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About 40 migrants were transported to Los Angeles from Texas earlier this week as part of Gov. Greg Abbott’s ongoing effort to have so-called sanctuary cities take the burden off Texas border towns.
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The young girl died in U.S. Border Patrol custody after experiencing a "medical emergency," the agency said. The news underscores concern about the safety of migrants with Title 42 no longer in place.
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At least 40 migrants were killed and 25 were injured during the March 27 fire in the border city. Mexico's attorney general said Francisco Garduño and four other officials failed to ensure the safety of migrants at the facility.
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An analysis by The Texas Newsroom found a 36% increase in the demand for foreign workers in the state in just one year.
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Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador confirmed the deaths during his Tuesday press conference. The Tamaulipas governor also confirmed that one of the surviving citizens was wounded. The other was not.
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The decade-long program has benefited hundreds of thousands of people. But Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and other GOP-led states argue it should be halted quickly
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A new Texas lawsuit alleges that a proposed immigration parole program violates federal law. Meanwhile, immigrant rights groups are slamming the president for restarting a separate, Trump-era policy.
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The lawmakers say that despite billions spent, the state’s border efforts aren’t working.
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Immigrant rights groups slammed the plan as ineffective and redundant.
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The Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday to keep Title 42 in place until a case between multiple GOP-led states and the Biden administration is resolved.
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Immigration limits set last year because of COVID-19 were supposed to expire Wednesday, but the Supreme Court ordered those limits to stay in place past Christmas. Now, volunteers at a Dallas church are working daily to provide food, clothing and shelter for asylum-seekers ahead of the holidays and an extreme cold front.
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A controversial public health order that’s been rapidly expelling migrants from the U.S. was supposed to end Wednesday. But as Title 42 remains in place migrants are unsure about their future and need to seek shelter as a strong cold front approaches.
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Volunteers in Dallas are still welcoming some migrants following the Supreme Court’s decision Monday to keep in place a Trump-era immigration policy, but they worry about the implications for migrants stuck at the border.