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House Passes Haiti TPS Extension Bill: What Happens Next

What Happened

On Thursday, April 16, 2026, the U.S. House of Representatives passed H.R. 1689 by a vote of 224 to 204. The bill, sponsored by Representative Laura Gillen of New York, would require the Secretary of Homeland Security to designate Haiti for Temporary Protected Status until April 2029. Ten House Republicans joined every voting Democrat to advance the measure, along with one independent.

The bill reached the floor through a rare procedural tool known as a discharge petition. Representative Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, co-chair of the Congressional Haiti Caucus, led the effort to gather the 218 signatures needed to force a vote over the objections of House leadership. Discharge petitions almost never succeed. According to Representative Pressley's office, only 15 have crossed the 218-signature threshold in the past 40 years.

The legislation now moves to the U.S. Senate, where its path forward is uncertain. The White House has signaled that President Trump would veto the bill if it reached his desk.

Key Takeaway: The House vote is historic and sends a strong message, but H.R. 1689 is not yet law. Haitian TPS holders remain protected by a separate federal court stay that is currently before the U.S. Supreme Court. Arguments in that case are scheduled for April 29, 2026. Nothing about your current TPS documentation or work authorization changes because of the House vote.

What the Bill Would Do

H.R. 1689 would do two main things if it became law:

The bill would not create a green card or any permanent immigration status. TPS is, by design, temporary. It provides protection from removal and the right to work, but it does not by itself lead to lawful permanent residence. For that, Haitian nationals generally need to qualify for another form of relief, such as asylum, a family or employment petition, or a humanitarian category.

Who Voted Yes Across the Aisle

According to the published roll call and multiple news reports, the ten House Republicans who voted in favor of H.R. 1689 were Mike Carey and Michael Turner of Ohio, Richard McCormick of Georgia, Don Bacon of Nebraska, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Mike Lawler and Nicole Malliotakis of New York, and Mario Diaz-Balart, Carlos Gimenez, and Maria Elvira Salazar of Florida. Representative Kevin Kiley of California, who recently left the Republican Party to serve as an independent, also voted yes.

Why does this matter? In a closely divided House, bipartisan crossovers are rare on immigration votes. The fact that ten Republicans, including several representing heavily Haitian and Caribbean communities in Florida and New York, went against their party's leadership signals that TPS for Haiti has more political support than the headline votes on enforcement bills would suggest.

Why This Matters for Massachusetts

Massachusetts has one of the largest Haitian populations in the United States. Communities in Boston, Brockton, Randolph, Mattapan, and the South Shore include tens of thousands of Haitian nationals, many of whom are or have been TPS beneficiaries. Representative Pressley's Seventh Congressional District includes neighborhoods with deep Haitian roots, which helps explain her leadership on the discharge petition.

For Haitian families in Massachusetts, the practical reality remains complicated:

For Haitian families I work with in Massachusetts: Your current TPS status and work permit are still in effect under the existing court stay. Do not let the House vote, or the noise around it, convince you that the situation has changed overnight in either direction. Keep following the Supreme Court case, keep your documents current, and stay in close contact with your immigration attorney.

What Happens Next

Several things could happen from here, and families and employers should plan for more than one scenario.

The Senate Could Act, Modify, or Ignore the Bill

In the Senate, Republican leadership controls the floor schedule. A Senate vote on H.R. 1689 is not guaranteed. Senators who support the extension may try to attach it to must-pass legislation later in the year, while opponents may try to hold it or send it to committee where it could stall. Senator Katie Britt of Alabama and other Republicans have publicly opposed the extension.

The Supreme Court Will Rule on the TPS Termination

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear argument on April 29, 2026 in the consolidated cases challenging the administration's termination of TPS for Haiti and Syria. Lower courts have kept the terminations on hold, preserving current protections during litigation. A decision is widely expected in late June or early July 2026. That ruling, rather than the House vote alone, is likely to be the most immediately consequential development for Haitian TPS holders.

A Presidential Veto Remains on the Table

Even if the Senate were to pass H.R. 1689, the White House has said the President would veto it. An override requires two-thirds majorities in both chambers, a threshold the House did not reach in its 224 to 204 vote and that the Senate would almost certainly not reach either. This means that, as a practical matter, H.R. 1689 most likely functions as a political statement and a backup protection, rather than an immediate path to law.

What You Should Do Right Now

If you are a Haitian national in Massachusetts or anywhere in the United States who holds or has held Haiti TPS, or who is a family member of a TPS holder, here are practical steps to take today:

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the House vote change my current TPS status or work permit?
No. The House passed H.R. 1689, but the bill is not law. Your current Haiti TPS status and any associated Employment Authorization Document (EAD) remain valid to the extent they are valid under the existing federal court stay and USCIS guidance. Nothing about your documents changes because of the April 16 House vote alone.
What is H.R. 1689?
H.R. 1689, sponsored by Representative Laura Gillen of New York, is a bill that would require the Secretary of Homeland Security to designate Haiti for Temporary Protected Status until April 2029. The House passed it 224 to 204 on April 16, 2026, and it now moves to the Senate for consideration.
What is a discharge petition?
A discharge petition is a procedural tool in the U.S. House that allows a majority of members to force a floor vote on a bill that has been stalled in committee or blocked by leadership. It requires 218 signatures, which is a simple majority of the 435-member House. Discharge petitions rarely succeed, so the use of one here is itself a significant political event.
How many Haitians would be affected if the bill became law?
The sponsors and advocates working on this bill describe approximately 350,000 Haitian nationals covered by the existing and pending TPS designations. That is the population the extension is intended to protect.
Will the Senate pass it? Will the President sign it?
Both are uncertain. The Senate has not committed to a floor vote, and the White House has indicated the President would veto the bill if it reached his desk. Even with strong Senate support, overriding a presidential veto requires two-thirds of both chambers, a threshold the current votes do not appear to meet.
What is happening at the Supreme Court?
The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral argument on April 29, 2026 in the consolidated cases challenging the administration's termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haiti and Syria. Lower court stays have kept the current TPS designations in effect during the litigation. A decision is widely expected in late June or early July 2026. That ruling will matter far more in the short term than the House vote.
I am a Haitian TPS holder in Massachusetts. Should I do anything differently right now?
Your legal status has not changed because of the House vote. That said, every TPS holder should use this period to stay current on TPS re-registration, keep EAD documentation up to date, and explore whether another form of relief (asylum, family petition, humanitarian parole, U visa, T visa, VAWA, or others) may apply to your situation. A free consultation with an immigration attorney who handles humanitarian cases can help you build a plan that does not depend only on TPS.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Immigration law is complex, and individual cases vary widely. The information in this article is accurate as of the date of publication but laws, regulations, and court orders may change. This article does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you are affected by the Haiti TPS situation, please consult with a qualified immigration attorney who can evaluate your specific circumstances. The author makes no representations about the outcome of any particular case.

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