A bill in Congress would allow victims of felonies committed by undocumented immigrants to sue localities that don't cooperate with ICE
President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit Western North Carolina on Friday to visit locals impacted by Hurricane Helene in late September.
His wife’s release came after 51 days. Many in North Carolina have, and now especially with another ceasefire, anxiously await the release of Chapel Hill native
Thom Tillis and Ted Budd said their offices had heard from ... to extend its temporary housing assistance for all eligible North Carolina residents by six months. FEMA announced Monday at 8 ...
President Trump signed an executive order supporting the Lumbee Tribe's federal recognition, a goal Senator Tillis commends and sees as a path to benefits and historical rectification.
Analysis: Democrats grandstanded, but it might be the questioning of two Republican hawks that sinks Trump’s pick for Director of National Intelligence, Eric Garcia reports
Members of North Carolina's congressional delegation introduced a bill that's aimed at rebuilding private roads and bridges damaged by Helene.
Raids by ICE enforcement that captured so much media attention Thursday may pale by comparison to the litigation possibilities opened by a bill from a North
A bipartisan group of North Carolina federal lawmakers introduced a bill Wednesday aimed at rebuilding western North Carolina’s private infrastructure through reimbursements from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
President Donald Trump told North Carolina hurricane victims that under former President Joe Biden, the Federal Emergency Management Agency failed them in a time of crisis. Trump visited North Carolina on Jan. 24, four months after Hurricane Helene made landfall and damaged more than 73,000 homes.
Eroding North Carolina of criminals, in particular those who entered the country illegally and then broke more laws, continues to get a push from lawmakers in the Republican Party, the president, and forecast soon ICE.
The North Carolina General Assembly on Nov. 20 overturned a gubernatorial veto to require all 100 sheriffs to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.