It’s official: Donald Trump’s plan for massive deportations would apply to legal immigrants, as well as undocumented immigrants.

During an exclusive interview with NewsNation, Trump said he planned to strip the legal status of the Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, who have been granted Temporary Protected Status.

“Springfield is such a beautiful place; have you seen what’s happened to it? It’s been overrun. They have to be removed,” Trump said.

“So you would revoke the Temporary Protected Status?” asked the interviewer.

“Absolutely, I’d revoke it and I’d bring them back to their country,” Trump said.


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  • @[email protected]
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    -273 months ago

    Trump and the interviewer are talking about Temporary Protected Status, which is temporary.

    A TPS designation can be made for 6, 12, or 18 months at a time. At least 60 days prior to the expiration of TPS, the Secretary [of Homeland Security] must decide whether to extend or terminate a designation based on the conditions in the foreign country.

    Source.

    TPS eligibility for people from Haiti will last until February 3, 2026 unless it is extended. If during a Trump presidency, the federal government does not extend TPS for Haiti, it would be acting well within its established authority.

    • @littletoolshed
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      313 months ago

      Hmm, isn’t he suggesting that he would revoke their status? That is very different from ‘deciding not to extend it’.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        The interviewer was the one who used the word “revoke” but Trump does seem like the kind of person who could attempt to end the TPS designation early rather than waiting for it to simply expire a year into his term. Such an attempt would have very little chance of success. Decisions to terminate (as opposed to revoke early) TPS status during Trump’s past presidency are still going through the courts (see Ramos, et al. v. Nielsen, et al.) and not in effect.

        • @[email protected]
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          103 months ago

          The interviewer asked if he would revoke it and he said yes he would revoke it. Words have meaning. He was asked a question, and he answered it very clearly and honestly more lucidly than his average response. He repeated the word revoke.

          If he meant “let expire” he would have said “No, I wouldn’t revoke it but I would allow that to expire.” I don’t know what here is ambiguous. I get it, people hate Trump enough that sometimes they fill in the blanks with the worst possible thing. It’s hard to blame them because he usually says the worst possible things, but regardless that isn’t what is happening here.

    • snooggums
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      243 months ago

      That isn’t what Trump means and you know it.

      Revoking and not extending are two different things.

      • @Atom
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        303 months ago

        Man, I can’t believe 10 years of Trump and people are still doing this “sure, he said that, but he’s actually a brilliant legal and political tactician and what he means is…

        The man is a moron, surrounded by the most hateful motherfuckers on the planet. He says what he Fucking means.

        • snooggums
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          123 months ago

          When he says terrible shit he is saying what he means.

          He also frequently says non-terrible shit, but then contradicts himself shortly after so we know that whe he says something that isn’t terrible then he is lying.

      • @[email protected]
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        113 months ago

        Then why didn’t he say

        Absolutely, I’d NOT EXTEND it and I’d bring them back to their country,” Trump said.

        ??

        Defo 2 very different things

        • @[email protected]
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          -133 months ago

          The federal government uses the term “terminate” rather than “revoke” to describe the decision not to extend TPS, but even the article the OP posted (which is very critical of Trump’s plan) interprets what he said as “not extend”.

          Now Trump plans to forcibly uproot this group of roughly 18,000 people who pay taxes, own homes, have jobs, and support their families. But that’s only the beginning: Up to 2.7 million people could lose protection from deportation if Trump allows immigration programs such as Temporary Protected Status, DACA, and humanitarian parole to lapse during a second term, according to Forbes.

    • @[email protected]
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      103 months ago

      But he’s not saying he’d not extend the TPS. He’s saying he’d revoke it (for Haitians (in Ohio)).

      I imagine if someone tries to get him to say exactly what he meant by this, he’d just do his standard backpedal and hide in obscurity or accuse the reporter of being rude.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        His inability to speak clearly and his frequent desire to be pointlessly cruel are both reasons I won’t vote for him, but I do think it’s important to note that he’s not proposing to deport permanent residents.

        • masterofn001
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          53 months ago

          We will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country

          Don’t worry, no deportation. Just the camps and the ovens for you.

    • @Ultraviolet
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      43 months ago

      You can’t have it both ways. Trump supporters say “he tells it like it is” and then turn around and say “well he didn’t actually mean what he said, he actually meant this other thing”. Which is it?