
Trump Administration Considers Major Travel Ban Expansion: Live Updates
The Trump administration is considering a major expansion of its travel restrictions, potentially banning entry for citizens from 36 additional countries. This follows a previous order restricting travelers from 12 nations as part of a broader immigration crackdown.
07:29 AM EDT
The Supreme Court decision that gives Trump cover for national ICE raids
Left: American flags are seen during a protest outside the US Supreme Court over President Donald Trump's move to end birthright citizenship as the court hears arguments over the order in Washington, DC, on May...
Left: American flags are seen during a protest outside the US Supreme Court over President Donald Trump's move to end birthright citizenship as the court hears arguments over the order in Washington, DC, on May 15, 2025. Right: Protesters march through downtown Los Angeles as demonstrations continue after a series of immigration raids began last Friday on June 13, 2025, in Los Angeles, California. Center: U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to sign a series of bills related to California's vehicle emissions standards during an event in the East Room of the White House on June 12, 2025 in Washington, DC. More
Spencer Platt/DREW ANGERER/AFP/Something more than tear gas residue and smoke from burning Waymos hung over the Los Angeles streets hit by anti-ICE protests over the past week: a landmark Supreme Court decision from just over a decade ago.
The Trump administration has argued that sanctuary jurisdictions like California, and L.A. specifically, are getting in the way of immigration enforcement, and that states and cities should be helping federal agents carrying out their work.
That argument is, perhaps ironically, based on a Supreme Court precedent affirmed during the Obama administration. In 2012, the high court ruled in Arizona v. United States that it was the federal government's supreme responsibility to enforce immigration laws, and it superceded state and local law enforcement.
"It has been interpreted, I have to say, remarkably consistently, by circuits from the Fifth Circuit to the Ninth Circuit, with some variations, to strike down or affirm district court decisions striking down state laws that have been viewed as attempts by the states to enforce immigration law," Emma Winger, deputy legal director at the American Immigration Council, told Newsweek. "Arizona's holdings are, in many ways, very clear."
Read the full story by Dan Gooding on Newsweek.

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