Immigration News

Daily Immigration News Clips – April 24, 2025

4/24/25 AILA Doc. No. 25042407.
Aggregated local and national media coverage of major immigration law news stories being discussed throughout the U.S. on April 24, 2025.

National

Axios 3 ways Trump's immigration crackdown could hit U.S. citizens
By Brittany Gibson

New York Magazine Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Is Already Coming for U.S. Citizens
By Zak Cheney-Rice

The Washington Post When government thinks you’re dead, it upends lives. DOGE may make it worse.
By Meryl Kornfield, Lisa Rein and Hannah Natanson

Border Report US inflation making dent on remittances to Mexico
By Julian Resendiz

The Washington Post Tracking the Trump administration’s nosedive
By Philip Bump

The Atlantic Trump Is Vulnerable on Immigration
By Jonathan Chait

The New Republic Trump Is Flopping on His Main Campaign Promise, Brutal New Poll Shows
By Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling

The New York Times Lydia Polgreen on What’s Missing in Our Conversation About Immigration
By Patrick Healy and Lydia Polgreen

MSNBC ICE’s focus on tattoos is part of a long tradition of profiling
By Karla Ostolaza, managing director of The Bronx Defenders' immigration practice

Local

Miami Herald Feds launch first-of-its-kind sting with Florida cops to deport undocumented immigrants
By Ana Ceballos and Syra Ortiz Blanes

Fox 13 Seattle Othello, WA woman's arrest sparks national debate on immigration enforcement
By Alejandra Guzman

NPR Russian-born Harvard researcher held in immigration detention, fighting deportation
By A Martínez

States Newsroom Immigration drives population growth in Kentucky in 2024
By The Daily Yonder

CBS News Immigration rights attorney receives troubling letter from Department of Homeland Security

Vermont Public Shift in federal immigration policy could imperil farm workers' futures in Vermont
By Peter Hirschfeld

VPM Youngkin announces arrests of more than 500 immigrants by security task force
By Billy Shields

Los Angeles Times Arrests at Pomona Home Depot sparks fear about labor crackdown amid L.A. fire recovery
By Clara Harter, Anthony Solorzano, Nathan Solis and Hannah Fry