For companies employing and hiring immigrant talent, the second Trump administration could bring big changes. Here’s what to know.
Hitting a familiar theme from the campaign trail and his first term in office, Trump portrayed the country’s borders as insecure and immigrants as contributing to crime and the fentanyl crisis. In an announcement that could have stark repercussions, he threatened to impose 25% tariffs on everything coming into the country from those two countries.
Trump and his allies say that their plan will revitalize the economy and prioritize the rule of law. American workers “will now be offered higher wages with better benefits to fill these jobs,” Stephen Miller, one of Trump’s top immigration advisers, told The Times last year.
President-elect Donald Trump’s pledge to impose massive tariffs was an early warning shot to try to force the hand of allies and adversaries to come to the negotiating table on immigration and trade issues,
One of the largest immigration advocacy groups in Pennsylvania is calling on the Biden administration to end contracts with ICE detention centers and prioritize asylum cases as a way to stave off impacts from incoming Trump policies.
The Trump transition team is considering plans to deputize state and local police forces to help federal agencies conduct mass deportations.
While immigration officials have used the tech for years, an October letter from the Department of Homeland Security obtained exclusively by The Associated Press details how those tools — some of them powered by AI — help make life-altering decisions for immigrants,
Weighing a run for governor, Bronx Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres is distancing himself and even repudiating positions he took in a 2022 endorsement questionnaire backing mass amnesty for illegal
America's population could plunge as much as 32% if the US were to completely close its borders, one Brookings projection found.
The big picture: The U.S. immigration system's backlog of 3.7 million court cases will take four years to resolve at the current pace — but that could balloon to 16 years under President-elect Trump's mass deportation plan, according to an Axios analysis.
Washington Examiner commentary editor Conn Carroll breaks down President-elect Donald Trump's approach to immigration, focusing on his campaign promise of mass deportations and the challenges ahead. From the long waiting times for court dates to the likelihood of his Cabinet picks moving forward,
As the incoming Trump administration promises an aggressive crackdown on immigration, questions are being raised about the role local police agencies might play in enforcing federal border