The Dictatorship
Haiti TPS holders alert justices to documents that ‘undercut’ Trump bid to end protections
The Supreme Courtwill hear arguments later this month on the Trump administration’squest to end humanitarian immigration protections for Haitians and Syrians, in a case that could affect immigrants from many countries. Ahead of the hearing, lawyers challenging the administration alerted the justices to evidence they say undercuts the government’s position.
On Thursday, they filed a letterregarding evidence produced by the government in discovery, namely three documents that, the plaintiffs wrote to the high court, “undercut the Government’s stated rationale for the termination” of the humanitarian relief at issue, called Temporary Protected Status.
The first document is a September 2025 email in which a researcher at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services wrote that her supervisor was “forcing” her “to include a section” in a Haiti report “on how TPS is a pull factor” for unlawful migration. The researcher wrote that she would do so if they “had any empirical evidence to support that claim,” but they didn’t. She wrote that she was “obeying” her supervisor’s “command” but that she wanted to “go on record” that she was “concerned” about “making such claims without empirical support.”
Another document is an email sent by the same USCIS researcher the following month that said there were no known or suspected terrorist “hits for Haiti,” and said that claim was removed from their analysis because it didn’t support “the termination argument.”
A third document referenced in the letter is an email from a different USCIS employee that said “DHS data” showed that “0.06%” of the Haiti TPS population had “public safety records” and that none were associated with known or suspected terrorist records.
The justices agreed last monthto consider the issue that has been litigated regarding TPS protections for people from several countries, in addition to Haiti and Syria. In a series of cases, lower courts have rejected termination decisions made by Kristi Noemwhen she was the head of the Department of Homeland Security. In response, the Trump administration launched urgent appeals to the justices, complaining that lower court judges have been unlawfully second-guessing government decisions. The justices agreed to review the issue jointly in the Haiti and Syria cases, but in doing so, the high court kept the lower court rulings in favor of the protections in place for now.
Oral argument is set for April 29and a ruling is expected later in the spring or early summer, when the justices issue the final decisions in cases argued this term.
In the Haiti litigation, U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes, a Biden appointee, wrote that Noem, who was since replaced as Homeland Security chief by Markwayne Mullin, “has a First Amendment right to call immigrants killers, leeches, entitlement junkies, and any other inapt name she wants,” but that, as DHS secretary, she was “constrained by both our Constitution and the APA [Administrative Procedure Act] to apply faithfully the facts to the law in implementing the TPS program. The record to-date shows she has yet to do that.”
Reyes noted that the president “has made — freely, at times even boastfully — several derogatory statements about Haitians and other nonwhite foreigners.” Among other things, she recounted that he called Haiti a “s—hole country,” suggested Haitians “probably have AIDS” and complained that their immigration to the U.S. is “like a death wish for our country.”
A divided federal appeals court panel in Washington declined the administration’s requestto lift the district court order. The two Democratic appointees in the majority said the government couldn’t show why it needed instant relief, whereas Haitians face “substantial and well-documented harms” if they lose protections, including “risk of detention and deportation, separation from family members, and loss of work authorization.” Trump appointee Justin Walker dissented, arguing that the government is irreparably harmed by courts intruding into executive policy. He also emphasized the “temporary” nature of TPS.
Jordan Rubin is the Deadline: Legal Blog writer. He was a prosecutor for the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and is the author of “Bizarro,” a book about the secret war on synthetic drugs. Before he joined MS NOW, he was a legal reporter for Bloomberg Law.
The Dictatorship
Trump administration looks to sanitize George Washington’s slavery history
The Trump administration’s fragile white ego is in focus yet again thanks to newly proposed changes for an exhibit in Philadelphia centered on George Washington and slavery.
The administration is being sued by the city over its efforts to whitewash Washington’s history of slave ownership from the President’s House Site, the nation’s first official presidential residence. The push has been put on hold by a judge who compared it to the censorship depicted in George Orwell’s book “1984.”
The attempted alteration of the exhibit came after a Trump executive order demanded a review of national parks and museums to bar any displays that “inappropriately disparage Americans past or living.” Last year, Trump also lobbed a puerile complaint that Smithsonian musuems focus too much on “how bad” slavery was.
And all that kvetching provides context for the changes that Trump’s administration is seeking to impose at the President’s House Site — alterations that The Philadelphia Inquirer said places the first president’s slave ownership “in a more sympathetic light.”
The Inquirer flagged government renderings showing plans for new historical panels to be installed at the site, and it seems clear that the administration’s goal is to make Washington out to be a loving patriot or conscientious objector to slavery, rather than a racist slave driver.
First, note what the Inquirer said has been removed:
The panels taken down by the Park Service in January included displays titled ‘The Dirty Business of Slavery’ and ‘Life Under Slavery,’ as well as illustrations about the Fugitive Slave Act and Ona Judge, who was enslaved by Washington and later escaped.
So the administration wants to omit detailed references to Washington’s slavery history — which Black activists fought for years to include — while also promoting a whitewashed narrative that he was a fundamentally moral man despite the whole “claiming dominion over other human beings” thing. Per the Inquirer:
For instance, on one panel titled ‘Presidents Washington and Adams on Slavery,’ the Trump administration writes that ‘Caught between his private doubts about slavery and his public responsibilities as president, George Washington navigated a nation deeply divided over slavery.’
‘Privately, George Washington often expressed discomfort with the institution and a desire to see it abolished,’ the panel continued. ‘Yet as a Virginia plantation owner, his wealth and livelihood were deeply tied to it.’
