President Trump began his pledge to give America a MAGA makeover Monday, taking a slew of executive actions to walk back Biden-era policies and fulfill bold campaign promises. The big picture: Trump's radical expansion of executive power will dramatically change life for millions of people if the orders withstand the barrage of legal challenges that are already coming.
House Republicans believe they should prioritize codifying Donald Trump's border security-related executive orders to prevent rollbacks or legal challenges.
President Trump’s blizzard of executive orders during the first few days of his presidency has sent Republican lawmakers scrambling to make sense of what impact they’ll have on the country, and
President Donald Trump has suffered his first major legal loss as president before his first week is even finished, with a federal judge in Seattle temporarily suspending his controversial executive order revoking birthright citizenship — a right guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment to all children born in the United States regardless of
Clearly, this order is not fully informed by current biological science,” said Dr. Richard Bribiescas, president of the Human Biology Association.
House Republicans are pushing a new bill to limit birthright citizenship to babies born with at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen or permanent resident.
President Donald Trump rescinded a Biden-era executive order that Republicans argued set aside federal funding to register Democrats to vote in elections.
Cleveland immigration lawyer Richard Herman predicts the president's move, while unlikely to survive legal scrutiny, will still have negative impacts.
Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance discusses the challenges Trump's orders from his first day back in office are already facing.
President Trump signed a sweeping executive order Monday during his first hours in office recognizing only two sexes, male and female, and directing federal agencies to cease promotion of the
WPTV Reporter Michael Hoffman spoke with Florida GOP Chair Evan Power on what President Trump would have to do in order to officially make the change on birthright citizenship