SAN ANTONIO — President Donald Trump plunged the U.S. government into panic and confusion on Tuesday by pausing federal funding while his administration conducts an across-the-board ideological review to uproot progressive initiatives, setting the stage for a constitutional clash over control of taxpayer money.
As immigration raids were reported in Austin and San Antonio last week, protesters gathered on Sunday, January 26, in support of immigrants and their contributions to American society. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
Trump’s new directive that aims to increase death sentences clashes with some Texas lawmakers’ efforts to add guardrails to capital punishment.
The Edinburg shop owner shared her support for Trump — and special pastries — on social media following the election, garnering a rush of customers.
Several San Antonio-based organizations are gathering Sunday to protest Donald Trump's incoming administration.
Texas cities, counties, higher education institutions and nonprofits clambered Tuesday to gauge the potential fallout from the suspension, later blocked temporarily by a federal judge.
On Inauguration Day on Monday, as Donald Trump was being sworn in as the 47th president, and returned to power with speech peppered with notions that America is in decline, the San Antonio Catholic Charities’ MRC Centro de Bienvenida (MRC), kept its ...
President Trump has signed executive orders changing immigration rules. Now San Antonio families, already going through the process, are worried of the impacts.
A video on the pioneering Black pilots, famed for their World War II exploits, was stripped from an Air Force basic training curriculum this week.
A total of 61 San Antonio officers will travel to Washington to help provide security at Donald Trump's inauguration on Jan. 20.
On Tuesday, Trump signed an executive order to cut federal support for gender transitions for individuals under the age of 19, reversing a Biden-era policy. That move followed a similar order last week aimed at barring transgender individuals from serving in the U.S. military.
The decision was what investors and economists expected after a series of high readings of inflation and strong jobs reports.