California is one of 22 states and two cities that have quickly challenged Trump’s order to remove birthright citizenship for future children starting next month.
Just one day into President Donald Trump’s second term, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell is taking her first swing at the new administration’s policies. The Bay State AG, along with 17 other states,
The owner of 345 California Center, a high-rise readily recognizable in San Francisco’s skyline for the twin flagpoles on its peak, said Thursday that it had paid down all $150 million of outstanding debt on the complex.
Democratic-led states and civil rights groups filed a slew of lawsuits challenging U.S. President Donald Trump's bid to roll back birthright citizenship on Tuesday in an early bid by his opponents to block his agenda in court.
Until the order, which Trump signed the same day he was inaugurated as the 47th president, the U.S. government has, at least the late 1800s, considered the child of any immigrant born on U.S. soil an automatic citizen, even to a mother in the United States illegally.
A group of Democratic state attorneys general filed a federal lawsuit on Tuesday to stop President Trump’s executive order that seeks to eliminate birthright citizenship.
Eighteen states, the District of Columbia and San Francisco will seek a preliminary injunction blocking a Trump order denying citizenship to U.S.-born children of unauthorized immigrants.
California, a coalition of other states and the city of San Francisco have sued the Trump administration over President Trump's executive order aimed at ending birthright citizenship, calling it unconstitutional.
Maryland joined 17 states, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco to sue President Trump on Tuesday over what they called his “flagrantly unlawful attempt” to end birthright citizenship through one of the flurry of executive orders he signed after taking office.
On the second day of President Donald Trump’s administration, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser joined a coalition of 18 states, as well as the cities of San Francisco and Washington, D.C., in suing Trump
The Delaware Department of Justice is joining 17 states in suing the Trump administration for its order ending birthright citizenship.
Ellison tells WCCO that birthright citizenship is guaranteed under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and that the Supreme Court has twice ruled that birthright citizenship extends to everyone born in the United States, including the children of immigrants regardless of their parents’ immigration status.