President Donald Trump’s promise to deport “millions and millions” of immigrants will hinge on securing money for detention centers
Immigration and Customs Enforcement is planning a to conduct a major enforcement operation in at least one U.S. city for several days after the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump ...
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials ... number of people deported from the U.S. in a single year was 438,000 in fiscal 2013 during the Obama administration. Trump’s apparent plans ...
Bush, and one by Democrat Barack Obama - is the latest blow ... and the illegal immigration crisis is finally stopped," Paxton said. The U.S. Homeland Security Department didn't immediately ...
While U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE ... Others, including “dreamers” allowed to stay under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, are likely to remain ...
His nominees to lead U.S. law enforcement agencies have continued to repeat his distortions. On Monday, Trump and his team will inherit the U.S. immigration ... President Barack Obama’s second ...
WASHINGTON − President Donald Trump on Monday is expected to declare a national border emergency and order the U.S. armed forces to "repel forms of invasion" at the U.S.-Mexico border, including illegal migration and drug trafficking, according to administration officials.
A legal expert is sharing what changes she believes will take place once the president-elect is inaugurated next week.
As President-elect Donald Trump looks to make sweeping changes to immigration policy in his second term, we revisit the history of immigration law through past presidencies starting in the 1700s.
Legal experts and researchers say incoming President Donald Trump's promised mass deportations could actually end up undermining goals of public safety and national security.
which would require U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain noncitizens who commit certain crimes. It comes after a bruising election season for Democrats, who lost both the White House ...
While the president has a broad range of immigration and national security powers, he cannot change US law on his own.