Trump, deportation flights
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The Trump administration’s plan to dust off the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 was in the works long before March 15.
From The Atlantic
As losses mount in lower federal courts, President Donald Trump has returned to a tactic that he employed at the Supreme Court with remarkable success in his first term.
From U.S. News & World Report
One plaintiff, identified only by initials in court filings, is a Guatemalan man who was sent to Mexico, where he says he was previously raped.
From U.S. News & World Report
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The Trump admin urged the Supreme Court to review a freeze on its use of an 18th-century law to fast-track deportations of Venezuelans, including alleged gang members.
4don MSN
A federal appeals court issued a decision in a high-profile immigration case challenging the Trump administration's authority to deport Venezuelan nationals via a 1798 wartime law.
ActBlue, a fundraising juggernaut for liberal candidates and causes, is facing stepped-up scrutiny and criticism from Republicans on Capitol Hill and allies of President Donald Trump – as the GOP flexes its new power in Washington and targets one of the key pillars of the Democratic Party’s financial infrastructure.
The Trump administration continues to insist it didn't defy a federal judge's order when it failed to turn around planes carrying Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador.
WASHINGTON—The Trump administration on Friday asked the Supreme Court to let it resume deportation flights to an El Salvador prison, arguing that lower courts that paused the removals were trespassing on the president’s powers.
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The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Friday to allow it to invoke the Alien Enemies Act to carry out swift deportations. The emergency application marks the first time that
The panel said that while further argument was needed, lawyers for the migrants would likely succeed in their claims that the Venezuelans had been denied due process.
A judge refused to lift his block on deportations under the Alien Enemies Act, saying Venezuelans deserve a chance to deny being gang members.
The decision leaves in place, for now, an order that the White House has strongly criticized as judicial overreach.