This legislation is the most significant immigration enforcement and border security related bill to pass the Senate in nearly three decades.
GOP-led Laken Riley Act on track to be first immigration bill signed into law by Trump; 10 Democrats vote with GOP majority to advance bill to final vote
The bill would require Homeland Security detain immigrants charged or arrested with local theft, burglary or shoplifting.
On the Senate floor ahead of the vote, Schumer said that new Majority Leader John Thune ... It would require U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to arrest unauthorized migrants who commit ...
In a statement the following day, Trump’s acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Benjamine Huffman announced that the Biden administration’s guidelines on these areas were being rescinded, as well as an end to what the Trump administration has termed the “the broad abuse of humanitarian parole.”
Latest news and updates on the first full day of Donald Trump's presidency after his election victory. Follow live.
The Senate on Monday passed the Laken Riley Act, making the immigration-related bill the first piece of legislation to make it through the upper chamber in the new Congress and putting it a step closer to being signed into law by President Trump.
U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and U.S. Sen. Jim Justice voted Monday in favor of a bill to place strict penalties on illegal immigrants who commit crimes in the U.S. and to approve President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State.
Senate passage gives Trump a legislative victory on his first day back in the White House and jump-starts his sweeping agenda to curb illegal immigration.
Many Republican senators say they do not agree with President Donald Trump’s decision to pardon and commute sentences for more than
The 47th president issued a series of executive orders, saw his first Cabinet member confirmed and moved into the White House, all in a day's work.
Donald Trump took the Oath of Office and was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States. He is only the second man in the nation’s history to return to the Oval Office after a hiatus. He has promised to "act with historic speed" – and on his first day in office,