Trump, Immigration Crackdown
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The Weeknight hosts discuss Trump altering his hardline immigration policies to prevent some deportations at U.S. farms and hotels, after hearing complaints from business leaders.
President Donald Trump was met with boos and cheers as he attended the opening night performance of the musical "Les Misérables" at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday evening.Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Trump are defending the mobilization of National Guardsmen and Marines to Los Angeles amid objections from Democrats about their domestic deployment.
Democratic governors, aside from Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA), are being challenged by President Donald Trump and immigration politics, as protests across the nation crop up. The blue-state governors, many of whom are possible 2028 presidential contenders,
Detroit area police agencies said they are ready for protests that are part of a nationwide effort to oppose President Donald Trump's immigration policy.
Republicans in Congress are calling several Democratic governors to Washington to question them over policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities
The president signaled an opening to protect migrant workers in agriculture and hospitality, in statements an official said sought to soothe industry leaders.
Key TakeawaysPresident Donald Trump posted that "changes are coming" to his "aggressive policy on immigration," noting that farmers and the hospitality industry have lost "very good, long time workers.
19hon MSN
Rallies against President Donald Trump are expected across the U.S. on Saturday to coincide with the military parade in Washington marking the Army’s 250th anniversary, which also falls on Trump’s birthday.
President Donald Trump’s border czar seemingly failed to get the memo on the president’s plan to ease immigration enforcement for farmworkers and hotel staff. Trump vowed on Thursday to ease deportation efforts to avoid targeting workers in agriculture and the leisure industry—sectors that heavily rely on migrant labor.
Three Democratic governors defended their responses to the migrant crisis and dispute claims of failing to cooperate with federal authorities, according to remarks prepared for a congressional panel.