SACRAMENTO, California — California Attorney General Rob Bonta assailed the Trump administration’s edict to halt federal funding as imprecise and frustratingly vague on Tuesday. But among the dozens of programs that could be cut, the state’s top law enforcement official pointed to one with certainty: money to help fire-scorched Los Angeles rebuild.
Nick Kostos and Femi Abebefe discuss the teams they believe can actually win the Super Bowl in February. Rep. Richard Neal joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss working with President Trump and the incoming administration, future of Trump tax cuts, importance of fiscal responsibility, and more.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta issued guidance to lawyers about noncitizens in his latest public event warning of possible clashes with the incoming Trump administration.
The president cannot eliminate fundamental rights by executive order, nor can he order federal agencies to violate the law,” California’s attorney general said in a statement.
The City of El Cajon sent a letter to California Attorney General Rob Bonta asking for clarification on SB 54.
Following a Monday executive order from President Donald Trump that seeks to freeze all federal aid, California officials respond.
Bonta, a Democrat, said he would defend birthright ... ending the right to citizenship for some children born in America. President Donald Trump holds up the letter that former President Joe ...
The lawsuit: Birthright citizenship is enshrined in the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment, Bonta said at a Tuesday news conference. He called Trump’s executive order “blatantly unconstitutional” and “unAmerican,” adding, “I’ll see you in court.”
California Attorney General Rob Bonta on Wednesday condemned a memo ... He has already joined a lawsuit over President Donald Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship and has pledged ...
Illinois was one of 22 Democratic-led states that filed suit Tuesday asking a federal court to block the sudden pause on funding, which was announced Monday evening. The freeze threatened to hold up trillions of dollars in funding for basic government functions like health care,
Scrambling to respond to the Trump administration’s late Monday night directive to pause a wide, but as-yet-unspecified, swath of federal spending programs, California’s Democratic elected officials a