Donald Trump will be only the second U.S. president after Grover Cleveland to serve two nonconsecutive terms after he takes the oath of office Monday.
President Trump's executive order to limit "birthright citizenship"​ was one of the first things he signed in his second term.
After speaking out against the flurry of executive orders signed by President Donald Trump on his first day in office, Michigan Attorney Dana Nessel is joining with the attorneys general of 21 other states in challenging an order aimed to halt birthright citizenship.
The lawsuit to block the president’s executive order is the first salvo in what is likely to be a long-running legal fight over immigration policy.
Donald Trump yesterday took an oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States” and then promptly broke that oath by seeking to revoke the first sentence of
President Joe Biden's symbolic declaration on Friday that the Equal Rights Amendment is “the law of the land” likely only sets up more debates for Congress and the courts over the constitutional prohibition on gender-based discrimination.
The right and the left don’t agree on how they’d like to change the Constitution, but they do agree that changes need to be made.
The remarks were largely a symbolic gesture of support for a century-long campaign to enshrine gender equality in the Constitution. But advocates said they could add heft to a future legal fight.
Michigan is one of 18 states which signed onto the lawsuit challenging the executive order issued by Trump on Monday.
The 14th Amendment grants citizenship to "all persons born or naturalized in the US"—why does Trump wants to change it?