Mexican officials and other leaders in the region have not been able to meet with the incoming administration about its migration and deportation plans.
GUATEMALA CITY — Guatemala's President Bernardo Arévalo said Wednesday he anticipates issues like immigration will generate tension with the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, but the former peacebuilder also sees shared interests.
Arevalo could create a win-win scenario for the U.S. and Guatemala, but only if Trump avoids repeating his first-term mistakes. The post Guatemala's Democracy Still Has a Chance, but It Needs U.S. Support appeared first on World Politics Review.
Federal immigration authorities will be permitted to target schools and churches after President Donald Trump revoked a directive barring arrests in “sensitive” areas.
Guatemalan journalist Jose Ruben Zamora, founder of El Periódico newspaper, arrives for his court hearing to decide if he will be sent back to prison concerning a money laundering case
The rumble of the No. 7 train is a familiar sound in Jackson Heights, where street vendors line the sidewalks, woven into the fabric of New York. Many of the vendors are immigrants themselves, now feeling targeted by President Trump's mass deportation agenda.
GUATEMALA CITY — Guatemala’s President Bernardo ... tension with the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, but the former peacebuilder also sees shared interests.
GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Guatemala’s President Bernardo ... tension with the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, but the former peacebuilder also sees shared interests.
On the outskirts of Altadena, where one of the most destructive firestorms in Los Angeles history had just receded, a group of volunteers worked last week to gather fallen tree branches and leaves — removing fuel for potential future fires,
A co-op of ethnic German Hutterite farmers, who arrived in the 19th century, own the Dakota Provisions plant. But migrants from Venezuela, Thailand and other countries, earning around $14 per hour, perform the dangerous, back-breaking work.
Migrants in Mexico who were hoping to come to the U.S. are adjusting to a new and uncertain reality after President Donald Trump began cracking down on border security
Follow updates and coverage on Trump's administration as the president addresses the World Economic Forum and the Senate considers Trump Cabinet nominees.