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U.S. Judge Blocks End of Parole Program Benefiting Nicaraguans, Cubans, Haitians, and Venezuelans

U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals denied Trump administration’s request to repeal program

Foto: CBP Tomada de cbp.gov

Agencia EFE

6 de May 2025

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A panel of three judges has temporarily blocked the Trump Administration’s attempt to revoke the legal status and work permits of hundreds of thousands of beneficiaries of a humanitarian program for migrants from Nicaragua, Cuba, Haiti, and Venezuela.

At least half a million of these immigrants, most of them residents of South Florida, benefit from the so-called ‘parole’ program.

The decision “represents an important step toward justice, not only for the hundreds of thousands of people who entered the country through this vital process, but also for the US sponsors who welcomed them into their homes,” stated Karen Tumlin, director of the Justice Action Center, in a statement on Tuesday, May 6, 2025.

The US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit denied the government’s request on Monday, May 5, 2025, to lift a federal judge’s order blocking the Department of Homeland Security’s plan to terminate the program, which was implemented during the presidency of Democrat Joe Biden (2017–2021).

The lower Federal court ruling by Massachusetts Judge Indira Talwani aims to stop the Trump Administration’s move to end various humanitarian parole programs for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans. These programs also include other beneficiaries such as Central American minors, Ukrainians, and Afghans, among other migrants.

The lawsuit Svitlana Doe v. Noem was filed in April by the Justice Action Center and Human Rights First on behalf of humanitarian parole program beneficiaries and their sponsors, alongside the plaintiff organization Haitian Bridge Alliance.

Parole has been an essential component of the immigration system for decades, said Anwen Hughes, a board member of Human Rights First.

“The court rightly recognized the harm the government’s arbitrary decision was about to cause to the lives of innocent people,” she added.

“Hundreds of thousands of our neighbors will sleep tonight knowing that the Trump administration’s attempts to delegitimize and criminalize our communities have been thwarted — for now,” said Guerline Jozef, founder of Haitian Bridge Alliance, in the statement.

For more than 70 years, both Republican and Democratic administrations have used humanitarian parole processes to advance national interests such as family reunification and the humane management of migration.

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