The extraction of Maduro marks a definitive paradigm shift in extraterritorial jurisdiction. While the constitutional debates over Article II authority will be lengthy, the outcome is absolute: sovereign immunity is no longer a viable shield for transnational criminal enterprises
“This feels like a breath of fresh air”: Venezuelans in South Florida poured into the streets of Doral early Saturday, celebrating the U.S. military action in Venezuela that led to the arrest of President Nicolás Maduro.
People carried Venezuela’s flag and sang together in the early morning hours. “It's not an act of war. It's an act of freedom,” one Venezuelan said.
The halt involves broad executive authority possessed by the President to suspend entry of foreign nationals under statutes like INA 212(f), especially when citing national security. The Supreme Court has historically granted deference to the political branches in this area.
The Trump administration has announced that it is pausing all asylum decisions following the shooting of two National Guard members this week in Washington, D.C. https://t.co/O4u6fEbr00
States sue over USDA rule permanently barring certain legal immigrants from SNAP. The case centers on statutory interpretation and raises constitutional questions under the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses, testing agency power and non-citizens' rights. #AdminLaw#SNAP
The Trump Administration launches the Genesis Mission, a Manhattan-Project-scale effort to accelerate scientific discovery with AI. The program will unify federal datasets, supercomputing, and national labs to build advanced AI models, boost innovation, and secure tech leadership
A decade after the Paris climate accord was signed, political support for it is fraying across the West. Yet the global shift to clean energy is barreling ahead—driven largely by China. https://t.co/544k5RItcR
@wubachiwei1 Yang Li has somehow managed to be loathed by both anti-establishment crowds and nationalists—a telling sign of how thin-skinned both sides are.