President Trump’s executive orders this week outline a sweeping agenda, from declaring an invasion at the border to curtailing birthright citizenship. But significant questions remain about what’s next.
Rep. Ritchie Torres called out the Biden administration for failing to address practical issues that matter dearly to working-class Americans across the country.
There is a tension in U.S. public opinion about President Trump’s immigration plans.
The day before his second inauguration, President-elect Donald Trump held a campaign-style rally at an arena in Washington, where he repeated some of the most frequent false claims from the campaign trail while also sprinkling in some new falsehoods.
The first sentence of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.
German opposition leader Friedrich Merz said he would seek to pass a disputed migration measure in parliament next week with any party willing to back it, a move critics say could break the firewall with the far right weeks before a federal election.
President Trump has signed several executive orders making sweeping changes to the immigration system. Immigration was one of voters’ top issues in the election, with many supporting Trump’s message that the current system is broken.
Justice Department career officials were reassigned to advance Donald Trump's immigration agenda, an official familiar with the matter told USA TODAY.
Juntos Seguros, a website, allows people to report U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids, alerting others in danger of deportation or detention.
More is coming, but many directives will take time to be implemented or will face political, legal or practical obstacles.
A new change ends a policy that mostly prohibited agents from making immigration arrests at schools and other spots where children gather.
BERLIN—German police detained an Afghan man suspected of stabbing two people to death, including a two-year old, putting immigration back at the center of the campaign for next month’s election. Armed with a kitchen knife,