1. United States
  2. Ohio
  3. Letter

Congress: Protect legal workers and our economy

To: Sen. Husted, Rep. Beatty, Sen. Moreno

From: A verified voter in Columbus, OH

June 26

The Supreme Court's decision today in Mullin v. Doe allows the executive branch to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 370,000 legally documented Haitian and Syrian immigrants without meaningful judicial review of its actions. The Court did not rule on whether ending these protections was good policy — it ruled that under the original 1990 statute, Congress wrote the law in a way that bars federal courts from reviewing the administration's statutory decisions. Because this power comes directly from how Congress drafted the law, the responsibility to fix it falls squarely on Congress. This is a structural flaw in our system that requires a practical, principled solution. Leaving long-term, legally present residents in perpetual limbo undermines the rule of law and creates massive instability. Legislative action is urgently needed for three reasons: - Economic Disruption: Abruptly ending work authorizations for hundreds of thousands of people is a self-inflicted wound to our economy. TPS holders contribute more than $29 billion annually to the U.S. economy and pay nearly $8 billion in taxes. More than 830,000 work in construction, healthcare, retail, manufacturing, and transportation — filling critical labor shortages at participation rates that match or exceed prime-age U.S.-born workers. Forcing them out of the workforce directly harms the local businesses and industries that depend on them. - Executive Overreach: The current framework concentrates unchecked power in the executive branch, with no mechanism for courts to ensure the law was followed. Restoring judicial review of statutory compliance aligns with the core constitutional principle of checks and balances, ensuring no administration can make sweeping, life-altering decisions completely shielded from legal oversight. This isn't a partisan principle — it's the foundation of American governance. - Humanitarian Consequences: The State Department currently rates both Haiti and Syria as "Level 4: Do Not Travel" — its highest warning — citing kidnapping, terrorism, civil unrest, and limited access to healthcare. Ending these protections sends law-abiding neighbors back to some of the most dangerous conditions on earth. This isn't a hypothetical risk. It's documented government fact. The TPS program affects roughly 1.3 million people from 17 countries — many of whom have lived here for decades and built lives, families, and businesses in American communities. The Court's ruling today clears the way for terminations across all of them, not just Haitians and Syrians. This structural problem demands a structural fix. I urge you to support legislation that either restores proper judicial oversight of TPS statutory decisions, or creates a clear, merit-based path to permanent residency for long-term holders who pass rigorous background checks. A bipartisan majority in the House has already shown this is possible — the Senate must follow. The Supreme Court has told us where the authority lies. Please use it.

Share on BlueskyShare on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedInShare on WhatsAppShare on TumblrEmail with GmailEmail

Write to Jon Allen Hustedor any of your elected officials

Send your own letter

Resistbot is a chatbot that delivers your texts to your elected officials by email, fax, or postal mail. Tap above to give it a try or learn more here!