President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to launch – on Day 1 of his presidency – the largest deportation of undocumented immigrants in U.S. history. Political observers say making good on
President-elect Donald Trump has promised significant changes when he takes office on everything from immigration to foreign policy to tariffs.
Trump has said he would like to deport everyone living illegally in the United States, though he has not set a specific numerical target. Who is most at risk?
The Pennsylvania Immigration Coalition had been planning for a possible Trump White House return since July, months before his re-election.
As President-elect Donald Trump looks to make sweeping changes to immigration policy in his second term, we revisit the history of immigration law through past presidencies starting in the 1700s.
Trump: “On Day 1 of the Trump presidency, I will restore the travel ban, suspend refugee admissions, stop the resettlement and keep the terrorists the hell out of our country.” (July 27, 2024; campaign rally in St. Cloud, Minnesota)
President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration will be held indoors Monday at the Capitol due to dangerously cold temperatures. Follow for live updates on the final days of the presidential transition.
The department that the South Dakota governor seeks to lead will be critical to fulfilling the incoming administration’s promises to quickly crack down on immigration.
Figueroa, 36, crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally in 2016 and was ordered deported after she missed an immigration court hearing that November. She met Martinez, 64, later that year, when they worked on the same ranch. “He was, and still is, my angel here,” she said.
In interviews with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, migrants in shelters across the central region of Mexico said they feel anxious and uncertain ahead of Trump's promise to crack down on immigration, fearful it will now become harder to gain asylum.
The Trump International Hotel was a hotbed for corruption and foreign conflicts of interest during Trump’s first term. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, for example, spent at least $259,724 at the hotel in 2017 while he was under investigation for money laundering. He used the presidential suite, which at the time was $10,000 per night.