最高法院审理特朗普针对海地和叙利亚移民的举措


2026年4月29日 美国东部时间10:11 / 路透社

作者:安德鲁·钟

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2026年2月4日,在美国俄亥俄州斯普林菲尔德,一名顾客在联邦法官发布临时禁令、阻止特朗普政府剥夺海地移民临时保护身份(TPS)的尝试后,走出一家海地餐厅Rose Goute Creole。路透社/宾·关 购买授权,将在新标签页打开

摘要

  • 海地、叙利亚移民的临时保护身份成争议焦点
  • 终止TPS是特朗普限制移民举措的一部分
  • 海地移民案中涉及“种族敌意”指控,同样提交法院审理
  • 下级法院判决特朗普政府败诉

华盛顿,4月29日(路透社)——美国最高法院将于周三审理唐纳德·特朗普总统政府剥夺数十万海地和叙利亚移民人道主义保护身份的举措,这是其标志性移民镇压行动的一部分。

大法官们将听取政府对纽约和华盛顿特区联邦法官裁决的上诉,这些裁决叫停了政府终止临时保护身份(TPS)的行动。此前美国政府为超过35万海地人和6100名叙利亚人提供了这一身份。

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美国国务院目前警告民众不要前往海地或叙利亚,理由是当地普遍存在暴力、犯罪、恐怖主义和绑架事件。

这起法律纠纷将考验特朗普的行政权力,以及最高法院传统上在移民、国家安全和外交政策事务上对总统的尊重。去年最高法院曾允许政府终止数十万委内瑞拉人的TPS身份。

撤销TPS和其他人道主义保护措施,是特朗普自2025年1月连任以来全面收紧合法与非法移民政策的一部分。在为TPS相关举措辩护时,政府表示这类保护措施原本就是临时性的。美国最早在2010年海地大地震后为海地人提供此类保护,并在2012年叙利亚陷入内战后为叙利亚人提供。

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根据美国法律,TPS是一项指定身份,允许来自遭受战争、自然灾害或其他灾难国家的移民在美国生活和工作,直到他们的祖国恢复安全。

当前最高法院以6票对3票的保守派多数席位,已多次批准这位共和党总统提出的各项强硬移民政策在法律诉讼继续审理期间立即实施。例如,最高法院允许特朗普将移民驱逐至与其毫无关联的国家,并允许联邦特工部分基于移民的种族或语言将其作为驱逐目标。

根据原告方的说法,这起法律纠纷可能产生广泛影响,将波及目前享有TPS身份的17个国家的130万移民。特朗普政府迄今已寻求撤销其中13个国家的保护身份。

下级法院判决终止TPS的举措无效,认定政府官员未遵循必要程序,在撤销某国的TPS指定前未对该国状况进行评估。

政府方面表示其遵循了正当程序,并提出更广泛的论点,即法院根本不应再审慎审查其TPS决定。如果最高法院接受这一主张,未来的相关挑战都将失败。

争议源于特朗普前国土安全部长克里斯蒂·诺伊姆去年采取的行动,她撤销了叙利亚和海地的TPS指定,称向这两国提供该身份违背美国国家利益。特朗普在3月解雇诺伊姆时,并未对她的TPS决定提出质疑。

叙利亚和海地的TPS持有者群体分别提起集体诉讼,挑战政府的举措。他们称诺伊姆的行动以及为多国终止人道主义身份指定的模式表明,这些决定是预先安排好的,目的是彻底取消TPS项目。

在海地移民案中,华盛顿特区联邦地区法官安娜·雷耶斯还作出一项认定:政府的行动可能部分出于“种族敌意”,违反了美国宪法第五修正案中法律面前人人平等的保障。雷耶斯表示,诺伊姆“出于对非白人移民的敌意”预先决定了终止TPS的决定。

