A D.C. federal judge paused a Trump administration policy requiring lawmakers to give a seven-day advance notice for oversight visits to immigration detention centers, ruling Monday the lawmakers have shown irreparable injury absent relief given the need for "real-time, on-the-ground information" about facility conditions and detainees' statuses.
The governor stopped short of discussing what his admin might do following a private meeting with local officials.
Today, the Trump administration delivered a loss in court to itself.
Secretary of Homeland Security to face two days of grilling on Capitol Hill
Ellison claims the actions are illegal, and is also requesting that the court issue a temporary restraining order to block the pause.
By LISA LERER and KATIE GLUECKDemocrats have overwhelmingly opposed President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran without seeking congressional approval. But in significant if subtle ways, the attacks have magnified fissures in the party over the country’s national security interests and America’s use of military force in the Middle East.The questions many Democrats are raising over whether Trump was justified in launching the attacks deepened Sunday after the first American casualties were a
Kristi Noem's testimony comes after calls for congressional oversight of the Trump administration's immigration operations following the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents.
When Maryland Democratic Gov. Wes Moore signed emergency legislation last month prohibiting agreements between local law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities, he was pushing back against one of the fastest-growing pieces of President Donald Trump’s deportation strategy. The expansion of immigration enforcement hasn’t happened primarily through high-profile raids: It has unfolded through formal partnerships […]
U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb previously froze the Department of Homeland Security’s policy requiring lawmakers provide advance notice to tour immigration facilities, after blocking two versions of the policy in December and February.
Despite cries that it was “performative politics,” Legislator Manny Abarca said the plan puts the county on record as opposing “the caging of people.” A second measure that would have barred federal immigration agents from wearing masks was held for legal concerns.
DHS is pushing back after the Denver City Council approved a resolution Monday banning federal immigration and other law enforcement officers from wearing face coverings.
Matthew Mondschein (Nevada Current) The Trump administration’s threat to take control of elections in several states and its refusal to rule out