58,000 Haitians Could Be Rendered Deportable Months After Trump Promised to Be Their ‘Biggest Champion’
An estimated 58,000 Haitian immigrants living in the U.S under a temporary federal program could become undocumented and targeted for deportation if the Trump administration doesn’t extend their Temporary Protected Status by next week.
Haitians in the U.S. “are basically holding their breath and living in anxiety while they wait to hear what the Trump administration has to say,” Marleine Bastien, the executive director of Haitian Women of Miami, an advocacy group that works with Haitian women and their families, told Fusion.
After the earthquake in 2010, President Obama granted Haitian immigrants in the U.S. temporary legal status under a humanitarian program called “Temporary Protected Status.”
In 2014, the federal government acknowledged that while there has considerable progress in Haiti since earthquake, the country “continues to lack the adequate infrastructure, employment and educational opportunities, and basic services to absorb” the approximately 58,000 Haitian nationals living in the U.S. under TPS.
If the Trump administration doesn’t extend TPS for Haitians, the estimated 58,000 members of the program could be rendered undocumented and be deported. President Donald Trump’s administration must announce the TPS extension by May 23—that’s just a week away.
Last September, when candidate Donald Trump was campaigning for president, he stopped in Miami’s Little Haiti and told Haitian-Americans he “shared a lot of common values” with the community and that, “Whether you vote for me or not I really want to be your biggest champion.”
But Bastien said she doesn’t remember any other administration waiting this long to extend TPS. She said other administrations have been sensitive to the fact it can take up to 90 days to renew TPS work permits. She said she’s aware of some Haitians under the TPS program who have already lost their jobs as their employers anticipate the temporary work program expiring.
Bastien said Haitians are fearing the worst and hoping for the best—even after the acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, James McCament, said conditions in Haiti have improved enough to end “temporary protected status” for Haitians.
“Haitians are fearing the worst because they know that this administration has all these hard-liners who do not favor immigration, period,” Bastien said.