Anonymous ID: 07e981 Jan. 18, 2025, 3:28 a.m. No.22373029   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3353 >>3541 >>3718 >>3864

Federal Appeals court rules that Obama-era DACA program is unlawful in Texas

 

The Appeals court decision only upheld Hanen's ruling for the state of Texas, thereby suspending the program in the Lonestar state, and said the judge was incorrect in halting the program nationwide.

 

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday upheld most of a lower court's ruling that former President Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was unconstitutional, throwing the future of the program in jeopardy.

 

U.S. District Court Judge Andrew Hanen in September of 2023 ruled that the Biden administration could not codify the program as a memorandum and that efforts to do so violated immigration law, according to The Hill.

 

The Appeals court decision only upheld Hanen's ruling for the state of Texas, thereby suspending the program in the Lone Star state, and said the judge was incorrect in halting the program nationwide, per CNN.

 

The court ruled that Texas was the only state to demonstrate “sufficient evidence that DACA has caused the harms it alleges and that those costs would be partially alleviated if DACA were enjoined."

 

The state had argued that “DACA recipients impose over $750 million in annual costs on the state, those costs are traceable to and exacerbated by the Final Rule, and a favorable judgment against DACA would at least partially alleviate Texas’s harm,” the judges wrote, according to Bloomberg Law.

 

The court also barred the government from accepting new DACA applications.

 

The order comes as President-elect Donald Trump is set to take office on Monday, which means the Biden administration has no time to try and further appeal the decision. The incoming Trump administration has not commented on the ruling so far.

 

https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/federal-appeals-court-rules-obama-era-daca-program-unlawful-texas

Anonymous ID: 07e981 Jan. 18, 2025, 3:31 a.m. No.22373034   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3353 >>3362 >>3413 >>3541 >>3718 >>3864

Here are the Democrats who said they will not attend Trump's inauguration on Monday

 

Major Democrats missing the event this year include former first lady Michelle Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

 

Some Democrats have chosen not to attend President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration on Monday, including former first lady Michelle Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

 

Members of Congress are not required to attend presidential inaugurations, but the majority of Congress usually attends the ceremony. However, this year, Democratic lawmakers have cited a conflict with Martin Luther King Jr. events in their home districts, or safety concerns because of how many Trump supporters would be in attendance in the wake of the riots on Jan. 6, 2021, according to Newsweek.

 

Former and outgoing presidents usually also attend the ceremonies, but Trump skipped President Joe Biden's inauguration in 2021, after the incoming president repeatedly claimed the 2020 election was stolen. All living presidents are expected to attend Trump's ceremony.

 

Here is a list of Democrats who have opted to skip the 2025 inauguration:

 

Former first lady Michelle Obama

 

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

 

Rep. Judy Chu of California

 

Rep. Lateefah Simon of California

 

Rep. Delia Ramirez of Illinois

 

Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois

 

Rep. Kweisi Mfume of Maryland

 

Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota

 

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey

 

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York

 

Rep. Ritchie Torres of New York

 

Rep. Deborah Ross of North Carolina

 

Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee

 

Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Texas

 

Rep. Sylvester Turner of Texas

 

Rep. Veronica Escobar of Texas

 

Rep. Donald Beyer of Virginia

 

Rep. Adam Smith of Washington

 

Rep. Gwen Moore of Wisconsin

 

Rep. Mark Pocan of Wisconsin

 

https://justthenews.com/government/congress/here-are-democrats-who-said-they-will-not-attend-trumps-inauguration-monday

Anonymous ID: 07e981 Jan. 18, 2025, 4:28 a.m. No.22373147   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22373128

Cooked up recently to frame Hitler in a certain light?

Are there going to be parallels with Trump to help cement the Hitler - Trump comparisons?

It's difficult to believe anything "discovered" by the media.

Anonymous ID: 07e981 Jan. 18, 2025, 5:55 a.m. No.22373369   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3373

(1/2)

 

Trump’s first day executive orders expected to touch a wide range of subjects

 

Trump promised to begin mass deportations on day one, but some sources have suggested the deportation numbers will be low at first and gradually build while the administration gets its apparatus in place.

 

resident-elect Donald Trump is set to formally take office on Monday after which he is expected to sign an exploding ball of executive orders that will set the tone for his administration on key issues, namely border security and energy.

 

On the campaign, Trump facetiously quipped that he would not act as a dictator or impose authoritarian rule “except for day one.” "We're closing the border and we're drilling, drilling, drilling. Other than that I'm not gonna be a dictator," he told an amused Sean Hannity during a town hall event last year.

 

Since then, reports have emerged that Trump could sign as many as 100 executive orders on his first day in office. Trump himself made a litany of “day one” promises while on the campaign trail that included moves on nearly every key issue.

 

Such promises included the convening of a task force to plan America’s 250th birthday, the start of mass deportations, the imposition of tariffs on Mexico, an end to birthright citizenship, the termination of migrant flights, deregulations, orders permitting the expansion of energy production, restrictions on DEI and other programs, and the rooting out of career bureaucrats who work against his agenda.

 

Immigration and border security

 

During a recent meeting with Republican senators, Trump adviser Stephen Miller highlighted planned actions on immigration to begin early in the administration as part of what the Associated Press called “executive punch unseen in modern times.”

