Torri Lonergan, Media Matters, Feb. 14, 2025 "When President Donald Trump announced his intention to end birthright citizenship, right-wing media figures immediately began spreading misinformation...
The Guardian, Feb. 13, 2025 "The Denver public school system (DPS) on Wednesday became the first US school district to sue the Trump administration over its policy of allowing Immigration and Customs...
Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy, USA TODAY, Feb. 13, 2025 Stephen Yale-Loehr , an immigration law attorney and a retired Cornell Law School professor, said while Modi can ask Trump to increase the number...
On Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025 U.S. District Judge Leo T. Sorokin in Boston joined three other federal district court judges in decisively rejecting Trump's birthright citizenship EO. Read his 31-page...
ACLU, Feb. 12, 2025 "Immigrants’ rights advocates sued the Trump administration today for access to immigrants transferred from the United States to detention at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba...
Nicole Narea, Vox News, Jan. 30, 2025
"Within days of taking office in 2017, President Donald Trump implemented a blanket ban on entry from seven Muslim-majority countries. It was met with furious pushback, public outcry, and a string of defeats in court. This time around, despite signing an initial barrage of executive orders, Trump has not implemented a travel ban. But that doesn’t mean it’s not coming. One of his Day 1 executive orders, experts say, takes the first step toward a new travel ban — one that could be even more extensive than the first time around. ... In his first term, Trump announced a ban without specifying why the targeted countries raised national security concerns and did not initially articulate any review process by which the bans could be lifted. That is what doomed the policy in court, said Stephen Yale-Loehr, a professor of immigration law practice at Cornell Law School and author of a textbook on immigration law. “I think that they’ve learned from their mistakes in the first administration, setting things up so that if they want to do a travel ban, it’s fairly likely to be upheld in court,” he said. ... According to César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández, a professor at Ohio State University College of Law and author of several books on US immigration enforcement, including Welcome the Wretched, Trump’s early executive order “appears to be setting the stage for more intense and longer-lasting surveillance of migrants” already in the US, including a provision calling for a report “identifying how many nationals from those countries [with deficient vetting] have entered or have been admitted into the United States on or since January 20, 2021.”