Arizona is joining with other states to sue President Donald Trump over his sweeping federal grant freeze that is set to go into effect Tuesday evening, according to the Attorney General’s Office.
President Donald Trump signed orders late Monday banning openly transgender service members from the U.S. military and suppressing any diversity initiatives, including prohibiting “un-American” ...
The Trump administration will temporarily stop payments on multiple federal programs Tuesday evening, cutting off Americans ...
Wong Kim Ark has the unique distinction as perhaps the only person with a Supreme Court ruling declaring him, by name, a citizen of the United States — but that didn’t prevent an immigration official ...
Much of what military troops at the border will be allowed to do — and what they aren’t — is proscribed in federal ...
The Havasupai Tribe, which lives at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, has repeatedly and emphatically said the Pinyon Plain uranium mine on U.S. Forest Service land in the Kaibab National Forest poses ...
In the post-Roe era, people capable of pregnancy face growing threats, and health care providers, family, friends, information on personal devices and virtually any activity that can be observed or ...
Since the U.S. Supreme Court’s City of Grants Pass v. Johnson ruling last June allowing localities to ban outdoor camping even if there is no homeless shelter space available, roughly 150 cities in 32 ...
President Donald Trump has reinstated a policy that bans foreign aid workers from offering information about abortion, and doubled down on an existing domestic policy that bans federal funding for ...
A group of Diné marched to the Navajo Nation Council Chambers in Window Rock to commemorate the National Day of Remembrance for Downwinders and to urge their tribal leaders to push the U.S. Congress ...
An Arizona House committee voted to approve a bill that would prohibit cities from reducing their police budgets even though no Arizona cities have done so, or threatened to do so, in recent history.
High school students who want to attend career and technical education courses in the Pima JTED program can begin registering for courses Monday.