Many of President Donald Trump's executive orders and administration policies will directly affect on Arizonans' lives. Here's a rundown of Week 1.
President Donald Trump's administration ordered a temporary freeze on federal grants and loans, sparking widespread confusion among Arizona companies, agencies, and other recipients of federal dollars.
"I find all of Trump's proposed policies on this topic to be outrageous," Democratic Representative Yassamin Ansari told Newsweek.
The Phoenix Union High School District declared itself on Friday a "safe zone" for all students "regardless of citizenship status."
At 2 p.m., Nathan Wayne Entrekin, of Cottonwood, Arizona, will be pleading guilty before U.S. District Judge Florence Pan. Entrekin joined in the #CapitolRiot dressed like the Book of Mormon figure Captain Moroni. @wusa9 @EricFlackTV pic.twitter.com/FVLVWMfId2
Several states, including Arizona, are challenging President Donald Trump's executive order that would end birthright citizenship.
President Donald Trump ran hard on the issue of immigration, and on Jan. 20, he announced several executive actions that are focused on those campaign promises. Now, Arizona leaders are reacting to what the President has announced.
Trump’s second term will have an outsized impact on Arizona, a border state and presidential battleground that was at the heart of Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and then elected him decisively four years later. Trump is in a more powerful position than he was on Inauguration Day in 2017, political watchers say.
Trump's administration greenlit immigration arrests at schools. Arizona’s Republican schools chief said that will hurt kids.
Here's which Arizonans cheered newly sworn-in President Donald Trump and which described him as a danger to the American people.
Among his first day of executive orders, President Trump on Monday ordered flags be at full-staff "on this and all future Inauguration Days." Gov. Katie Hobbs raised them until Tuesday.
The White House is taking drastic measures to control trillions of federal dollars by ordering a freeze on all federal grants and loans so the Trump administration can review government spending.