Beloved GOP Rep. Will get Brutally Torched After Shock Betrayal Of MAGA, Trump
Rep. Rich McCormick, R-Ga., is getting torched online after backing legislation to extend Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, a vote that critics on the right are framing as yet another “temporary” immigration program that never ends.
McCormick tried to draw a hard line between TPS and amnesty after the vote, writing on X: I voted to extend TPS for Haitians because I cannot, in good conscience, send people who were lawfully granted protection here, followed our laws, and built lives under our rules back to rape, murder, and chaos in a lawless Haiti. This is completely separate from amnesty or illegal immigration. Conflating the two is dangerous.
But the blowback came fast, with conservatives arguing that TPS has become a permanent loophole that keeps growing, no matter who’s in charge in Washington.

One critic shot back: “Shame on you! 99% of Americans are against TPS for illegals! You work for and are paid for by me and my fellow Americans 😳 You should be fired immediately! Allowing Haitian illegals to remain here indefinitely is dangerous!”

Others went even harder. One user wrote, “You’re a coward and a disgrace. Another added: Your morality is garbage.”
The fight centers on TPS, a legal designation that allows people already in the United States to stay and work if their home country is deemed unsafe due to conditions like armed conflict or natural disasters. The protections can be extended, and critics say the “temporary” label has turned into a political magic trick that keeps large populations in the country year after year.
The House vote that sparked the latest eruption was real, and it was close. The chamber passed a bill Thursday to require a three-year extension of TPS for Haitians, a move pushed by Democrats and advanced over objections from Republican leadership. The measure passed 224-204, with 10 Republicans joining Democrats and one independent.
Supporters argued Haiti remains too dangerous to send people back, citing the country’s instability and violence. Opponents warned it rewards failed enforcement and incentivizes more migration by signaling that temporary programs can become effectively permanent.
McCormick’s critics say that’s the bigger issue: even when lawmakers swear it’s not “amnesty,” the end result is the same. And with President Donald Trump making mass deportations and stricter enforcement central to his agenda, the backlash shows how little patience the MAGA base has for anything that looks like a carve-out, even when the beneficiaries are already here under a legal designation.
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