Supreme Court, Trump and birthright citizenship
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President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship will be back in court Thursday for its first major hearing since the Supreme Court limited the way in which lower courts can halt the controversial policy.
After Supreme Court Justice Jackson issued a solo dissent against President Trump’s federal layoff plan, Jonathan Turley criticized her decision as 'judicial abandon.'
Thirty-four cities and counties, including Baltimore, Chicago and Los Angeles, have asked to join a California lawsuit seeking to stop the Trump administration from cutting federal funding based on immigration sanctuary policies.
The ACLU is challenging President Trump's order limiting birthright citizenship. They seek class action status to block the policy nationwide after the Supreme Court limited judges' power for nationwide injunctions.
Alito's concerns about "loopholes" in the Supreme Court's universal injunctions ruling emerge as judges issue sweeping decisions against Trump policies through alternative legal means
A federal lawsuit filed earlier this year by New Mexico and other states provides New Mexicans with at least temporary protection from President Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship,
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Straight Arrow News on MSNJustices lift injunction on Trump's federal workforce cutsIn an unsigned decision, the justices said the administration is "likely to succeed" in its argument that President Donald Trump's executive order directing agency downsizing is lawful. The ruling allows the White House to resume staff reduction efforts across 22 federal agencies - including the Departments of State,