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Biden's Plans to Send Massive Amnesty to Congress within First 100 Days
Joe Biden says he will send a massive amnesty deal for “over 11 million” illegal aliens to the United States Senate within his potential first 100 days in office.
Joe Biden says he will send a massive amnesty deal for “over 11 million” illegal aliens to the United States Senate within his potential first 100 days in office.
A Lake County judge in Indiana has recently struck down the city of Gary’s “welcoming city” ordinance, a cleverly named sanctuary statute that severely limited local compliance with federal immigration agencies and officers, and provided illegal protections to alien residents and visitors.
DHS proposed a new rule early this week to stop illegal aliens from obtaining work permits while they’re awaiting deportation, accurately stating that it just doesn’t make sense to allow them to hold jobs as their removal process has already begun.
Earlier this week, a federal judge halted the Trump administration’s practice of deporting alien minors who have entered the U.S. illegally.
According to recent exit polling conducted by Zogby Analytics on behalf of FAIR a majority of voters still strongly favor strengthened border restrictions and tight limits on admission of foreign guest workers during the ongoing health and economic crisis and beyond.
Several GOP Sens. have begun to talk of a potential immigration deal with Biden as Congress has tried and failed in recent years to clinch a deal related to "comprehensive immigration reform," reports The Hill.
Judge Garaufis, a Clinton appointee, ruled over the weekend that the administration’s latest attempt to curb the Obama-era DACA amnesty program was not legally sound as Chad Wolf is illegally serving as the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.
During his first weeks in office, Joe Biden and his Democrat administration are expected to quickly start dismantling President Trump's incredibly effective immigration agenda.
A federal judge in Chicago issued a nationwide injunction Monday to President Trump’s “Public Charge” rule, an attempt to make sure more foreign nationals are capable of self-sufficiency in order to obtain a green card from the US.
The Homeland Security and Justice departments are on the verge of finalizing two new asylum regulations to deal with “frivolous” claims at the border.