After the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling last Friday that the Trump administration can, for now, end humanitarian parole for half a million migrants, immigration advocates insist the legal battle is not over — and believe it will end sooner than later, now in their favor.
In March, President Trump and his Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem, moved to cancel humanitarian parole for 530,000 migrants from Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua — even though they were promised by the Biden administration they could stay legally in the U.S. for two years.
Most of those parole beneficiaries are here in Florida.
Noem argued then that former President Biden had created the humanitarian parole program for those four nationalities illegally, and that therefore Trump could immediately end not just