2026年3月11日 下午6:59 UTC / 路透社
华盛顿特区,2026年1月12日,日出光线照射着美国最高法院大楼。路透社/乔纳森·恩斯特/资料图片 [购买授权,新标签页打开]
- 摘要
- 诉讼称:政府对非白人移民怀有敌意
- 法官称:这一指控”看似极有可能”
- 案件涉及:临时保护身份(TPS)分类
3月11日(路透社)- 尽管海地持续发生暴力事件导致超过100万人流离失所,总统唐纳德·特朗普(Donald Trump)的政府周三向美国最高法院请求干预,试图剥夺居住在美国的35万多名海地人的人道主义驱逐保护措施。
司法部在一份紧急请求中要求最高法院推翻一名法官的裁决,该裁决阻止了政府终止海地人临时保护身份(Temporary Protected Status,简称TPS)的行动。法官认定,政府对海地人的行为可能部分出于”种族仇恨”。
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特朗普任命的前国土安全部部长克里斯蒂·诺姆(Kristi Noem)于2025年11月裁定,海地不存在”阻止海地移民返回加勒比国家的特殊和临时情况”。美国国务院目前警告不要前往海地,原因是”绑架、犯罪、恐怖主义活动、民众骚乱和医疗资源有限”。
大规模驱逐:自2025年1月重返白宫以来,这位共和党总统推行大规模驱逐政策,试图剥夺部分移民原本由美国政府出于人道主义提供的临时法律保护,扩大了可能被驱逐者的范围。
在特朗普任内,国土安全部已着手终止约12个国家的TPS身份,称该政策”本就应是临时性的”。
最高法院在10月允许政府终止数十万委内瑞拉移民的TPS身份。2月,政府也向法院申请终止约6,100名居住在美国的叙利亚人的TPS身份。
司法部在海地案件的文件中表示,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”。
与叙利亚案件一样,政府暗示最高法院应受理并审理基本法律问题,因为”TPS终止的断断续续诉讼已成为常态”。
“除非法院解决这些争议的是非曲直——这些问题现在已在全国法院得到审理——否则这种不可持续的循环将一次次重复,滋生更多相互冲突的裁决和对本法院临时命令的不同解读,”司法部写道。
临时保护身份适用于因祖国经历自然灾害、武装冲突或其他特殊事件而符合条件的人,为合格移民提供工作许可和临时驱逐保护。
海地人于2010年在民主党前总统巴拉克·奥巴马(Barack Obama)任内首次获得TPS身份,此前海地发生毁灭性地震。
美国政府多次延长这一身份,最近一次是在民主党前总统乔·拜登(Joe Biden)任内,当时引用了”经济、安全、政治和健康危机同时爆发”,这一危机由帮派活动和政府瘫痪加剧。这一延长使居住在美国的海地人获得保护直至2026年2月3日。
根据国际移民组织的数据,超过140万海地人因暴力和不稳定局势流离失所。
特朗普于3月5日解雇了诺姆,此前数月因包括联邦官员在明尼阿波利斯开枪打死两名美国公民,以及议员质疑为宣传她及其部门的2.2亿美元广告合同等争议不断。诺姆被解职时,其TPS相关决定并未成为争议焦点。
对非白人移民的敌意
美国地区法官安娜·雷耶斯(Ana Reyes)2月2日在海地人提起的集体诉讼中裁定,诺姆可能违反了终止海地移民受保护身份所需的程序,以及美国宪法第五修正案规定的法律平等保护条款。
“原告指控诺姆部长预先确定了终止决定,且这是出于对非白人移民的敌意。这一指控看似极有可能,”雷耶斯写道。
雷耶斯还提到诺姆2025年12月的社交媒体帖子:”克里斯蒂·诺姆有权用她想要的任何不当词汇称呼移民为杀手、寄生虫、 entitlement junkies(注:此处保留英文术语或译为‘特权索取者’)等。然而,诺姆部长受宪法和《行政程序法》约束,必须在实施TPS项目时忠实于事实与法律。”
哥伦比亚特区巡回上诉法院3月6日驳回了政府暂停法官裁决的请求。
最高法院要求原告在下周一前对政府的申请作出回应。
特朗普政府已紧急请求最高法院允许实施被下级法院阻碍的政策。自特朗普重返总统职位以来,最高法院在大多数此类案件中均支持政府。
纽约报道:安德鲁·钟(Andrew Chung);特德·赫森(Ted Hesson)和内特·雷蒙德(Nate Raymond)补充报道;威尔·邓纳姆(Will Dunham)编辑
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Trump administration asks Supreme Court to end Haitian protected status
March 11, 2026 6:59 PM UTC / Reuters
Light from the rising sun hits the U.S. Supreme Court building at the start of the day in Washington, D.C. U.S., January 12, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo [Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab]
- Summary
- Lawsuit says administration hostile to nonwhite immigrants
- Judge says that claim “seems substantially likely”
- Case involves Temporary Protected Status classification
March 11 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump’s administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to intervene in its effort to strip humanitarian deportation protections from more than 350,000 Haitians living in the United States despite persistent violence in Haiti that has displaced more than a million people.
