While these concerns have resurfaced under the second Trump administration, the message from advocates, lawyers, and health centers is clear and unequivocal: health care is always a priority and treatment should not be stopped.
Hours after President Donald Trump returned to the White House he signed a flurry of executive orders. They are an about face to several issues from the former administration and long standing policies that could have a new look.
President Donald Trump's attempt to end birthright citizenship "seeks to repeat one of the gravest errors in American history, by creating a permanent subclass of people born in the U.S. who are denied full rights as Americans."
Picture this: jackbooted ICE officers patrolling subway stations during your morning commute. Officers yanking families out of shelters and handcuffing them on the sidewalk. Enforcement operations sweeping in at pick-up time outside your kid’s school, barging into local businesses or even into your church, synagogue, or mosque.
Elected officials and immigrant advocacy organizations in Queens are urging undocumented immigrants to familiarize themselves with their rights as the Trump administration prepares to conduct Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in New York City.
“This policy has nothing to do with common sense,” immigrant groups and legal services providers react to DHS new directive on raids in sensitive locations.
As Washington celebrated Donald Trump's inauguration on Monday, New York City's immigrant-rich communities are expressing concern over the president's mass deportation plans.
Day 1 of the second Donald Trump presidency arrived on Monday, with the new commander-in-chief signing an executive order purporting to end birthright citizenship for children of parents who are in the United States illegally.