The Delaware Department of Justice is joining 17 states in suing the Trump administration for its order ending birthright citizenship.
The move by Prospect Medical Holdings was long expected. Its local hospitals, including Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland and Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, are expected to continue operating.
Hawaiʻi Attorney General Anne Lopez announced that she and 18 other attorneys general are challenging President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship, saying that it violates the constitutional rights that children born in the country are entitled to.
"14th Amendment says what it means, and it means what it says—if you are born on American soil, you are an American," says Connecticut AG William Tong.
Until the order, which Trump signed the same day he was inaugurated as the 47th president, the U.S. government has, at least the late 1800s, considered the child of any immigrant born on U.S. soil an automatic citizen, even to a mother in the United States illegally.
Eighteen states, plus the District of Columbia and San Francisco sued in federal court to block Trump's order.
A Catholic deacon asked Wyoming conservatives to treat undocumented immigrants with the same dignity as 'the pre-born' when considering a bill to keep such immigrants off state roads.
Attorney General Dan Rayfield has joined other states in Texas gun rights cases in support of Biden administration gun safety rules.
New Jersey Democratic Attorney General Matt Platkin said his state and others with Democratic attorneys general, plan to intervene in cases already in the court system.
The group of attorneys general said the Inflation Reduction Act has had a “catalytic” effect on economic growth, particularly in Republican districts.
The overall average breast cancer incidence rate in the U.S. was 131.8 per 100,000 and the overall average breast cancer mortality rate was 19.3 per 100,000. Among women in the U.S., breast cancer accounts for 32% of all cancer cases and 14% of all cancer deaths, the report found.
New Attorney General Dan Rayfield announced Thursday that Oregon and more than a dozen other states are joining together to defend two federal rules aimed at reducing gun violence nationwide. Here's Rayfield's news release about the action,