According to an audio recording, the White House adviser sees virus-related order creating changes to American society by limiting immigration.
The order signed Wednesday seeks to protect the country from the virus and jobs for Americans in an unstable economy. But what does it really do?
The president signed the executive order Wednesday afternoon, saying that it will help the United States battle the coronavirus outbreak and protect American jobs.
The executive order is expected to exempt some categories of nonimmigrant visas, including temporary workers.
The president announced his plans in a late-night tweet on Monday, saying the move will safeguard American jobs and defend country from “the Invisible Enemy.”
Records obtained by The Washington Post via the Freedom of Information Act show numerous breaches of a barrier President Trump has characterized as impenetrable.
An estimated 29,000 health workers could lose their work permits if the Supreme Court ends the program for undocumented workers brought here as children.
Unauthorized crossings have dropped steeply in recent days as U.S. implements rapid deportation model due to emergency measures.
The country is taking an unorthodox approach to the pandemic, but officials acknowledge the real number of cases is much higher than reported.
A 19-year-old woman from Guatemala had reached the top of a section of fencing and fell while attempting to drop over to the other side.
ICE says it has implemented special pandemic protocols, but advocates and lawyers say an outbreak could sweep through the facilities, which have had problems with the disease.
Malpai Borderlands Group, many of whose members are conservative Republicans, see a generation of land stewardship at risk as barrier construction approaches protected lands.
Desert animals too large to squeeze between the bars of President Trump’s border wall will soon have their habitats cut in two and in recent weeks, cameras set up along the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona have been capturing the last few moments before partition.
The new rule, published Friday, has drawn an array of criticism.
Top lawyers under President Trump are increasingly using a rare power to take control over already decided immigration cases.
The policy that has pushed tens of thousands of migrants back into Mexico to await U.S. asylum hearings now appears headed to the Supreme Court.
Though President Trump supports the opposition to socialist Maduro, his administration’s policies make it difficult for political refugees to seek safety in the United States. A father and daughter show why.
Central American asylum seekers are frequently being sent to Guatemala to pursue their claims there, and others are swiftly facing deportation instead of waiting for U.S. court dates.
The acting White House chief of staff told a private gathering in England that the United States needs more immigrant workers to fuel economic growth, a contrast to Trump policy.
Federal officials say the units will help Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrest more immigrants in the interior of the country, after last year’s decline.


















