PHOENIX — Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes announced Tuesday she intends to challenge the legality of President Donald Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship.
Newly inaugurated President Donald Trump plans executive action that could deepen climate change's impact on Arizona.
Arizona politicians quickly reacted Monday to President Donald Trump's sweeping plans to overhaul the federal government after he took the oath of office to become the 47th president of the United States.
Trump’s second term will have an outsized impact on Arizona, a border state and presidential battleground that was at the heart of Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and then elected him decisively four years later. Trump is in a more powerful position than he was on Inauguration Day in 2017, political watchers say.
Among his first day of executive orders, President Trump on Monday ordered flags be at full-staff "on this and all future Inauguration Days." Gov. Katie Hobbs raised them until Tuesday.
Because presidents exercise such unfettered discretion in granting clemency, these actions provide useful insights into their true character.
At least 11 Arizonans were convicted in connection with the riot. They ranged from Phoenix resident Jake Angeli, the “QAnon shaman” who became the worldwide face of the riot to a pair of Tucson siblings mostly forgotten among the more than 1,500 cases stemming from the violence.
Supporters of reproductive rights gather in Phoenix to protest potential restrictions on health care and reproductive freedoms under Donald Trump.
Reporting live from the United States, for the second inauguration of Trump which will be happening today. I took a few hours to
Edward Vallejo, a Phoenix man who was convicted for his role in the Jan. 6 riot, got his sentence commuted on Monday as part of President Trump's executive orders.
Instead, the Arizona Democrat says she’ll be volunteering in Phoenix for the Martin Luther King Jr. National Day of Service.