Legal Sidebari
Termination of Temporary Protected Status
for Certain Countries: Recent Litigation
Developments
Updated March 8, 2023
Certain aliens (as defined in t
he Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)) who otherwise are subject to
removal from the United States may stay and work here when the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) designates their countries for
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) because of unstable or dangerous
conditions in those countries. In 2017 and 2018, DHS announced the termination of TPS designations for
Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, El Salvador, Nepal, and Honduras. The agency’s decisions affect, as of
November 2022, roughly
292,000 TPS beneficiaries from those six countries who potentially could lose
authorization to remain in the United States upon the effective termination date of the countries’ TPS
designations. Several
lawsuits challenged DHS’s decisions on various constitutional and statutory
grounds. In one of those cases,
Ramos v. Wolf, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in 2020
reversed a lower court’
s preliminary injunction barring DHS from ending the TPS designations for four of
those countries—Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, and El Salvador. In 2023, following unsuccessful efforts by the
parties to reach a settlement, the Ninth Circuit
granted the plaintiffs’ petition to rehear the case
en banc and vacated the 2020 panel decision. A separate court challenge to the termination of TPS designations
for Honduras and Nepal
remains stayed pending the outcome in
Ramos. DHS newly designated Haiti and
Sudan for TPS i
n 2021, 2022, and 2023, thereby allowing nationals of those countries to apply for TPS
benefits based on the newer designations. This Legal Sidebar examines the litigation concerning the TPS
designation terminations and the implications it may have for TPS recipients.
Background
Under
8 U.S.C. § 1254a, DHS, in consultation with other federal agencies, may designate a country (or
any part of a country) for TPS if (1) there is an armed conflict that prevents the safe return of nationals
from that country; (2) there has been an environmental disaster in that country that substantially disrupts
living conditions in the area affected; or (3) there are “extraordinary and temporary conditions” in the
foreign country that prevent alien nationals from safely returning. An alien from a country designated for
TPS may
be permitted to
remain and work in the United States for the period in which the TPS
designation is in effect, even if the alien had not originally entered the United States lawfully. The
initial
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period of TPS designation may last between 6 and 18 months, and the designation may
be extended
thereafter. If the DHS Secretary concludes that the designated country “no longer continues to meet the
conditions for [TPS] designation,” the agency
“shall terminate” the TPS designatio
n. 8 U.S.C. §
1254a(b)(5) provides that “[t]here is no judicial review of any determination of the [DHS Secretary] with
respect to the designation, or termination or extension of a designation, of a foreign state . . . .” Upon
termination of their respective country’s TPS designation, TPS beneficiaries
revert to t
he same
immigration status they had before TPS (unless that status has since expired or been terminated) or to any
lawful immigration status they obtained while registered for TPS relief (as long as the lawful status
remains valid on the date a TPS designation terminates).
From September 2017 through May 2018, DHS successively
announced the termination of TPS
designations for
Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, El Salvador, Nepal, and Honduras. In its
Federal Register
notices, the agency declared that the conditions which originally warranted TPS designations for these
countries no longer existed or had substantially improved. The agency granted 12- or 18-month wind-
down periods for each country before the terminations would become effective.
Preliminary Injunction in Ramos v. Wolf and Related
Litigation
In
Ramos v. Wolf, nine TPS beneficiaries and their five U.S. citizen children filed a
lawsuit in the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of California, challenging DHS’s decisions to end TPS
designations for Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, and El Salvador. The plaintiff
s argued that, in terminating the
TPS designations, DHS only considered whether the original country conditions warranting those
designations had continued, without examining more recent events in those countries. The plaintiffs
argued that DHS’s actions
violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) because they “represented a
sudden and unexplained departure from decades of decision-making practices and ordinary procedures.”
The plaintiffs als
o argued that DHS’s decision to terminate TPS violated their
constitutional right to equal
protection because it was “motivated in significant part by racial and national-origin animus.”
In October 2018, the district court
issued a preliminary injunction barring DHS from terminating the TPS
designations for Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, and El Salvador pending the outcome of the litigation.
Previously, the court had
rejected the government’s contention that
8 U.S.C. § 1254a(b)(5), barred
judicial review of DHS’s TPS terminations, reasoning that the statute did not bar review of the “general
policies or practices” employed in deciding whether to end a TPS designation, and that the jurisdictional
provision did not foreclose constitutional challenges. In its October 2018 order, the court
determined that,
given DHS’s failure to explain its “change in practice” of only considering the original country conditions
when making a TPS determination, plaintiffs had show
n serious questions or a likelihood of success on
the merits of their APA claim. The court al
so ruled that the plaintiffs raised serious questions on their
equal protection claim based on evidence that race may have been a “motivating factor” in the TPS
designation decisions. The court
cited statements reportedly made by President Trump that “expressed
animus against non-white, non-European immigrants,” and other
evidence suggesting that the DHS
Secretary may have been “influenced” by President Trump and administration officials to terminate TPS
designations.
