Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, argued that the federal Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program has been used to relocate migrants into communities across the United States following a recent Supreme Court ruling that favored the Trump administration’s authority to remove TPS protections for certain groups, including Haitians and Syrians, as reported [1] by PJ Media.
The Supreme Court decision prompted reactions from lawmakers and commentators on both sides of the immigration debate.
People who traverse across several countries and show up to our southern border “looking for a better life” are not legitimate asylum seekers.
You don’t have a right to claim asylum in America just by showing up to our border.
“Asylum” has a specific definition under our…
— Brandon Gill (@realBrandonGill) June 28, 2026 [2]
Supporters of the ruling argued it reinforces the executive branch’s authority to administer immigration programs, while critics expressed concern about the potential impact on individuals who have lived in the United States under TPS protections.
TPS is a humanitarian immigration program that allows nationals of designated countries experiencing armed conflict, natural disasters, or other extraordinary conditions to remain and work temporarily in the United States.
Haiti and Syria received TPS designations more than a decade ago following crises in their respective countries.
Following the ruling, Gill posted comments on X criticizing the expansion of the program during the Biden administration and arguing that many beneficiaries had not traveled directly from their home countries.
“By the way, many of the Haitians who were given TPS under Joe Biden did not come from Haiti. They were living in nations like Brazil and Chile and came here to take advantage of Biden’s open border. They were sent, not to Martha’s Vineyard or Sherman Oaks, but to blue-collar, midwestern towns like Springfield, Ohio. And the people there were called racist for objecting to the culture of the town they built being fundamentally changed overnight.”
Gill also argued that asylum and TPS programs are susceptible to fraud and questioned how the programs have been administered in recent years.
Exactly correct — the hordes of Third World “temporary” migrants did not settle in tony Ruling Class enclaves.
They were sent to working class communities like Charleroi, PA, which I profiled as the town struggled to deal with the influx… pic.twitter.com/yAf0jjGLxM [3] https://t.co/eZY2d3twgg [4]
— Steve Cortes (@CortesSteve) June 27, 2026 [5]
Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin responded to Gill’s post by citing his own reporting from the southern border during the 2021 migrant surge in Del Rio, Texas.
“When I was at the Del Rio, [Texas,] Haitian bridge camp in 2021, many of the Haitians told me they had been living in Chile & Brazil for years before coming to the US illegally for economic (not safety) reasons,” Melugin wrote.
“The Haitians were dumping & tearing up their Chilean documents at the river’s edge hide this fact from the US so it wouldn’t hurt their fraudulent asylum claims.”
Melugin added additional comments regarding migrants he encountered while covering the border.
“The idea that all these Haitians came directly from Haiti after an earthquake or assassination is false. Many of them were living happily and safely for years in South America until Biden’s open border policies became too attractive to pass up. Others also flew into the US via Biden’s CHNV [Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans] mass parole program, which was supposed to be for only 2-year humanitarian parole grants. Of course, most never left.”
The CHNV parole initiative allowed eligible nationals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to apply for temporary humanitarian parole into the United States under specified conditions.
Gill’s comments also referenced broader debates over immigration policy and congressional representation.
He argued that counting all state residents during the U.S. Census, regardless of immigration status, could affect congressional apportionment and Electoral College representation.
Those issues have remained part of ongoing political and legal debates surrounding immigration enforcement, census methodology, and federal immigration policy.
Supporters of the Supreme Court ruling have said the decision restores greater authority to the executive branch to determine when temporary humanitarian protections should end.
Opponents have argued that ending TPS protections could disrupt the lives of individuals who have lived and worked in the United States for years.
The administration’s implementation of TPS and related immigration programs continues to face legal challenges as federal courts consider additional cases involving humanitarian protections and executive immigration authority.