
Illegal! University Of California Los Angeles Prioritizes Illegal Aliens for $7,000 Immigration Activism Summer Fellowship
According to Campus Reform, "The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) is offering students a $7,000 stipend through its “Dream Summer” fellowship, a summer program that trains participants in immigrant rights advocacy and social justice activism." In other words, UCLA is rewarding illegals for law-breaking. The post Illegal! University Of California Los Angeles Prioritizes Illegal Aliens for $7,000 Immigration Activism Summer Fellowship appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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More Than 8 in 10 French Voters Back 'Negative Immigration', Support Widespread Deportations
The overwhelming majority of the French public are in favour of a large-scale deportation effort, including the removal of significant numbers of foreigners who detract from society. The post More Than 8 in 10 French Voters Back ‘Negative Immigration’, Support Widespread Deportations appeared first on Breitbart.
Zohran Mamdani Vows To Protect Illegal Aliens Ahead of 2026 Midterm Elections
New York City Commie Mayor Zohran Mamdani condemned the Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling that allows the Trump administration to end Temporary Protected Status for roughly 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians, warning it had “sparked one of the largest attacks on immigrants in modern American history.” The decision in Mullin v. The post Zohran Mamdani Vows To Protect Illegal Aliens Ahead of 2026 Midterm Elections appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Supreme Court signaling willingness to test Trump's 'wildly illegal' order: expert
A legal expert warned on Sunday that the Supreme Court seems willing to test the limits of America's constitutional multiracial democracy by approving a "wildly illegal" executive order from President Donald Trump. Leah Litman, a law professor at the University of Michigan and co-host of the "Strict Scrutiny" podcast, said during a new interview on the podcast "Pod Save America" that the Supreme Court's recent spate of immigration decisions gave her pause. Last week, the court sided with the Trump administration by ending Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of Haitian and thousands of Syrian immigrants. The Supreme Court has an opportunity to further rewrite America's citizenship standards in an upcoming case about birthright citizenship, an opinion that several court watchers expect will come down this upcoming week ahead of the court's summer recess. "The recent immigration decisions are really concerning," Litman said. "The fact that the court adopted such broad reasoning in cases where they didn't have to do so at all, I think, is causing some people to rethink their confidence in what the court might do on birthright [citizenship]."One of the first executive orders Trump signed during his second term sought to halt recognition of citizenship for children born to people in the country illegally or temporary residents. It would overturn more than a century of jurisprudence, which has granted citizenship to these groups. Litman said the Supreme Court's delay in releasing its opinion signals that it might contain a few fireworks. "I think the delay could also signal that the decision isn't going to be unanimous, and if it's not unanimous, that's going to meaningfully alter the Overton window as far as what people's understanding of our constitutional multiracial democracy is," she said. "If you have dissents by Justices Thomas and Alito, is birthright citizenship going to become a new litmus test for Republican appointees, where the expectation is you will only be selected for a judicial seat if you would overrule birthright citizenship, just like you could only be selected for a judicial seat if you would overrule Roe v. Wade?" Litman queried. "It would also invite future challenges to birthright citizenship down the road. So, I think those are some of the things that are on people's minds."
‘Temporary’ deportation shield for immigrants has always been a total farce
The Temporary Protected Status program for immigrants has long been a one-way ratchet — always extended but never revoked — that's made a mockery of the word “temporary.”
Trump’s unprecedented corruption is actively destroying America: report
President Donald Trump is breaking precedent in an important way, according to two experts — he is unprecedented in his corruption.“Past presidents of both parties have recognized that the Oval Office is a public trust, not a business opportunity,” wrote The Hill’s David Wippman and Glenn C. Altschuler on Sunday. “President Trump has shattered that norm. Since returning to office, he and his family have raked in more than $4 billion. Much of that comes from investments in cryptocurrency, real estate, and licensing ventures that benefit directly from President Trump’s policies.”He added, “Although the federal conflict of interest statute does not cover the president, every occupant of the White House since Watergate has recognized an ethical obligation to separate public office from personal financial interests. Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush used blind trusts. Barack Obama and Joe Biden didn’t need to, because their assets consisted largely of diversified investments, pensions and book royalties.”Wippman and Altschuler described how Trump has weakened regulations to prevent conflicts of interest, heavily profited from cryptocurrency, used his power to enrich his hotels and golf courses and accepted deals which personally benefit him from the governments of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. They even described him from profiting by major media and technology companies settling frivolous litigation he filed instead of contesting them.“Last month, in what critics called ‘the most blatant example of presidential corruption in modern times,’ Trump settled his own suit against the IRS,” Wippman and Altschuler wrote. “The settlement included a $1.776 billion ‘anti-weaponization fund’ Trump could use to reward supporters and immunity for him and other family members from any claims the IRS might make against them. Political blowback forced Trump to abandon the fund, perhaps permanently, but not the exemption from prosecution. It’s impossible to know whether any specific policy decision reflects greed rather than the public interest. But that is precisely the problem. When citizens cannot be confident the government is acting on their behalf, they lose faith in the political process.”Trump’s personal profiting from the presidency was evident as recently as Sunday. The New York Times reported Trump and his sons are profiting from the administration striking a deal with Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev in November over tungsten mine access.“Their sons were soon doing business with partners in a deal that their fathers were negotiating, continuing a pattern of self-enrichment in the second Trump administration that has few precedents in American history,” wrote The New York Times’ Paul Sonne and Eric Lipton on Sunday. They later added that “around the same time, Cantor Fitzgerald, an investment company controlled by Mr. Lutnick’s family and overseen by his sons Brandon and Kyle Lutnick, helped one of the lead investors working with Dominari on the Kazakh deal raise $210 million in new capital for a related entity. Such rounds of fund-raising typically net Cantor millions of dollars in fees.”
Supreme Court Strips Protections for Haitian & Syrian Immigrants in "Racially Inflected" Decision
Thousands of Haitians and Syrians living in the United States are newly at risk of deportation after the Supreme Court ruled to allow the Trump administration to strip them of “temporary protected status,” or TPS. The program, designed for foreign citizens of countries the U.S. government believes are too unstable or dangerous to be returned to, often due to natural disasters or war, has been a major target of attack by the Trump administration and its anti-immigrant agenda. “We are looking at the catastrophic deficit in the workforce in the United States if we allow this deportation machine and cruelty to take effect,” our guest, Haitian Bridge Alliance’s Guerline Jozef, says. “This is just part of the Trump administration’s efforts to feed the detention and deportation machine and essentially halt immigration,” adds Lupe Aguirre of the International Refugee Assistance Project. “It’s about maintaining their campaign promises to root out people that they see as undesirable.”






