U.S. District Judge John Coughenour, appointed by former President Ronald Reagan, signed the temporary restraining order on Thursday to block Trump’s action. Coughenour’s decision just days after a number of states, including New Jersey, sued the Trump administration over the move.
Show" host Ronny Chieng joked Thursday that President Donald Trump is doing historical deep dives like he's "MAGA John Oliver."
In just his first three days in office, President Donald Trump has signed dozens of executive orders, with more expected to come. Two local political experts say the orders themselves are often straightforward— but their paths to becoming reality might not be.
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump spent his first week back in office rapidly signing executive orders, the sheer volume of which could work to his advantage as he looks to quickly implement his second-term agenda against a wave of new lawsuits, legal analysts told Newsday.
The president on Jan. 24 issued an executive order revoking former President Joe Biden’s 2021 directive that had axed the decades-old policy.
Judge John C. Coughenour issued an order temporarily blocking President Donald Trump's order to end birthright citizenship.
But in revoking President Lyndon Johnson’s 1965 Executive ... The Reagan administration considered revoking EO 11246 in 1985, at the initiative of Attorney General Ed Meese. Ronald Reagan ...
These orders represent a deliberate attempt to undo progress on diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility and create new barriers to opportunity.
A federal judge appointed by Ronald Reagan calls the executive order ‘blatantly unconstitutional.’
The federal judge who temporarily blocked President Donald Trump's executive order denying U.S. citizenship to the children of parents living in the county illegally is a "tough" legal expert who made lawyers appearing before him "nervous,
President Donald Trump's first days in office already offer signals about how his next four years in the White House may unfold.