's justification centered on rejecting claims of racial bias. Instead, the justices accepted the administration's stance that it holds an across-the-board policy disagreement with how the TPS framework has been historically managed. This precedent places other nationalities in immediate legal jeopardy. Hanley explained that immigrants from nations like Somalia are now facing an identical predicament, remaining in a state of legal limbo with the realistic expectation that their protected status will also be brought to an end.
The shifting legal landscape is drawing close attention in states like Ohio, which holds the second-largest Somali population in the country. Local analysts note that the vast majority of Somali residents in that region have already transitioned to U.S. citizenship, meaning they are fully insulated from the changes. Furthermore, Hanley emphasized that the end of TPS does not mean immediate or automatic removals. Under federal law, anyone whose status expires is still legally entitled to complete due process, meaning their cases must systematically move through the immigration court system.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 26, 2026


