2026年3月11日 / 美国东部时间下午3:51 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
华盛顿讯 — 特朗普政府周三向最高法院提出请求,要求为终止超过35万海地移民的临时驱逐保护措施扫清道路。
司法部提出的紧急救济请求,是国土安全部终止多个国家临时保护身份(TPS)努力的最新动向,这使来自这些国家的移民面临被驱逐的风险。迄今为止,最高法院允许特朗普政府取消对委内瑞拉移民的保护措施,而涉及叙利亚移民的请求正在等待最高法院的裁决。
2010年,由于一场导致30多万人死亡并摧毁该国的灾难性地震后的”特殊和临时情况”,海地人首次获得临时保护身份。
在特朗普的第一任期内,他曾试图取消对海地的保护措施,但终止决定因法庭纠纷而搁置,且由于他卸任而未生效。
但在特朗普重返白宫开始第二任期后,国土安全部部长克里斯蒂·诺姆(Kristi Noem)采取措施终止海地的TPS身份,该决定于2月3日生效。
诺姆认为终止保护的决定”反映了对海地开启新篇章的必要和战略性信任投票”,以及总统”打造安全、主权和自力更生的海地的外交政策愿景”。尽管她承认海地的某些情况仍然”令人关切”,但诺姆表示该国部分地区”适合返回”。
但在去年12月,五名海地公民对诺姆终止TPS身份的决定提起诉讼,试图阻止这一行动。上个月,联邦地区法院批准了他们的请求,部分认定诺姆终止保护措施的决定可能是出于种族敌意。
美国地区法官安娜·雷耶斯(Ana Reyes)写道:”克里斯蒂·诺姆有权称移民为杀手、寄生虫、福利瘾君子以及她想叫的任何不当名称。然而,诺姆部长受到宪法和《行政程序法》的约束,必须忠实于事实与法律来实施TPS项目。目前的记录显示她尚未做到这一点。”
司法部提出上诉,华盛顿特区美国上诉法院的一个由三名法官组成的分歧小组拒绝冻结下级法院的裁决。
在敦促最高法院允许特朗普政府取消驱逐保护措施时,副检察长D.约翰·索尔(D. John Sauer)辩称,下级法院采用的理论可能会使”现任政府几乎所有的移民政策失效”。
他表示,下级法院”再次试图以损害国家利益和外交关系的方式阻止重大行政部门政策举措,同时将损害归咎于作为TPS临时性固有因素的被申请人”。
TPS由国会于1990年创立,为遭受武装冲突、自然灾害或其他”特殊和临时”情况(使被驱逐者返回危险)的国家公民提供临时移民保护。被指定为TPS的国家移民通常不得被驱逐出美国,并在指定期间(通常最长18个月,可延长)被授权工作。
作为其移民议程的一部分,特朗普已采取行动终止至少12个国家移民的TPS保护措施,包括阿富汗、海地、尼加拉瓜、索马里和也门。
法官暂停白宫取消TPS的行动
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/federal-judge-halts-trump-administration-from-revoking-tps-for-350000-haitians/
联邦法官暂停特朗普政府取消35万海地人TPS身份的行动
(03:45)
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to let it end deportation protections for 350,000 Haitians
March 11, 2026 / 3:51 PM EDT / CBS News
Washington — The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Wednesday to clear the way for it to end temporary deportation protections for more than 350,000 Haitian immigrants.
The bid for emergency relief from the Justice Department is the latest arising out of the Department of Homeland Security’s efforts to end Temporary Protected Status for a host of countries, putting immigrants from those places at risk of deportation. The Supreme Court has so far allowed the Trump administration to roll back protections for Venezuelan migrants, and a request involving Syrian immigrants is awaiting action from the high court.
Haitians were first granted Temporary Protected Status in 2010 because of “extraordinary and temporary conditions” following a catastrophic earthquake that left more than 300,000 people dead and devastated the country.
In his first administration, President Trump moved to rescind the protections for Haiti, but the termination was caught up in a court fight and didn’t take effect because he left office.
But after Mr. Trump returned to the White House for a second term, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem took steps to end Haiti’s TPS designation, effective Feb. 3.
Noem determined the decision to end the protections “reflects a necessary and strategic vote of confidence in the new chapter Haiti is turning” and the president’s “foreign policy vision of a secure, sovereign and self-reliant Haiti.” While the secretary acknowledged that certain conditions in Haiti remained “concerning,” Noem said parts of the country were “suitable” to return to.
But in December, a group of five Haitian nationals challenged Noem’s termination of TPS and sought to block the move. A federal district court granted their request last month, finding in part that Noem’s decision to unwind the protections was likely motivated by racial animus.
“Kristi Noem has a First Amendment right to call immigrants killers, leeches, entitlement junkies, and any other inapt name she wants,” U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes wrote. “Secretary Noem, however, is constrained by both our Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act to apply faithfully the facts to the law in implementing the TPS program. The record to-date shows she has yet to do that.”
The Justice Department appealed, and a divided three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., declined to freeze the lower court’s decision.
In urging the Supreme Court to allow the Trump administration to rescind the deportation protections, Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued that the theory embraced by the lower court threatened to invalidate “virtually every immigration policy of the current administration.”
Lower courts, he said, “are again attempting to block major executive-branch policy initiatives in ways that inflict specific harms to the national interest and foreign relations, while crediting harms to respondents that inhere in the temporary nature of TPS.”
TPS was created by Congress in 1990 and provides temporary immigration protections for people from countries beset by armed conflicts, natural disasters or other “extraordinary and temporary” conditions that make it dangerous for deportees to return. Migrants from a country designated for TPS generally cannot be removed from the U.S. and are authorized to work for the length of the designation, which typically lasts up to 18 months and can be extended.
As part of his immigration agenda, Mr. Trump has moved to end TPS protections for immigrants from at least a dozen countries, including Afghanistan, Haiti, Nicaragua, Somalia and Yemen.
Judge halts White House from revoking TPS
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/federal-judge-halts-trump-administration-from-revoking-tps-for-350000-haitians/
Federal judge halts Trump administration from revoking TPS for 350,000 Haitians
(03:45)
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