Judge will halt Trump administration from ending humanitarian parole for
people from four countries
[April 11, 2025]
By MICHAEL CASEY
BOSTON (AP) — A federal judge said Thursday that she will prevent the
Trump administration from ordering hundreds of thousands of Cubans,
Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans with temporary legal status to
leave the country later this month.
The ruling is a significant, although perhaps temporary, setback for the
administration as it dismantles Biden-era policies that created new and
expanded pathways for people to live in the United States, generally for
two years with work authorization.
U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani said she would issue a stay on an
order for more than 500,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and
Venezuelans to leave the country, sparing them until the case advances
to the next phase. Their permits were to be canceled April 24.
During a hearing, Talwani repeatedly questioned the government's
assertion that it could end humanitarian parole for the four
nationalities. She argued that immigrants in the program who are here
legally now face an option of “fleeing the country” or staying and “risk
losing everything.”
“The nub of the problem here is that the secretary, in cutting short the
parole period afforded to these individuals, has to have a reasoned
decision,” Talwani said, adding that the explanation for ending the
program was “based on an incorrect reading of the law.”
“There was a deal and now that deal has been undercut,” she said later
in the hearing.
Last month, the administration revoked legal protections for hundreds of
thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, setting them
up for potential deportation in 30 days.
They arrived with financial sponsors, applying online and paying their
own airfare for two-year permits to live and work in the U.S. During
that time, the beneficiaries needed to find other legal pathways if they
wanted to stay longer in the U.S. Parole is a temporary status.
President Donald Trump has been ending legal pathways for immigrants to
come to the U.S., implementing campaign promises to deport millions of
people who are in the U.S. illegally.
Outside court, immigration advocates, including Guerline Jozef, founder
and executive director of the Haitian Bridge Alliance, one of the
plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said attacks on this program contradict the
Trump administration’s strategy on immigration.
“We hear the narrative of people coming her illegally and the
administration wanting to erase illegal immigration,” Jozef said. “But,
we clearly see today that is not the case. Even those people who have
legal status, are paying their taxes and working are under attack.”
[to top of second column]
|

A 9-year-old girl with Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, who was
born in Venezuela, but who fluently speaks only English and is in
the gifted program at her school, watches TV in her family's
apartment, Saturday, April 5, 2025, in Doral, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca
Blackwell)
Cesar Baez, an activist of the political opposition in Venezuela,
said he feared for his life and left his country to come to the U.S.
under the sponsorship of a doctor. He arrived under the humanitarian
parole program in December 2022 and, for the last year, has been
working as a producer at a media outlet in Washington.
He has applied for a working visa as another way to get legal status
and has also requested asylum, but those processes have also been
paused under the Trump administration.
For him, the judge’s announcement means hope.
“It is very important for me to have protections and not be removed
to Venezuela,” said Baez, 24. “I have no doubt that if I set foot in
the country, I would immediately be imprisoned.”
Zamora, a 34-year-old Cuban woman who asked to be identified only by
her last name due to fears of being detained and deported, received
the judge’s news as relief.
“I was terrified of being left without a work permit,” said Zamora,
whose parole and work permit expire in September. “We are people
who, in order to come here, have gone through several background
checks, and the government take away our status as if we had been
criminals and entered illegally.”
Advocates, who called the administration’s action “unprecedented,"
said it would result in people losing their legal status and ability
to work and argued that it violated federal rule-making.
The government's lawyer, Brian Ward, argued in court that ending the
program doesn't mean that individuals couldn’t be considered for
other immigration programs. He also said the government wouldn't
prioritize them for deportation — something Talwani found suspect,
given they could be arrested if they happened to go to the hospital
or were involved in a car accident.
The end of temporary protections for these immigrants has generated
little political blowback among Republicans other than three
Cuban-American representatives from Florida who called for
preventing the deportation of the Venezuelans affected. One of them,
Rep. Maria Salazar of Miami, also joined about 200 congressional
Democrats this week in cosponsoring a bill that would enable them to
become lawful permanent residents.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |