President Donald Trump quickly put his stamp on federal government after his return to the White House this week with wide-ranging executive orders that are reshaping long-standing policies that have governed Georgia for generations.
President Trump makes key moves on the first week back in office. And 11Alive's Faith Jessie sits down with Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.
A new AJC poll showed a majority of Georgians support allowing unauthorized Georgians to remain in the country if certain conditions are met.
A Georgia state senator and hardline supporter of President-elect Trump appeared to be pushed to the floor before being arrested while trying to enter the state House chamber on Thursday.
The House on Wednesday passed the Laken Riley Act, sending the immigration-related bill to President Trump’s desk in what is poised to be his first legislative victory since returning to the White
Georgia Democratic Congressman Hank Johnson said President Donald Trump’s first days in office have him concerned for the future of U.S. democracy. He spoke with WABE’s “Morning Edition” shortly after
Gerald Griggs, the state NAACP leader, reacted to a slew of executive orders and policy directives advanced in the first days Trump's second term in office.
The Laken Riley Act would require the detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes
The state of Georgia asks a federal appeals court to interpret the 1965 law in a way that could make it much harder to prove minority votes have been illegally diluted.
One of Trump’s picks is currently an evangelical pastor: Southern Baptist Scott Turner, an associate pastor at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas, was tapped to be Trump’s secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
While any of us who voted in the most recent Presidential election most likely has some firm opinions about Donald Trump, I am not sure anyone knows what this immodest, narcissistic, arrogant, in-your-face New Yorker will bring to the table the next four years.
Buried under layers of secrecy and red tape, the full findings related to the homicides of President John F. Kennedy, his brother and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.