Trump, Harvard
Digest more
5h
Money Talks News on MSN12 States Challenge Trump Tariff Actions in CourtA growing legal backlash is testing the limits of presidential power on trade. The outcome could influence future economic policy.
Frustrated by judicial rulings during his second term, President Trump and allies have lashed out at the courts in a growing pressure campaign.
On Friday U.S. District Court Judge Beryl A. Howell rejected the Trump administration's request that she suspend her May 19 ruling in which she concluded its decision to fire the board of the U.S. Institute of Peace was illegal and thus "null and void."
Veterans, in particular, are seeking free legal work from firms that cut deals with the White House like Skadden, Kirkland & Ellis and Paul Weiss.
A federal judge has blocked an executive order by President Donald Trump targeting Jenner & Block, a law firm known for its work on progressive issues and its ties to Special Counsel Robert Muller’s Russia probe.
On Friday a District Court Judge in Boston ruled that the Trump administration must seek to facilitate the return to the United States of a Guatemalan man who said he was erroneously deported to Mexico in February despite fears for his safety.
President Donald Trump is fighting his mass deportation battle on two fronts: the courts, where he is losing, and public opinion, where he may have a better shot. While Justice Department lawyers seek to salvage some of the most aggressive elements of Trump’s deportation agenda,
Trump threatened on Friday to impose a 25% tariff on Apple for any iPhones sold, but not made, in the US, as part of his administration's goal of re-shoring jobs. ALSO READ \| "Don
The Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to lift protections for thousands of Venezuelans, leaving them potentially vulnerable to deportation. What about people from other countries?
Fox Business on MSN3d
Sen. Eric Schmitt 'confident' Trump's deportation efforts will continue amid legal challengesSen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., discuss the Trump administration's efforts to remove criminal illegal migrants on 'The Evening Edit.' White House dismisses scores of National Security Council staff
It’s only four months into Donald Trump‘s second term as president, and his administration already seems fed up with all the paperwork. The administration has responded to a court order requiring that it provide potential deportees with the “meaningful opportunity” to challenge their deportations in court on two fronts: with a legal challenge and declaration from State Secretary Marco Rubio,