特朗普长期以来一直寻求撤销TPS保护,2024年竞选连任期间,他曾发表虚假和贬损言论,称海地人在俄亥俄州食用家养宠物,并承诺撤销海地移民的TPS身份。

安德鲁·钟 报道;威尔·邓纳姆 编辑

我们的准则:汤姆森路透社信任原则。

Supreme Court examines Trump’s move against Haitian and Syrian immigrants

April 29, 2026 10:11 AM UTC / Reuters

By Andrew Chung

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A customer exits Rose Goute Creole Restaurant, a Haitian restaurant, after a federal judge issued a temporary stay blocking the Trump administration’s attempt to strip Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian immigrants, in Springfield, Ohio, U.S., February 4, 2026. REUTERS/Bing Guan Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Summary

  • Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, Syrians at issue
  • Ending TPS among Trump’s actions restricting immigration
  • ‘Racial animus’ claim in Haiti case also before court
  • Lower courts ruled against Trump administration

WASHINGTON, April 29 (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court examines on Wednesday moves by President Donald Trump’s administration to strip humanitarian protections from hundreds of thousands of Haitian ​and Syrian immigrants, part of his signature immigration crackdown.

The justices will hear arguments in the administration’s appeals of rulings by federal judges ‌in New York and Washington, D.C., halting its actions to terminate Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, previously provided by the U.S. government to more than 350,000 people from Haiti and 6,100 from Syria.

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The State Department currently warns against traveling to either Haiti or Syria, citing widespread violence, crime, terrorism and kidnapping.

The legal dispute presents a test of Trump’s executive power and the Supreme Court’s ​traditional deference to presidents on matters of immigration, national security and foreign policy. The court last year let the administration end TPS for hundreds ​of thousands of Venezuelans.

Revoking TPS and other humanitarian protections is part of Trump’s broader rollback of legal and illegal immigration since ⁠he returned to office in January 2025. In defending its actions on TPS, the administration has said such protections were always meant to be temporary. The ​United States first provided these protections to Haitians after a major earthquake in 2010 and to Syrians after their country descended into civil war in 2012.

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Under U.S. ​law, TPS is a designation that allows migrants from countries stricken by war, natural disaster or other catastrophes to live and work in the United States while it is unsafe for them to return to their home countries.

The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has granted the Republican president’s requests to immediately implement various hardline immigration policies while legal challenges ​continue to play out in courts. For instance, it let Trump deport immigrants to countries where they have no ties and let federal agents target people for ​deportation based in part on their race or language.

The legal dispute could have wide implications, affecting 1.3 million immigrants from all 17 countries currently designated for TPS, according to the plaintiffs. ‌Trump’s administration ⁠has sought to rescind the protections for 13 of those countries so far.

Lower courts ruled against the TPS terminations, finding that administration officials failed to follow mandatory protocols to assess conditions in a country before revoking its designation.

The administration has said it followed proper procedures, and has made the broader argument that courts cannot second-guess its TPS decisions in the first place, an assertion that if accepted by the court could doom challenges going forward.

At issue are actions taken last year by ​Kristi Noem, Trump’s former Department of Homeland ​Security secretary, to revoke the TPS ⁠designations for Syria and Haiti, stating that providing this status to them was contrary to U.S. national interests. Noem’s TPS decisions were not at issue when Trump fired her in March.

Groups of Syrian and Haitian TPS holders filed class-action lawsuits separately challenging ​the administration’s moves. They said Noem’s actions and the pattern of ending humanitarian designations for various countries show that ​the decisions were a ⁠preordained effort to eliminate the TPS program.

Also at issue in the Haitian case is a finding by Washington-based U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes that the administration’s action likely was motivated in part by “racial animus,” violating the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment promise of equal protection under the law. Reyes said it was likely that Noem preordained her termination ⁠decision “because of ​hostility to nonwhite immigrants.”

Trump has long sought to rescind TPS protections, and while running for reelection ​in 2024 vowed to revoke TPS for Haitian immigrants after making false and derogatory claims that they were eating household pets in Ohio.

Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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