House Democrats Push Bill to Extend Haitian TPS Until 2029
House advances bill to extend Haitian TPS through April 2029, protecting over 350,000 individuals.
**TL;DR** The House voted to advance a bill that would extend Temporary Protected Status for Haitians living in the United States until April 2029. The measure shields more than 350,000 Haitians who currently rely on TPS from losing their legal protection.
**Context** Temporary Protected Status allows nationals from countries experiencing conflict or disaster to live and work legally in the U.S. for a limited time. Haiti’s designation has been renewed several times since the 2010 earthquake, but recent administrations have signaled intent to let it lapse. In March, House Democrats launched a discharge petition to force a vote on Representative Laura Gillen’s TPS extension bill.
**Key Facts** - The House passed the legislation sending it to the Senate for an up‑or‑down vote. - The bill would keep Haiti’s TPS designation active through April 2029. - Over 350,000 Haitians residing in the U.S. would retain work authorization and deportation relief under the extension. - Representative Laura Gillen sponsored the bill; Representative Ayanna Pressley’s discharge petition helped secure the House vote.
**What It Means** If the Senate approves the bill, Haitian beneficiaries will avoid a gap in legal status that could disrupt employment, housing, and family stability. Failure to act would revert to the existing expiration date, leaving hundreds of thousands vulnerable to removal proceedings. The extension also signals congressional pushback against executive efforts to curtail TPS for Haiti.
Watch for Senate consideration of the bill in the coming weeks.
Conversation
Reader notes
Loading comments...