Termination of CHNV Humanitarian Parole for 532,000 People
DHS terminated humanitarian parole for 532,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela, stripping legal status effective April 24, 2025. The Supreme Court allowed the mass revocation in a 7-2 ruling, and DHS urged affected individuals to 'self-deport immediately.'
The Trump administration terminated the humanitarian parole programs for nationals of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela (CHNV), stripping legal status and work authorization from approximately 532,000 people. The Supreme Court allowed the termination to proceed in a 7-2 decision on May 30, 2025, and DHS began issuing termination notices encouraging parolees to 'self-deport immediately.'
Executive summary
What this record documents
- Approximately 532,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela had been granted humanitarian parole under the CHNV programs established in 2022-2023.
- DHS published a Federal Register notice on March 25, 2025 terminating all CHNV parole, with parole expiring April 24, 2025.
- A district court in Massachusetts issued a preliminary injunction on April 14, 2025 staying the termination.
- The Supreme Court reversed the injunction on May 30, 2025 in a 7-2 decision (Justices Jackson and Sotomayor dissenting), allowing termination to proceed.
- On June 12, 2025, DHS issued termination notices and encouraged parolees to 'self-deport immediately.'
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 20, 2025
Executive order directing termination of parole programs
President Trump signed Executive Order 14165 ('Securing Our Borders'), directing the DHS Secretary to terminate all categorical parole programs deemed contrary to the new administration's immigration policies.
March 25, 2025
Federal Register notice terminating CHNV parole
DHS published a Federal Register notice formally terminating the CHNV parole programs, setting April 24, 2025 as the date parole would expire for all beneficiaries.
April 14, 2025
District court stays termination
U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Massachusetts issued a nationwide preliminary injunction staying the categorical termination of CHNV parole.
April 24, 2025
Original parole expiration date
Absent the court injunction, parole and employment authorization would have terminated on this date for all 532,000 CHNV beneficiaries.
May 30, 2025
Supreme Court lifts injunction in 7-2 decision
The Supreme Court granted the government's request to stay Judge Talwani's injunction, allowing the CHNV parole termination to proceed. Justices Jackson and Sotomayor dissented.
June 12, 2025
DHS issues termination notices, urges self-deportation
DHS began issuing individual notices of parole termination to CHNV beneficiaries, explicitly encouraging them to 'self-deport immediately.'
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
On March 25, 2025, the Department of Homeland Security published a Federal Register notice formally terminating the humanitarian parole programs for nationals of Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela (CHNV). The programs, established in 2022 and 2023, had allowed approximately 532,000 people to legally enter and work in the United States under two-year parole grants, provided they had US-based sponsors and passed security vetting.
The termination notice set April 24, 2025 as the date when all parole -- and associated employment authorization -- would expire for every beneficiary, regardless of individual circumstances.
Legal Battle and Supreme Court Ruling
A federal district court in Massachusetts initially blocked the mass termination. On April 14, 2025, U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani issued a nationwide preliminary injunction staying the categorical revocation, finding that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on their claim that the termination violated the Administrative Procedure Act.
However, on May 30, 2025, the Supreme Court reversed the district court in a 7-2 decision, granting the government's emergency request to lift the injunction. Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor dissented. The Court's brief, unexplained order allowed DHS to proceed with stripping humanitarian parole from all 532,000 beneficiaries.
"Self-Deport Immediately"
On June 12, 2025, DHS began issuing individual termination notices to CHNV parolees. The notices explicitly encouraged recipients to "self-deport immediately." The agency revoked employment authorization under the C11 category, meaning that even if individuals had pending immigration applications, they lost the ability to work legally.
Scale of De-Documentation
The CHNV termination was part of the broader pattern of mass de-documentation documented across this archive. Combined with TPS terminations for Venezuela, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, and other countries, NPR reported that 1.6 million people lost their legal right to stay in the United States in 2025 -- the largest mass revocation of legal immigration status in US history.
Conditions in Countries of Origin
The four CHNV countries all face conditions that make return dangerous:
- Cuba: Severe economic crisis, political repression, and food shortages
- Haiti: Over 90% of Port-au-Prince under gang control, 1.4 million internally displaced, US State Department Level 4 "Do Not Travel" advisory
- Nicaragua: Political repression under the Ortega government, arbitrary detention of opposition figures
- Venezuela: Ongoing political crisis under Maduro, economic collapse, and the Maduro regime's persecution of returning migrants
Why This Entry Is Rated Severe
- Scale: 532,000 people lost legal status in a single administrative action
- Supreme Court enabled: The 7-2 decision allowed mass de-documentation to proceed despite district court findings of likely illegality
- "Self-deport" language: DHS explicitly urged affected individuals to leave the country immediately, creating fear and confusion
- Employment authorization revoked: Hundreds of thousands of workers lost the legal ability to support themselves and their families
- Return danger: All four countries face conditions documented as dangerous by the US government's own agencies
- Part of broader pattern: Combined with TPS terminations, 1.6 million people were stripped of legal status in 2025
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
Termination of Parole Processes for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans
DHS Issues Notices of Termination for the CHNV Parole Program, Encourages Parolees to Self-Deport Immediately
DHS Releases Statement on Major SCOTUS Victory on Ending the CHNV Parole Program
DHS revokes protections for 532,000 in CHNV parole program
Litigation-Related Update: Supreme Court stay of CHNV Preliminary Injunction
Updates on CHNV Parole Terminations and Federal Litigation
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