The Wall Street Journal reported on January 27 (the story is protected by a pay wall — click here to read a Vanity Fair summary) that North Carolina’s senior senator Thom Tillis set a new standard for disingenuous flipflops last week with his vote to confirm Trump nominee Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense.
North Carolina lawmakers introduced legislation in Congress Wednesday that would allow the victims of felonies committed by undocumented immigrants to sue cities, counties, and states that did not comply with ICE deportation orders.
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 law, if passed, would permit victims, and families of victims, to sue for compensatory damages. Sen. Tillis and 10 other GOP senators are the cosponsors.
The introduction of this legislation comes on the heels of Congress passing Britt’s Laken Riley Act.
GOP senators reintroduce a bill to allow legal action against sanctuary cities for crimes by undocumented immigrants.
The legislation comes as the White House directs federal prosecutors to investigate state or local officials interfering with Trump's immigration crackdown.
The first Republican primary challenger to U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis 's 2026 re-election bid is coming from Andy Nilsson, a Winston-Salem resident and long-time Republican campaign official.
Senator Thom Tillis honored the late Greensboro Police Officer Michael Horan for his commitment to service and impact on the community.
ICE has issued statements on its removal operations ... That bill was cosponsored by Sens. Thom Tillis and Ted Budd, each of whom have authored other bills. The Laken Riley Act requires ...
Kash Patel to face deeply skeptical questioning from Democratic senators about his loyalty to the president and stated desire to overhaul the bureau
Trump vows Mexico, Canada tariffs to start Feb 1 after using press conference to blast DEI once again: Live - The president said neither country has been ‘good to us on trade’ and the U.S. did not nee