Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Judge blocks Trump administration plan to strip protected status for Haitians in US – as it happened

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Closing summary

This brings our live coverage of the second Trump administration to a close… but just for the day. We will be back at it on Tuesday. Thanks for reading and here are some of the latest developments:

  • A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from stripping Temporary Protected Status from up to 350,000 Haitians, which allows them to legally live and work in the United States during the turmoil in their homeland.

  • Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed on Monday to testify to a House oversight committee inquiry on Jeffrey Epstein.

  • Christian Menefee, a Texas Democrat who won a special election on Saturday, was sworn in as a congressman on Monday, further narrowing the slim 218-214 Republican majority in the US House.

  • Donald Trump repeated his denial that he ever visited Epstein’s private island, but appeared to catch himself referring to the late sex offender he socialized with for most of two decades by his first name.

  • Trump told reporters that he supports a decision by the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, to ensure that every federal officer in Minneapolis wears a body camera during the ongoing immigration crackdown in the city.

  • A group of survivors of Epstein’s abuse asked federal judges to order the US justice department to take down the entire public archive of files released in recent days and make proper redactions to remove identifying information of the victims.

Key events

JD Vance still angry his false claim Haitian refugees were ‘illegal immigrants’ was debunked in 2024 debate

The US vice-president, JD Vance, complained on social media on Monday about Democrats who point out that asylum seekers who are awaiting adjudication of their claims are not in the United States illegally.

“If your position is that a person can claim asylum after traversing eight countries, and they are therefore ‘legal immigrants’ because the president ignores the law and allows them to stay, then you’re advocating for an open border,” Vance wrote.

Vance was responding to a comment from a Rhode Island congressman, Seth Magaziner, who pointed out that the family of the five-year-old boy who was detained in Minneapolis while wearing a bunny hat, Liam Conejo Ramos, is in the US legally, since they applied for asylum. “Many of the families ICE has been snatching off the streets are like this. Immigrants who entered legally!” Magaziner wrote.

“This reminds me of when Margaret Brennan ‘fact checked’ me at the VP debate,” Vance responded.

What he was referring to was a moment in his 2024 vice-presidential debate against Tim Walz when Vance said that social and economic problems in Springfield, Ohio “and in communities all across this country,” were caused by bringing in “millions of illegal immigrants to compete with Americans” for homes, jobs and health care.

After Vance spoke, one debate moderator, Margaret Brennan, said: “just to clarify for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio does have a large number of Haitian migrants who have legal status. Temporary protected status.”

Vance was enraged by what he called a violation of the debate rules. “The rules were that you guys weren’t going to fact check”, he said. He then went on to repeat his claim that “an illegal migrant” applying for asylum or temporary protected status, and being granted the legal right to live and work in the US for a time, was effectively “the facilitation of illegal immigration… by our own leadership.”

A federal judge’s order on Monday, paused the Trump administration’s plan to strip legal status from 350,000 Haitians in the United States, including those in Springfield, Ohio that Vance amplified conspiracy theories about in 2024.

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