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Mullin's comments on NBC's "Meet the Press" came in response to questions about a U.S. Supreme Court decision on Friday that ...
The Supreme Court’s ruling did not address the 14th Amendment, which states anyone born in the United States is automatically a citizen or the 1898 case of U.S. v. Wong Kim Ark, which ruled children ...
The justices’ regular caseload was overshadowed by requests from the president to allow some of his most controversial ...
You'll get access to an ad-free website with a faster photo browser, the chance to claim free tickets to a host of events ...
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries hesitated to endorse Democratic New York City mayor contender Zohran Mamdani but ...
At the Aspen Ideas Festival, Fareed sits down with former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and former acting Attorney ...
Chief Justice John Roberts refrained from naming specific individuals, but his rare public warning coincided with President ...
"Why wouldn't you send a child with their parents? Why would you want to separate them? I wouldn't want to be separated from my kid," the GOP senator said.
Miami-Dade Mayor criticizes the Supreme Court's decision on birthright citizenship, fearing instability for local families.
On very few occasions in the long history of a free America could the presidency have come so close to resembling an autocracy with a supreme leader in place rather than a President who is subject to ...
Republican U.S. Senator Markwayne Mullin said on Sunday he believes babies born in the United States to immigrants living in ...