Donald Trump will designate a Venezuelan criminal gang as "global terrorists," an incoming administration official told reporters Monday, as part of the US president-elect's fight against illegal immigration into the United States.
This was no laughing matter. A high-ranking member of the vicious migrant gang MS-13 nicknamed “Funny” couldn’t stop smiling in federal court Tuesday — even as he was slammed with a 60 ...
The initiatives signal the administration’s intent to carry out its campaign promises of mass deportations, and provide the first glimpse of how it would do it.
A “national emergency” at the border, assault on birthright citizenship, and cartels and gangs as terrorist organizations
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order saying the United States will designate drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, a move that could push a militarized agenda for the border and Latin America.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday moving toward designating Mexican drug cartels and other Latin American criminal groups as foreign terrorist organizations. The move, part of a series of actions targeting immigration and border security, its raising questions about its implications for U.S.-Mexico relations.
Trump signed an executive action Monday night dealing with gender identity. The details weren't immediately made public; however, an incoming White House official speaking on background had told reporters earlier in the day that an order would make it the policy of the United States to recognize two biologically distinct sexes — male and female.
The President of the United States, Donald Trump, signed an executive order on Monday to classify the Mexican cartels, the criminal group “Tren de […]
Trump campaigned on border security promises, and he and his allies argue that his electoral win is an endorsement of his upcoming actions on the issue.
Trump issued 26 executive orders, 12 memoranda, and 4 proclamations on his first day back in the Oval Office. Here’s what to know.
For millions in the U.S. illegally or with temporary legal status, the start of Donald Trump’s second term as president comes with a feeling their time in the U.S. may end soon.
Regardless of status, Catholics stand with you.” That is the message from Charlotte Bishop Michael T. Martin in the wake of President Donald Trump’s position on deportations for undocumented immigrants living in the United States.