SEATTLE — A lawsuit filed Friday in a Seattle federal court alleged President Donald Trump's executive order eliminating birthright citizenship violates the rights of three local pregnant women.
A federal judge in Seattle issued a blistering rebuke to block President Donald Trump's executive order to end birthright citizenship. A lawsuit filed Tuesday in the Western District of Washington came after Trump signed an executive order that claimed a baby born in America must have at least one parent who is either a citizen or a lawful permanent resident to automatically qualify
A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking President Trump's executive order to redefine birthright citizenship.
Parts of Seattle are expected to come to a halt Saturday as demonstrators take to the streets ahead of President-elect Trump's inauguration on Monday.
It took just hours after his swearing in for President Donald Trump to reignite a fight he waged for four years against Washington. What will it look like now?
A suburban Seattle police officer is set to be sentenced Thursday for the 2019 shooting death of a 26-year-old homeless man he was trying to arrest for disorderly conduct outside a convenience store.
The lawsuit filed in Seattle has been progressing the fastest of the five cases brought over the executive order.
Democratic-led states and civil rights groups filed a slew of lawsuits challenging U.S. President Donald Trump's bid to roll back birthright citizenship on Tuesday in an early bid by his opponents to block his agenda in court.
Two dozen Democratic-led states and cities are challenging President Donald Trump’s bid to end birthright citizenship in court, a major constitutional challenge to one of the White House’s signature policies.
On Jan. 23, 2025, in a suit filed in the U.S. District Court in Seattle by the attorneys-general of Washington State, Arizona, Illinois, and Oregon
President Donald Trump attends a National Prayer Service at the Washington National Cathedral in D.C. by Jackie Kent, KOMO News Reporter TOPICS: SEATTLE — The Supreme Court has cleared the way ...
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the medical aid website would be back online "shortly", after a sweeping memo ordered federal agencies to freeze funding.