Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced Tuesday his office is joining at least 20 other states and the city of San Francisco in lawsuits seeking to stop an executive order signed Monday by President Donald Trump that would end birthright citizenship,
More than 20 U.S. attorneys general, including Minnesota's Keith Ellison, has filed a lawsuit against the executive order by President Donald Trump that is aimed at ending birthright citizenship.
Early Tuesday afternoon, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced he, as well as the attorneys general of more than a dozen states — including Wisconsin — asked the United States Supreme Court to invalidate the order, block any actions taken to implement the order and ask for immediate relief to prevent the order from taking effect.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison sued to block Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship, joining counterparts in 21 other states in legal battles against a right they say is guaranteed by the Constitution and upheld by the Supreme Court.
President Trump signed nearly 100 executive orders on Inauguration Day, including one that ends birthright citizenship for some children. Minnesota's Attorney General has now joined a lawsuit to sue him over it.
The safety of hundreds of undercover law enforcement officers in Minnesota and their families has been jeopardized after their identities were illegally released by the Minnesota Board of Peace Officers Standards and Training,
Attorneys general from 18 states including Minnesota sued to block President Donald Trump’s move to end a decades-old immigration policy known as birthright citizenship guaranteeing that U.S.-born children are citizens regardless of their parents’ status.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has filed a lawsuit against High Light Vapes, a Los Angeles-based e-cigarette manufacturer, charging it with marke
The suit argues the Supreme Court has previously ruled that birthright citizenship extends to everyone born in the United States.
The effort is in response to a legal challenge led by Kansas and several other states against a Biden administration rule.
The Feb. 3 event kicks off with a morning rally in the Capitol Rotunda followed by one-on-one meetings between Black entrepreneurs and lawmakers.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced Minnesota joined 21 states and San Francisco in suing Trump over his birthright citizenship order.