While the
Ramos lawsuit was pending, a group of plaintiffs in
Bhattarai v. Wolf challenged DHS’s
termination of TPS designations for Honduras and Nepal in the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of California. In March 2019, following the
Ramos injunction, the court in
Bhattarai stayed the
proceedings pending adjudication of the government’s appeal in
Ramos. Further, the government
agreed
not to terminate the TPS designations for Nepal and Honduras pending resolution of that appeal.
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Additionally, in
Saget v. Trump, a group of plaintiffs filed a
lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the
Eastern District of New York challenging DHS’s termination of Haiti’s TPS designation. In April 2019,
the court
issued a preliminary injunction enjoining DHS from terminating Haiti’s TPS designation,
largely on the same grounds that the
Ramos district court relied on in issuing an injunction.
The Ninth Circuit’s Decision in Ramos v. Wolf
The government
appealed the preliminary injunction in
Ramos v. Wolf to the Ninth Circuit. On September
14, 2020, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit, in a split decisio
n, reversed and vacated the injunction.
The court
held that 8 U.S.C. § 1254a(b)(5) barred judicial review of the plaintiffs’ APA challenge to
DHS’s decision to terminate the TPS designations for Sudan, Nicaragua, Haiti, and El Salvador.
Recognizing the DHS Secretary’
s “broad and unique” discretion over TPS designations, the court
read §
1254a(b)(5) as barring review of the Secretary’s “country-specific TPS determinations,” but not “general
collateral challenges to unconstitutional practices and policies used by the agency” in reaching those
determinations. According to the court, the Secretary’s unreviewable TPS determinati
ons include the
substantive “considerations and reasoning” underlying those determinations, such as an assessment of
country conditions. The court
construed the plaintiffs’ arguments about DHS’s failure to consider
intervening events in a country as “essentially an attack on the substantive considerations underlying the
Secretary’s specific TPS determinations, over which the statute prohibits judicial review.”
The Ninth Circuit did, however
, address the plaintiffs’ equal protection claim, and concluded that 8
U.S.C. § 1254a(b)(5)
did not foreclose “colorable constitutional claims.” The court
held that the plaintiffs
failed to present serious questions on the merits of their claim that the TPS terminations were influenced
by President Trump’s “animus against non-white, non-European immigrants.” The court
determined there
was a “glaring lack of evidence” linking the President’s alleged discriminatory intent to the specific TPS
terminations. Further, the court held that the fact that the TPS terminations affected non-European
countries with mainly “non-white” populations also
did not establish racial animus because virtually all
countries designated for TPS have that characteristic and any TPS termination would disproportionately
impact such countries. The court
vacated the district court’s injunction and remanded the case to the
lower court for further proceedings.
Following the Ninth Circuit’s decision, the
Ramos plaintiffs filed
a petition for rehearing en banc (i.e., a
petition requesting review of the panel’s decision by all active judges in the circuit). Subsequently, the
Ninth Circuit panel stayed the litigation pending settlement discussions between the parties in light of the
Biden Administration’s indication that it would review the TPS designation terminations. After a few
years, those settlement effort
s reportedly ended without agreement. Eventually, on February 10, 2023, the
Ninth Circuit
granted the plaintiffs’ request to rehear the case
en banc and vacated the panel’s decision.
The court has scheduled oral argument on the rehearing petition for June 2023.
New TPS Designations for Haiti and Sudan
On August 3, 2021, less than a year after the initial ruling in
Ramos, DHS newly
designated Haiti for
TPS. That designation enabled Haitian nationals, including those who received TPS under the previous
2011 designation, as well as those who entered the United States more recently, to pursue TPS benefits
under the 2021 designation. Given this development, on October 15, 2021, the parties in the
Saget case
(which involved a challenge to the termination of Haiti’s original TPS designation) agreed to dismiss that
case. More recently, on January 26, 2023, DHS
extended and redesignated Haiti for TPS, allowing
Haitian nationals residing in the United States as of November 6, 2022, to pursue TPS relief based on this
new designation.
