Donald Trump, gold card and immigration
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Kilmar Abrego Garcia, Trump
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"Around the world, America stands for something. Or it did," Jeremiah Johnson, a Trump-appointed judge, told Newsweek.
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Lawmaker Calls Trump a ‘National Embarrassment’ After President’s Latest Anti-Immigration Tirade
The President’s singling out of Somalia comes shortly after protesters—and Democratic lawmakers— condemned his targeting of Minnesota’s Somali Community. During a Cabinet meeting last week, Trump said that Somalia is “barely a country” and referred to Somali immigrants as “garbage.”
A major turning point for the DHS’s immigration enforcement operations can be stemmed from President Donald Trump signing into law the “Once Big Beautiful Bill Act,” which allotted
By denying a pause in the lawsuit, a federal judge delivers a setback to Trump’s Day 1 refugee ban and orders the case to proceed.
President Donald Trump’s push for the largest mass deportation in history has had an outsized impact on the child care field, which is heavily reliant on immigrants and already strained by a worker shortage.
The case against Dugan echoes a criminal prosecution of a Massachusetts judge during the Republican president's first term in office for allegedly aiding a migrant in avoiding arrest. The Justice Department dropped those charges in 2022 during Democrat Joe Biden's presidency before a trial, and the judge has since faced judicial ethics proceedings.
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Highlights: Kristi Noem defends Trump’s immigration policies before departing early from hearing
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem’s appearance before the House Homeland Security Committee on Thursday morning was billed as a discussion about global threats the United States faces, but her role in the Trump administration’s immigration policies is in the spotlight.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who heads the agency central to President Donald Trump’s mass deportations agenda, is expected to face fierce questioning from Democrats on Thursday as the public face of the Republican administration’s hard-line approach to immigration.
Nearly eight years ago, President Donald Trump denied using the word “shitholes” to describe African countries during an Oval Office meeting on immigration. But now he has fessed up.
When President Donald Trump imposed a travel ban from several Muslim-majority countries in 2017, Democratic advocates and lawmakers raced to airports across the country to protest. They held news conferences and visited detention centers the following year when Trump began separating migrant children from their parents.