NJ Attorney General Matt Platkin announced a lawsuit to challenge President Donald Trump’s executive order that seeks to end birthright citizenship.
Attorneys general from 22 states have sued to block President Donald Trump’s move to end a century-old immigration policy known as birthright citizenship guaranteeing that U.S.
Trump's executive order is "flagrantly unlawful," attorneys for multiple states, including New Jersey and Delaware, said in a lawsuit.
Eighteen states, the District of Columbia and San Francisco will seek a preliminary injunction blocking a Trump order denying citizenship to U.S.-born children of unauthorized immigrants.
NJ lawyers will no longer pursue their appeal to immediately halt congestion pricing. But they plan to file an amended complaint with new arguments.
U.S. President Donald Trump told global business leaders on Thursday they should manufacture products in the United States to avoid import tariffs and enjoy low tax rates.
A group that supports immigrants in South Jersey is launching Rapid Response ICE watch teams and holding Know Your Right community workshops.
President Donald Trump's executive order denying U.S. citizenship to the children of parents living in the country illegally faced the first of what will be many legal tests on
Judge Sidney Stein swatted the new trial request down, Ry Rivard reports. He noted the material, which he had blocked from consideration over the “Speech and Debate Clause,” was minimal.
Troy Sargent expected his probation to last another six months, but he learned it's been terminated early following an executive action by President Donald Trump pardoning hundreds charged in the
Twenty-two states -- including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut -- plus the District of Columbia and San Francisco sued in federal court to block Trump's order. New Jersey Democratic Attorney General Matt Platkin said Tuesday that presidents might have broad authority but they are not kings.
Until the order, which Trump signed the same day he was inaugurated as the 47th president, the U.S. government has, at least the late 1800s, considered the child of any immigrant born on U.S. soil an automatic citizen, even to a mother in the United States illegally.