The ruling slices through the lives of Venezuelan, Cuban, Haitian, and Nicaraguan migrants who had begun to believe the worst was behind them. Under Biden, “parole” offered a narrow bridge: work permits, a chance to enroll kids in school, a moment to breathe. With the Supreme Court’s stay, that bridge is collapsing in real time, and the word “temporary” now feels like a cruel joke.
Inside migrant communities, fear is turning into a volatile mix of anger and exhaustion. Parents debate whether to keep children home from school, terrified of a knock at the door. Advocacy groups race to file new challenges, but the legal terrain has shifted sharply in Trump’s favor. For hundreds of thousands, the question is no longer about the American dream. It is whether they will be given enough time to pack before they are forced to leav