It was another busy day for the administration of President Donald Trump, as he was settled in a lawsuit against the executive order of the birth acquired.
This setback was the first to manage it, and it came when the judge issued a restriction against his executive order, which seeks to end the right of citizenship with childbirth children whose parents are in the country without a permit.
Illinois Coami Raul's public prosecutor was one of four law enforcement officials who joined the lawsuit against the executive order, and issued a statement after the decision of the American boycott judge John Kogenor.
He said in a statement: “We are pleased that the court agreed to our request to issue a temporary restriction, which led to the properly described what the judge described as the” non -constitutional, unconstitutional “executive order issued by President Trump, which sought to redefine the right of citizenship to birth. “The right of the individual born in this country to be a citizen in this country has been devoted to the fourteenth amendment of the US constitution for more than 150 years after the civil war. No president has the authority to overcome the constitution. A period.”
Illinois J. Pritzker also praised the decision, saying in a post on social media that Trump “has no ability to rewrite the constitution with a simple strike from my mustache.”
During the session, Cohenor told the lawyer of the Ministry of Justice that the guidance is “starkly unconstitutional” and that formulating the matter “baffles the mind”, according to Associated Press correspondents in the courtroom.
A hearing in this case is scheduled to be held on February 6.
Trump pledged to appeal the verdict, but he also faces lawsuits in Massachusetts, where 18 prosecutors have signed a different lawsuit against the executive order, which Trump signed on his first day in office.
Lawyers argued that the matter violated the fourteenth amendment, which guarantees the automatic citizenship of those born in the United States. Trump is seeking to remove this guarantee from children born to parents who are in the country without permit.
Trump took more executive measures on Thursday, including an executive order that removes confidentiality of documents related to the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, and civil rights activist Reverend Martin Luther King Junior.
Documents related to killings are expected to become public in the coming weeks.
“I have now decided that continuous revision and blocking information from the records of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy are not compatible with the public interest, and that the issuance of these records has been long awaited.” By the hill.
Trump's order can put an end to some of the old questions surrounding the assassinations, which all occurred more than half a century ago.
The Public Prosecutor and Director of National Intelligence is required to present a plan within two weeks to publish records related to the assassination of John Kennedy, which for a long time was the subject of audit and even conspiracy theories.
The White House said another thing was issued on Thursday that would remove policies that “act as suspects in front of the American innovation (artificial intelligence).”
It is directed to federal officials to search for and review previous orders related to the development of artificial intelligence, which was issued by former President Joe Biden.
Professor Bamadad, Director of the Debol Institute for Artificial Intelligence, warns that threats will come from technology, regardless of who is in the White House.
He said: “There is an arms race, which is almost wild West in developing artificial intelligence at the present time.” “I think we will soon need or later some criteria.”
On his first full day after returning to his position, President Donald Trump invited the leaders of Softbank, Openai and Oracle to announce the establishment of a new company called Stargate.
Trump took office and promised to take strict measures against migration issues, and American immigration agents participated in a raid on a work site in Newark, New Jersey, on Thursday evening, where the city's mayor said that it was related to the detention of a former American soldier, among others.
The Mayor of Nark, Ras Baraka, said during the accident that the Immigration and Customs Administration agents (ICE) failed to issue an arrest warrant during the accident.
The mayor said in a statement to the NBC New York: “ICE agents raided a local institution in Newark City, and they arrested unregistered residents as well as citizens, without submitting an arrest warrant.” “Newark will not stand idle while people are illegally intimidated.”
The Immigration and Customs Department later issued a statement saying that customers “may face American citizens while conducting field work and they may ask to identify the individual as was the case during a targeted enforcement process at the work site today.”
The accident raises more questions about the upcoming immigration operations that the Trump administration will pay.
In response to fears of such procedures, school officials in many Chicago suburbs, including Wokjan, seek to educate the population and students about their rights when it comes to going to school, and what information is in the end with law enforcement authorities.
No large -scale operations have been carried out in Chicago yet, although Trump and other supporters have often targeted Chicago as a potential concentration area for their efforts in enforcement of immigration laws.