And another example:
And later in the same panel: ‘Slaves living in the President’s House experienced a greater modicum of autonomy than elsewhere in the South such as to explore the city and sometimes even attend the theater, with Washington buying the tickets.’
When a censorship regime like Trump’s sees fit to tout a slave owner’s generosity — and the “greater modicum of autonomy” he purportedly granted to those he subjected to brutal bondage and forced labor — it leaves little doubt that the fundamental goal is to sanitize history, rather than teach it thoroughly.
A White House spokesperson told the Inquirer that the administration wants to acknowledge “the full breadth of our nation’s history” and that “no piece of history should be washed away.”
But “whitewashing” truly is the most apt descriptor for a plan that includes touting George Washington as some kind of selfless, principled gift-giver while brushing past, or deliberately omitting, details about his well-documented — and extremely lucrative — history of enslaving human beings.
Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.
The Dictatorship
Thursday’s Mini-Report, 4.9.26
Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Crisis conditions in Lebanon: “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel vowed on Thursday to continue striking Hezbollah in Lebanon, hours after he appeared to make a concession by saying his country would start talks with the Lebanese government about trying to disarm the Iran-backed paramilitary group.”
* In related news: “More than 80 countries — which did not include the U.S. — condemned Israel’s lethal strikes on Lebanon. … Several international leaders have condemned Israel’s intensified strikes on Lebanon, which killed more than 300 people yesterday alone, according to The Associated Press, citing the country’s health ministry.”
* This wasn’t a problem before the war: “Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei vowed today to tighten control over the Strait of Hormuz and claimed victory in the ongoing war between his country and Israel and the U.S. ‘We will definitely take the management of the Strait of Hormuz to a new phase,’ Khamenei said in a series of posts on X.”
* Inflation news: “Core inflation held above the Federal Reserve’s target before the recent surge in energy prices, according to a key gauge released Thursday that offers the central bank a snapshot of conditions leading into the Iran war. The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes food and energy, rose a seasonally adjusted 3% in February, the Commerce Department reported. The all-items headline inflation measure increased 2.8%.”
* The good news is, the vaccine saves lives; the bad news is, the Trump administration doesn’t want us to know that: “The acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has delayed publication of a CDC report showing the covid-19 vaccine cut the likelihood of emergency department visits and hospitalizations for healthy adults last winter by about half, according to two scientists familiar with the decision.”
* Even for this White House, her remarks were weird: “First lady Melania Trump denied any ties to convicted sex offenders Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell on Thursday. … ‘The lies linking me with the disgraceful Jeffrey Epstein need to end today,’ the first lady began in remarks delivered from the White House. … It was not clear who or which statements or reporting she was referring to.”
* On a related note, Donald Trump told MS NOW that he didn’t know about his wife’s press statement.
* Trump’s animosity toward the NFL has reached a new stage: “The Justice Department has opened an investigation into whether the National Football League has engaged in anticompetitive tactics that harm consumers, according to people familiar with the situation.”
See you tomorrow.
Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”
The Dictatorship
CDC delays report on benefits of Covid vaccine
The publication of a report showing the Covid vaccine is highly effective at reducing hospitalizations has been delayed by the acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Washington Post first reported the delayciting two scientists familiar with the decision who spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed the delay to MS NOW.
Dr. Jay Bhattacharya — an economist who advocated against vaccines during the Covid-19 pandemic and who now helms the National Institutes of Health — took issue with the report’s methodology and held back on publication, the spokesperson said. Bhattacharya was acting director of the CDC at the time and has since been granted broad authority over the agency as the Trump administration searches for a permanent director.
“Dr. Bhattacharya expressed concerns about the observational method used in this study to calculate vaccine effectiveness, and the scientific team is working to address these concerns,” Emily G. Hilliard, the HHS spokesperson, told MS NOW.
The report was slated to publish in a March issue of the CDC’s flagship journal, the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the scientists told the Post. But Bhattacharya delayed its release despite a study that relied on the same methodology — examining the vaccination status of sick people who sought care at hospitals and emergency rooms — having been published in the CDC journal a week earlier, according to the Post. That study focused on the efficacy of fly vaccines.
Hilliard did not respond to a question about whether it is common practice for political appointees to review independent research studies that fall outside of their expertise, but said that “it’s routine for CDC leadership to review and flag concerns about MMWR journal papers, especially relating to their methodology, leading up to planned publication.”
Department of Human and Health Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a prominent vaccine skeptic who founded the anti-vaccine nonprofit Children’s Health Defense before President Donald Trump appointed him to lead the country’s health and research agencies. Last year, Kennedy overhauled the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which makes recommendations about vaccine policy. He fired all 17 members of the committee and included vaccine skeptics among the replacements.
The panel has since scrapped recommendations that healthy children and pregnant women get vaccinated against Covid. The CDC previously recommended Covid vaccines for everyone age 6 months and older.
The revised panel has also rolled back the decades-old guidance that all newborns get vaccinated against hepatitis B — an incurable disease with deadly consequences when contracted in the first few months of life.
The Food and Drug Administration, another agency under the purview of HHS, generated concern among medical experts and pharmaceutical companies when it refused to review Moderna’s application for approval of a new flu vaccine that used the same mRNA technology that made the Covid vaccine possible. The agency reversed course after Moderna amended its application and met with regulators in February.
Sydney Carruth is a breaking news reporter covering national politics and policy for MS NOW. You can send her tips from a non-work device on Signal at SydneyCarruth.46 or follow her work on X and Bluesky.
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