Trump, Supreme Court
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Trump, Harvard and Foreign Student
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A series of legal and policy developments involving the Trump administration have been highlighted. From Harvard suing the government over foreign student enrollment restrictions to FTC's decision regarding Microsoft's acquisition,
President Donald Trump is fighting his mass deportation battle on two fronts: the courts, where he is losing, and public opinion, where he may have a better shot. While Justice Department lawyers seek to salvage some of the most aggressive elements of Trump’s deportation agenda,
Businesses are getting a free pass from the Trump administration from a wide variety of enforcement actions they had been facing under President Joe Biden.
In April, Judge Brian E. Murphy of the Federal District Court in Boston ordered the government to give deportees at least 15 days notice before sending them to a third country, and to provide them a chance to tell a court whether they feared persecution or torture at their destinations.
Independent agency officials removed by President Donald Trump will have a harder time winning legal challenges after the US Supreme Court blocked the reinstatement of fired members of the National Labor Relations Board and Merit Systems Protection Board.
The Trump administration seeks to end the Flores Settlement Agreement, key to protecting child migrants, citing outdated necessity amid new policies. Advocates argue its removal endangers children's safety.
The abrupt, premature dismissals of agency officials has teed up a Supreme Court decision that, if delivered in the president's favor, could give him substantially more authority.
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Sen. Eric Schmitt 'confident' Trump's deportation efforts will continue amid legal challengesSen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., discuss the Trump administration's efforts to remove criminal illegal migrants on 'The Evening Edit.' Poison hemlock has spread throughout the US. Here's how to kill it. People making over $100,000 now considered low-income in several California counties
President Trump's proposal to manufacture Apple's iPhone in the U.S. encounters legal hurdles. Economic experts note that tariffs alone may not suffice for re-shoring production jobs as the technological requirements for automation aren't yet available.
The Trump administration is seeking to remove union bargaining rights from hundreds of thousands of federal workers.