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Additionally, on April 19, 2022, DHS newly
designated Sudan for TPS. That designation allows Sudanese
nationals, including those with TPS relief under the prior 2013 designation as well as those who came to
the United States more recently, to pursue TPS benefits under the 2022 designation. The newer TPS
designations for Haiti and Sudan are currently set to last until August 3, 2024, and October 19, 2023,
respectively.
Implications for TPS Recipients
The Ninth Circuit’s 2020 panel decision in
Ramos would have allowed DHS to terminate the TPS
designations for El Salvador and Nicaragua, as well as the
previous 2011 and 2013 TPS designations for
Haiti and Sudan. TPS recipients from those countries would have become subject to removal upon
expiration of their TPS (unless they acquired some other lawful immigration status that remained valid).
Additionally, the 2020
Ramos ruling could have impacted TPS recipients from Nepal and Honduras,
whose countries’ TPS termination decisions are being separately
challenged in
Bhattarai v. Wolf. In that
case, the court
stayed the proceedings pending adjudication of the government’s appeal in
Ramos. The
Ninth Circuit’s 2020 decision would have also made TPS recipients from Nepal and Honduras subject to
removal. All told, the
Ramos 2020 decision potentially rendered about
292,000 TPS recipients removable
upon the effective termination date of their countries’ TPS designations.
Nonetheless, TPS recipients from El Salvador, Nicaragua, Nepal, Honduras, and Haiti and Sudan (under
those countries’ 2011 and 2013 designations) will not immediately lose their authorization to remain in
the United States. As discussed in this Sidebar, the Ninth Circuit ha
s granted the
Ramos plaintiffs’ petition
for rehearing
en banc and vacated the earlier 2020 panel decision. Consequently, the lower court’s
injuncti
on remains in effect pending the Ninth Circuit’s
en banc review of the case. Meanwhile, DHS’s
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) ha
s extended TPS-related documentation (e.g., work
authorization) for TPS recipients from El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Nepal, and for TPS
recipients from Haiti and Sudan (under those countries’ 2011 and 2013 designations) until June 30, 2024.
Further, as discussed, nationals of Haiti and Sudan with TPS under those countries’ previous designations
may pursue TPS benefit
s under the newer designations, thereby ensuring that they maintain TPS benefits.
USCIS
announced in November 2022 that if the government ultimately prevails in the
Ramos litigation,
the TPS terminations for El Salvador, Honduras, Nepal, and Nicaragua would take effect no earlier than
365 days from issuance of a final court order permitting the TPS designation terminations. However, if
the Ninth Circuit’s
en banc review results in a decision allowing DHS to terminate the TPS designations,
the plaintiffs coul
d petition for review before the Supreme Court, and request a stay of the Ninth Circuit’s
ruling pending disposition of that petition. The plaintiffs could also file a
motion to stay the mandate in
the Ninth Circuit pending the Supreme Court’s consideration of their petition.
While litigation in
Ramos continues, Congress may consider
legislation related to TPS. For example, in
the 118th Congress, th
e Temporary Protected Status Reform and Integrity Act (S. 207) would make those
who entered the United States without inspection, accrued unlawful presence in the United States, or were
issued a final removal order ineligible for TPS. Additionally, under this bill, TPS recipients would be
ineligible to adjust to LPR status during the period in which they have TPS status. This bill would also
require an Act of Congress for any second or subsequent extension of a country’s TPS designation. The
bill would also prohibit DHS from designating TPS for a country that had a previous TPS designation that
was terminated within the past eighteen months. The bill provides that, if a TPS designation is terminated,
aliens who had been granted TPS based on that designation may remain in the United States for 180 days
after termination of the designation.
In the 117th Congress, t
he American Dream and Promise Act of 2021 (H.R. 6), which passed the House in
2021, would have allowed certain nationals of countries designated for TPS to
pursue adjustment of status
t
o lawful permanent resident (LPR). Other legislation introduced in the 117th Congress would have added
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new countries or regions to those designated for TPS (e.g
., Hong Kong, Lebanon, a
nd Ukraine), or,
similar to
H.R. 6, would hav
e allowed TPS recipients who have lived in the United States for several
year
s to adjust to LPR status. Conversely, some bills introduced in the 117th Congress would have limited
TPS by making those who ar
e members of criminal gangs or
lack lawful immigration status ineligible for
TPS
, terminated an individual’s TPS if that person failed to appear for a removal proceeding, or
transferred authority from DHS to Congress to designate countries for TPS.
Author Information
Hillel R. Smith
Legislative Attorney
Disclaimer
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