Donald Trump, Democrats and executive order
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Democrats said Tuesday they have sued President Trump over his executive order to require states to further prove citizenship in registering voters and to make other changes to elections.
From Newsday
An alleged gang member given protected status was mistakenly deported and cannot be brought back, the Trump administration argued in a court filing.
From Yahoo
El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, said in a social media post that the two countries had conducted a “joint military operation” and claimed that all the migrants “are confirmed murderers and hig...
From The New York Times
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Federal judges have slapped President Trump with at least 15 sweeping injunctions since he returned to the White House.
Senate Judiciary Republicans are seeking accountability for taxpayers who footed the bill for the Department of Justice’s (DOJ’s) diversity, equity
Trump used to condemn executive orders, slamming them as evidence of inept presidential leadership. That was before he dramatically changed his mind.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration is planning an executive order that would ease rules governing exports of military equipment, and could announce it as soon as Tuesday or Wednesday, four sources familiar with the discussions said.
Gov. Kevin Stitt has issued an executive order to, he says, position Oklahoma as the nation's strongest defender of religious liberty.
Congressman Brandon Gill is teaming with America First Legal to file an amicus brief to the Supreme Court backing President Donald Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport violent gang members.
Claiming federal judges have exceeded their authority by preventing President Trump from enacting certain executive orders, Republican lawmakers are seeking to balance the judicial scale.
Driven by Trump’s decadeslong fixation on false claims of voter fraud, the order mandates that proof of citizenship be added to voter registration forms, among other changes that are broadly considered unconstitutional and a blatant overreach of executive authority.
Republican Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird is leading a legal brief in support of President Donald Trump’s executive order to redefine birthright citizenship. Also in the Notebook, Iowans rally in opposition to a bill shielding pesticide companies from lawsuits over cancer risks.
When House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan sat with President Donald Trump at the NCAA wrestling championship in Philadelphia earlier this month, it was only a matter of time before they discussed the party’s brewing effort to impeach federal judges seen as blocking the president’s agenda.