Action empowers agents in CBP and ICE to enforce Trump administration's 'immigration laws and catch criminal aliens -- including murderers and rapists -- who have illegally come into our country' - An
The directives - which direct immigration officials to use “common sense” - are a departure from a long-standing policy.
Immigration scholars break down some of the immigration terms that are likely to become common during the Trump administration’s first months.
The Homeland Security Department has scrapped a Biden policy that kept immigration authorities away from sensitive community places.
Now what we’re doing is unifying nonprofits that have resources to support ‘Know Your Rights’ campaigns for immigrants in our community.” - Karlha Arias
Trump’s administration reinstates controversial measures, including 'Remain in Mexico' policy, and ends safeguards for “so-called ‘sensitive’ areas.”
The Trump administration revoked a Biden-era policy that prohibited ICE arrests at or near schools, places of worship and other "sensitive locations."
Signing orders his officials called "common-sense immigration policies," the actions included declaring a national emergency at the U.S. southern border, deploying armed forces, finishing border wall construction, and ending asylum and birthright citizenship.
The orders include declaring a national emergency to deploy military personnel to the border, suspending refugee resettlement and ending birthright citizenship.
An estimated 733,000 school-aged children are in the U.S. illegally. Many more have U.S. citizenship but have parents who are in the country illegally.
President Donald Trump has lifted long-standing restrictions on migrant arrests at sensitive locations such as schools and churches, reversing policies set by ICE and CBP over the past decade.