 

Among the most highly-anticipated order will be the return of the “Remain-in-Mexico” policy requiring that would-be asylees stay outside the U.S. ahead of their court dates. Others are likely to address the completion of the southern border wall, Trump’s signature campaign promise from 2016, while others are expected to target groups of illegal aliens that recently entered the United States and those who have already been approved for deportation.

 

Some of the immigration orders may stall, however, with the Senate evidently hesitant to speedily confirm some of his key nominees for posts relevant to those policies. Still, some of his border actions will need only the weight of the president’s signature.

 

One of his key immigration promises was to implement an executive order directing federal agents to interpret the law in a way that would not grant the children of illegal immigrants American citizenship. Trump made that promise in May of 2023, at which time it generated considerable legal speculation about the likely challenges to such a dramatic reinterpretation of the law.

 

Trump promised to begin mass deportations on day one, but some sources have suggested the deportation numbers will be low at first and gradually build while the administration gets its apparatus in place.

 

“You’re not going to see historic numbers in month one. You start to see a steady increase, and then it’ll keep building and building,” one source familiar with the administration’s plans told Politico.

 

Energy and the environment

 

Independent of immigration, Trump reportedly plans to target energy production, in part by rolling back Biden-era executive orders and environmental regulations. Specifically, Trump has taken aim at the Biden administration’s natural gas export restrictions and electric vehicle mandates, vowing to end them on day one and to expand fracking in Pennsylvania.

 

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/monthe-day-one-dictatorship-trumps-expected-executive-orders

Anonymous ID: 07e981 Jan. 18, 2025, 5:57 a.m. No.22373373   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22373369

(2/2)

 

Article

Dig Deeper

President-elect Donald Trump is set to formally take office on Monday after which he is expected to sign an exploding ball of executive orders that will set the tone for his administration on key issues, namely border security and energy.

 

On the campaign, Trump facetiously quipped that he would not act as a dictator or impose authoritarian rule “except for day one.” "We're closing the border and we're drilling, drilling, drilling. Other than that I'm not gonna be a dictator," he told an amused Sean Hannity during a town hall event last year.

 

Since then, reports have emerged that Trump could sign as many as 100 executive orders on his first day in office. Trump himself made a litany of “day one” promises while on the campaign trail that included moves on nearly every key issue.

 

Such promises included the convening of a task force to plan America’s 250th birthday, the start of mass deportations, the imposition of tariffs on Mexico, an end to birthright citizenship, the termination of migrant flights, deregulations, orders permitting the expansion of energy production, restrictions on DEI and other programs, and the rooting out of career bureaucrats who work against his agenda.

 

Immigration and border security

 

During a recent meeting with Republican senators, Trump adviser Stephen Miller highlighted planned actions on immigration to begin early in the administration as part of what the Associated Press called “executive punch unseen in modern times.”

 

Among the most highly-anticipated order will be the return of the “Remain-in-Mexico” policy requiring that would-be asylees stay outside the U.S. ahead of their court dates. Others are likely to address the completion of the southern border wall, Trump’s signature campaign promise from 2016, while others are expected to target groups of illegal aliens that recently entered the United States and those who have already been approved for deportation.

 

Some of the immigration orders may stall, however, with the Senate evidently hesitant to speedily confirm some of his key nominees for posts relevant to those policies. Still, some of his border actions will need only the weight of the president’s signature.

 

One of his key immigration promises was to implement an executive order directing federal agents to interpret the law in a way that would not grant the children of illegal immigrants American citizenship. Trump made that promise in May of 2023, at which time it generated considerable legal speculation about the likely challenges to such a dramatic reinterpretation of the law.

 

Trump promised to begin mass deportations on day one, but some sources have suggested the deportation numbers will be low at first and gradually build while the administration gets its apparatus in place.

 

“You’re not going to see historic numbers in month one. You start to see a steady increase, and then it’ll keep building and building,” one source familiar with the administration’s plans told Politico.

 

Energy and the environment

 

Independent of immigration, Trump reportedly plans to target energy production, in part by rolling back Biden-era executive orders and environmental regulations. Specifically, Trump has taken aim at the Biden administration’s natural gas export restrictions and electric vehicle mandates, vowing to end them on day one and to expand fracking in Pennsylvania.

 

The natural gas export ban was part of the Biden administration’s climate change initiatives and was ostensibly temporary, though it faced legal challenges and the Department of Justice in December asked the courts to halt proceedings, given the incoming Trump administration was likely to end the ban anyway.

 

The electric vehicle mandate, meanwhile, was a regular fixture of Trump’s campaign, especially amid United Auto Workers’ lengthy strike. Trump made the argument that the Green New Deal and the Biden administration’s effort to transfer auto-manufacturing to electric vehicles would bankrupt the industry and result in additional offshoring of their jobs.

 

“I will cancel her insane electric vehicle mandate. It'll be ended on day one,” he promised.

 

Jan. 6 pardons?

 

In December, Trump promised to pardon Jan. 6 participants on his first day, saying they were "living in Hell" as the Justice Department pursued charges over their involvement in the incident. More than 1,500 people have faced charges related to Jan. 6 but the scope of Trump's planned pardons remains unclear, especially whether they will include those convicted of violent offenses.

 

The rest of the day

 

Trump’s actual day one schedule was changed last minute due to inclement weather, with the Inauguration itself being moved inside the Capitol Rotunda, a move not seen since President Ronald Reagan’s second inauguration in 1985.

 

 

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/monthe-day-one-dictatorship-trumps-expected-executive-orders>>22373369