President Donald Trump pardoned nearly 1,500 people who were convicted of attacking the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Some of those included high-profile North Texans.
News of the protest spread across social media over the weekend, inviting people to "show up & speak up for those who can't."
On Tuesday, spokespeople in the Fort Worth, Arlington and Hurst-Euless-Bedford independent school districts said it was unclear whether or how their districts’ programs would be affected by the freeze.
A now-halted order by the Office of Management and Budget sought to pause federal spending on programs deemed too radical by the Trump administration.
A teacher with the Fort Worth Independent School District in Texas posted on X for Immigration and Customs Enforcement to visit the school because some students “don’t even know English,” according to a report.
Sunday afternoon and into the night, hundreds of North Texans demonstrated in Dallas and Fort Worth against President Donald Trump’s new and expanding crackdown on Immigration. The protest in Dallas started around 3:00 p.
A substitute teacher in Fort Worth, Texas, is under investigation after allegedly calling for ICE raids at Northside High School, claiming many studen
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents launched “enhanced targeted operations” in the Dallas-Fort Worth area on Sunday, a spokesperson said, signaling an escalation ordered by President Donald Trump as part of his efforts to tighten immigration enforcement.
The state has vowed to assist the president in his efforts to revamp immigration. But Texas' biggest cities and school districts are more reluctant to help.
As many as a thousand North Texans gathered near Dallas’ Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge Sunday afternoon in protest of President Donald Trump’s national mass deportation plan. The protest lasted well into the evening hours despite frigid temperatures, with many protesters standing wrapped in blankets and Mexican flags.
The TV host known as “Dr. Phil” embedded with U.S. immigration enforcement officers during an operation in Chicago on Sunday, defending President Donald
I have many students who don’t even speak English and they are in 10th-11th grade,’ a Fort Worth-based teacher tweeted