

The Salvadoran government, the Salvadoran community in the US and pro-immigrant activists have been battling in recent months to get TPS extended or at least to have its cancellation delayed by six months, as the government did with the TPS program for Hondurans.
However, the Donald Trump administration decided to adhere to its hard line on immigration and end the program for Salvadorans after having done the same for TPS as applied to Nicaraguans and Haitians.
The US decided to grant this protection to Salvadorans who were in this country in February 2001 after the devastating earthquakes that struck their homeland that year, but the measure provided immigration protection to other nationals who had arrived decades earlier fleeing the Salvadoran civil war and its consequences.
Under the presidency of Republican George H.W. Bush, Congress established a procedure permitting the federal government to authorize -- under extraordinary circumstances -- temporary residence and permission to work to citizens of countries affected by armed conflict, epidemics or natural disasters. TPS did not, however, open a route to permanent residence or any other immigration status and thus, with the US decision to end it, its beneficiaries will have to return to their homelands or face involuntary deportation if they elect to remain here as undocumented migrants.