In a decisive legal development, the U.S. Supreme Court granted a stay on May 30, 2025, allowing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to resume efforts to terminate the CHNV parole program.
This action affects more than 530,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela and marks a significant pivot in U.S. immigration enforcement.
A Victory Claimed by DHS Amid Ongoing Legal Challenge
WASHINGTON – The Department of Homeland Security issued a firm statement following the Supreme Court’s 7-2 decision to stay a lower court order blocking termination of the CHNV parole program.
Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin described the ruling as a “victory for the American people,” aligning with Trump-era policies that prioritize border enforcement and public safety.
The decision enables DHS to proceed with ending the parole status of over half a million individuals who entered the United States under a categorical program established by the Biden administration.
The program had allowed migrants from four politically unstable countries to reside temporarily in the U.S.
Read The High Court Ruling.
Understanding the CHNV Parole Program
The CHNV program, launched during the Biden administration, provided humanitarian parole to nationals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
DHS granted temporary entry and, in some cases, work authorization under this program to reduce irregular border crossings and manage regional migration pressures.
Critics, including DHS officials appointed under the Trump administration, argue the program bypassed established vetting protocols and granted entry to individuals without adequate screening.
Supporters of the program cited humanitarian need and administrative efficiency in the face of rising regional crises.
Timeline and Legal Milestones
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January 20, 2025: President issues an executive order directing DHS to end all categorical parole programs, including CHNV.
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February 2025: A federal District Court blocks DHS from mass termination, ruling it may violate legal requirements for individualized parole decisions.
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March 2025: The First Circuit declines to overturn the lower court’s decision but agrees to an expedited review.
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May 30, 2025: The U.S. Supreme Court grants a stay, permitting DHS to proceed with the program’s termination during appeals.
This legal maneuver does not resolve the broader constitutional questions about executive immigration authority. Instead, it removes a procedural block while litigation continues.
Statement from DHS
In its official press release, DHS criticized the Biden-era program as reckless and harmful to national interests:
“They allowed more than half a million poorly vetted aliens…to compete for American jobs and undercut American workers,” stated Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. “Ending the CHNV parole programs…is a necessary return to public safety and common-sense immigration policies.”
The statement emphasized concerns about fraud, internal pressure on civil servants, and the economic impact on U.S. workers. DHS reaffirmed its commitment to restoring immigration enforcement and public confidence.
What the Dissenting Justices Said
The ruling drew sharp dissent from Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor. Justice Jackson argued that DHS failed to prove “irreparable harm” — a legal requirement for emergency relief.
She noted:
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The government did not present evidence of an urgent national security threat.
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Immediate harm would befall hundreds of thousands who risk deportation, job loss, and family separation.
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The government retains authority to evaluate parole on a case-by-case basis.
The dissent criticized the majority for prioritizing policy execution over individual rights, stating that the stay would result in “needless human suffering.”
Policy Implications: What Happens Now
The Supreme Court’s order opens the door for DHS to begin terminating parole status while the case advances through the First Circuit Court of Appeals.
This may lead to large-scale removals or the revocation of legal status for many current CHNV beneficiaries.
Consequences include:
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Potential deportations
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Expiration of work permits
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Family disruptions
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Uncertainty for states managing social services and housing
DHS now faces the administrative task of case-by-case reviews, enforcement coordination, and public messaging, all while under legal and political scrutiny.
Snapshot
Legal Action | Lower Court Ruling | Supreme Court Stay (May 30, 2025) |
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DHS authority to end CHNV | Blocked (pending appeal) | Allowed (block lifted during litigation) |
Migrant status | Protected temporarily | At risk of removal during appeals |
Legal resolution status | Unresolved | Pending review by the First Circuit Court |
A Divided Legal Landscape
The broader issue touches on the limits of executive authority over immigration. Can a president end mass parole programs with a single directive? Or must such decisions respect individual due process?
As the case advances, both the courts and the public will grapple with balancing national policy goals against the human realities of immigration enforcement.
Final Notes and What to Expect
The DHS may now proceed with rolling back the CHNV program, though it must navigate logistical, legal, and political obstacles. Migrant advocacy groups are expected to continue pressing the courts to reverse the stay and protect affected families.
This ruling underscores the volatile intersection of executive power and humanitarian migration policy. Whether this marks a definitive shift or a temporary maneuver remains to be seen.
Stay Informed:
This is an evolving legal matter with real-life consequences. Follow our immigration law coverage for updates on appellate rulings, federal policy shifts, and DHS implementation strategies.
Sources: US Department of Homeland Security and the Scotus Blog.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News™, an independent news organization delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analyzed research with human-edited accuracy and context.