The Justice Department in an emergency request asked the court to lift a judge’s decision that blocked the administration’s move to end Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, for Haitians. The judge found that the administration’s action toward the Haitians likely was motivated in part by “racial animus.”
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Kristi Noem, a Trump appointee then serving as secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, determined in November 2025 that there were “no extraordinary and temporary conditions” in Haiti that would prevent Haitian migrants from returning to the Caribbean country. The U.S. State Department currently warns against travel to Haiti “due to kidnapping, crime, terrorist activity, civil unrest and limited healthcare.”
MASS DEPORTATIONS The Republican president, pursuing a policy of mass deportations since returning to office in January 2025, has moved to strip certain migrants of temporary legal protections previously provided to them by the U.S. government for humanitarian reasons, expanding the pool of possible deportees.
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Under Trump, the Department of Homeland Security has moved to end TPS status for about a dozen countries, saying it was always meant to be temporary.
The Supreme Court in October let the administration terminate TPS for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants. The administration in February also asked the court to allow it to strip TPS status from about 6,100 Syrians living in the United States.
The Justice Department in its filing in the Haiti case said lower courts were “again attempting to block major executive-branch policy initiatives in ways that inflict specific harms to the national interest and foreign relations.”
As it did in the Syria case, the administration suggested that the Supreme Court take up and hear arguments on the underlying legal issue given that “stop-and-start litigation over TPS terminations has become endemic.”
“Unless the court resolves the merits of these challenges – issues that have now been ventilated in courts nationwide – this unsustainable cycle will repeat again and again, spawning more competing rulings and competing views of what to make of this court’s interim orders,” the Justice Department wrote.
Temporary Protected Status is available to people whose home country has experienced a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event. It provides eligible migrants with work authorization and temporary protection from deportation.
Haitians were first given TPS in 2010 under Democratic former President Barack Obama after a devastating earthquake struck their country.
The U.S. government repeatedly extended the status, most recently under Democratic former President Joe Biden’s administration, which cited “simultaneous economic, security, political and health crises” in Haiti, fueled by gangs and a lack of a functioning government. That extension had given Haitians living in the United States protections through February 3, 2026.
More than 1.4 million Haitians have been displaced by violence and instability, according to the International Organization for Migration.
Trump fired Noem on March 5 after months of controversy including the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens by federal officers in Minneapolis and questions by lawmakers about a $220 million advertising contract for a campaign promoting her and her department. Noem’s TPS decisions were not at issue in her dismissal.
‘HOSTILITY TO NONWHITE IMMIGRANTS’
U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes ruled, opens new tab on February 2 in a class-action lawsuit brought by Haitians challenging the administration’s move. Reyes found that Noem likely violated the procedures required to terminate the protected status of Haitian immigrants as well as the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment guarantee of equal protection under the law.
“Plaintiffs charge that Secretary Noem preordained her termination decision and did so because of hostility to nonwhite immigrants. This seems substantially likely,” Reyes wrote.
Referencing a December social media post by Noem, Reyes added, “Kristi Noem has a First Amendment right to call immigrants killers, leeches, entitlement junkies and any other inapt name she wants. 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 U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on March 6 rejected the administration’s bid to pause the judge’s ruling.
The Supreme Court requested a response from the plaintiffs to the administration’s filing by next Monday.
Trump’s administration has asked the Supreme Court on an emergency basis to allow implementation of policies impeded by lower courts. The Supreme Court has sided with Trump in most of these cases since he returned to the presidency.
Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Additional reporting by Ted Hesson and Nate Raymond; Editing by Will Dunham
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