Politics

BREAKING: Trump REVOKES Protected Status for THOUSANDS of Somalis - March Deportation Deadline Set

Gary FranchiJanuary 13, 2026123 views
BREAKING: Trump REVOKES Protected Status for THOUSANDS of Somalis - March Deportation Deadline Set
Photo by Generated on Unsplash

President Trump's administration has delivered on another campaign promise, officially revoking Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for thousands of Somalis living in the United States, including large populations in Minnesota. The decision comes amid a deepening fraud scandal involving the Somali community and marks a significant step in the administration's broader immigration enforcement agenda.

According to breaking reports, affected Somalis now have until March 17, 2026, to voluntarily leave the United States or face deportation proceedings. The move has sent shockwaves through liberal strongholds like Minneapolis, where large Somali populations have been living under the protected status for years.

Social media erupted with reactions as news broke. "BREAKING: The Trump administration has just REVOKED temporary protected status for THOUSANDS of Somalis living in the United States, including Minnesota. They MUST leave the US by March 17, or face deportation," posted one user, celebrating the administration's swift action.

This decision is part of a massive visa revocation campaign by the Trump administration. Reports indicate that more than 100,000 visas have been revoked in Trump's first year back in office, targeting criminal cases, visa overstays, and student drug offenses. The numbers are staggering: 8,000 student visas and 2,500 specialized work permits have been canceled in just 12 months.

Long Overdue Action

For patriots who have watched immigration laws ignored for years, this represents exactly the kind of enforcement they voted for. The Somali TPS revocation comes at a time when fraud scandals involving the community have made national headlines, raising serious questions about who has been gaming our immigration system.

Unlike the previous administration's catch-and-release policies, Trump 2.0 is showing that immigration laws actually mean something again. The March deadline gives affected individuals time to make arrangements, but the message is crystal clear: the era of indefinite protected status is over.

This is just the beginning, folks. With Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem at the helm and Stephen Miller back as a senior advisor, Americans can expect more decisive action to restore integrity to our immigration system. The question isn't whether more revocations are coming – it's how many more communities will finally see real immigration enforcement return to their neighborhoods.

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Gary Franchi

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

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C
ConstitutionFirstVerifiedjust now
About time someone enforces existing immigration law! March gives them time to make proper arrangements.
P
PatriotMom2024Verifiedjust now
Finally! We need to prioritize American citizens first and ensure our immigration system actually follows the law.
T
TaxpayerFirstVerifiedjust now
Exactly right. Protected status was always meant to be temporary, not permanent residency.
B
BorderSecurityNowVerifiedjust now
What's the appeals process for this? Are there exceptions for those who have been here legally for decades?
A
AmericaStrongVerifiedjust now
This is what we voted for - action on immigration policy.
M
MinnesotaResidentVerifiedjust now
I live in Minneapolis and have seen firsthand how the lack of proper vetting has affected our community. There needs to be better processes in place to ensure public safety.
M
MidwestVoterVerifiedjust now
Same here in Ohio. The system needs reform and accountability.