Chicago, Presidency of Donald Trump and Immigration
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Lucy Martinez, a teacher at Nathan Hale Elementary School, was recorded putting a finger to her neck and pretending to pull the trigger during a No Kings protest in the city over the weekend.
Residents troubled by an immigration crackdown air dissent—and warnings—with devices typically favored by athletic coaches.
The boycott stemmed in part from anger over Chicago Public Schools’ policies that included the use of portable classrooms that came to be known as Willis wagons — after district Superintendent Benjamin Willis — to relieve overcrowding at schools in largely Black neighborhoods.
But the federal judge limited the deposition of Gregory Bovino to “how” federal officers are aggressively enforcing immigration law, not “why” they're doing it in Chicago.
A federal judge ordered immigration agents this month not to use tear gas on journalists and protesters who pose no threat — yet the incidents have continued.
A woman is facing widespread backlash after being seen in a viral video seemingly mocking Charlie Kirk’s assassination at a ‘No Kings’ protest in the US.
Speaking at a "No Kings" rally in Washington, D.C., Bill Nye, the former host of "Bill Nye the Science Guy," urged lawmakers to “stop the abuses of this petulant president [Trump] and his circle of sycophants,” declaring, “No thrones, no crowns, no kings."
CBS, NBC, PBS and NPR -- aired 17 minutes and 51 seconds of mostly positive, "mostly peaceful" coverage (not counting the gushy headlines chatter at the beginning). By contrast, January's "March for Life" protest drew only 50 seconds,