Supreme Court, Trump and national labor relations board
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
The New York Times |
The Trump administration has in recent weeks asked the Supreme Court to allow it to end birthright citizenship, to freeze more than a billion dollars in foreign aid and to permit the deportation of V...
The New York Times |
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit sided with the government to block a lower-court ruling that had led to the reinstatement of thousands of federal workers.
CNN |
The agencies are a critical bulwark against Trump’s efforts to rapidly reduce the size of the federal workforce and fire thousands of employees.
Read more on News Digest
Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts intervened to preserve the Trump administration's termination of two federal board members, a temporary win for the administration.
The Supreme Court on Monday allowed President Donald Trump to enforce the Alien Enemies Act for now, handing the White House a significant victory that will let immigration officials rely on a sweeping wartime authority to rapidly deport alleged gang members.
1don MSN
The ruling said a judge can't block Trump’s plan nationwide but made it clear that people swept up must have a chance to challenge their seizures before they can be deported.
As President Trump pushes the limits of executive power, the Supreme Court is avoiding confrontation with the White House while flexing its right of judicial review.
U.S. judges said on Wednesday they would impose new limits on President Donald Trump's attempts to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members under a wartime law, after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a broad ban on such removals in another court.
Follow here for live updates and news on fallout in the financial markets from President Donald Trump's announcement last week on tariffs for all countries.
Inside the Justice Department’s civil division, lawyers are squeezed between judges demanding answers and bosses’ instructions to protect the Trump agenda at all costs.
Two people have appeared in court charged with maliciously damaging US President Donald Trump's Turnberry golf course. Ricky Southall, 33, from Wakefield, and Umza Bashir, 55, from Leeds, were charged with malicious mischief when they appeared in private at Ayr Sheriff Court on Monday.