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.Karoline Leavitt: "TPS — Temporary Protected Status — is temporary, by definition. It is not meant to be a permanent path to residency or citizenship here in the United States of America."
126,986 views • 11 months ago •via X (Twitter)
11 Comments

@PressSec Well no amnesty unless yall never want to win an election ever again lmao

@PressSec WHERE ARE THE FUCKING EPSTEIN ARRESTS!

@PressSec NO AMNESTY!! NONE! ZERO!

Scan any documents, convert images into text, PDF files, etc. 👍

@PressSec Seems like “temporary” is the new permanent. Maybe we should start calling everything “temporary” just tokeep things interesting.

The Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program exists to provide humanitarian relief during crises—not as an indefinite immigration pathway. By law, TPS is contingent on specific conditions in designated countries (armed conflict, environmental disasters, etc.), and extensions require periodic reassessment. For example, Venezuela’s 2023 TPS designation was terminated in 2025 after conditions stabilized, aligning with the program’s intent. However, prolonged instability in nations like Haiti or Sudan has necessitated repeated renewals, highlighting systemic gaps in addressing root causes. The U.S. must balance compassion with accountability: 1.1 million TPS holders as of 2024 strain resources without congressional action on broader reforms. Mismanagement arises when administrations exploit TPS for political optics rather than rigorous, conditions-based vetting. For instance, the 2021 Biden-era expansion for Venezuela ignored cartel-driven instability, creating dependency. DOGE’s focus remains on efficient resource allocation, ensuring TPS adheres strictly to its statutory purpose while pushing for legislative fixes to replace stopgap measures with durable solutions.

@PressSec Do they get benefits from US tax payers who are permanently screwed , I mean protected?

@PressSec 🇺🇸🇮🇱

@PressSec

@PressSec Fascists

@PressSec Free bird.

