The president's executive orders have already drawn dozens of legal challenges, including some that could make it to the U.S.
CASA, an organization suing the Trump administration over its birthright citizenship executive order, has long relied on federal grants to fund its operations.
Apple is reportedly gearing up to unveil a new iPhone SE and PowerBeats Pro headphones on February 11, according to Bloomberg ...
"Alabama Boss deep fries pork butt in lard for a Southern twist on a classic. Rated Red is your go-to channel for everything Heartland! From epic food and cars to military life, video games, and ...
President and billionaire ally move to shrink government as deputy JD Vance prepares to meet with Ukrainian President ...
PARIS — French Prime Minister François Bayrou has survived the last in a series of four no-confidence motions leveled against ...
Trump is nakedly breaking the law right in front of the entire country, just as progressive Democrats have been predicting.
Stopping treatments all of a sudden ‘horribly dangerous for anyone, for any care, but particularly for this extremely ...
Second, the Trump administration is creating a sense that the law is just vibes now. If you question the legality of Trump’s ...
On his first day in office, President Trump issued an executive order that purports to end birthright citizenship for certain ...
The court in 1898 ruled that the protections and guarantees afforded by the 14th Amendment belong to citizens and noncitizens ...
In a recent New York Times op ed, legal scholars Randy Barnett and Ilan Wurman offer a partial defense of President Trump's executive order denying ...