
Tim Sullivan
Senior Asia Correspondent at Associated Press
Roving @AP reporter, back in America after years in Asia and West Africa. Often thinking of North Korea. Learning to be a Minnesotan. [email protected]
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
apnews.com | Mark Sherman |Tim Sullivan
La Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos ha permitido a la administración Trump utilizar una ley de tiempos de guerra de 1798, la Ley de Enemigos Extranjeros, para deportar a migrantes venezolanos a los que acusa de ser miembros de pandillas, poniendo fin a la suspensión temporal de las deportaciones ordenada por un juez federal.
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1 month ago |
apnews.com | Tim Sullivan |Elliot Spagat
President Donald Trump on Saturday invoked the Alien Enemies Act for the first time since World War II, granting himself sweeping powers under a centuries-old law to deport people associated with a Venezuelan gang. Hours later, a federal judge halted deportations under Trump’s order. The act is a sweeping wartime authority that allows non-citizens to be deported without being given the opportunity to go before an immigration or federal court judge.
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1 month ago |
apnews.com | Rebecca Santana |Tim Sullivan
Mayors from Boston, Chicago, Denver and New York will testify before Congress on ‘sanctuary cities’ 1 of 4 | This combination photo shows New York City Mayor Eric Adams, Feb. 20, 2025, in New York, from left, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, July 25, 2024, in Chicago, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston, May 3, 2024, in Denver and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, Nov. 2, 2022, in Boston.
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1 month ago |
apnews.com | Tim Sullivan |Rebecca Boone
The Trump administration is touting an immigration crackdown that includes putting shackled immigrants on U.S. military planes, expanding agents’ arrests of people here illegally and abandoning programs that gave some permission to stay. One tool that’s conspicuously absent from President Donald Trump’s efforts to reduce illegal immigration: Going after the businesses that hire workers who are in the U.S. illegally.
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Sep 16, 2024 |
apnews.com | Allen G. Breed |Tim Sullivan
BLUFFTON, South Carolina (AP) — On the first day of his American National Government class, Prof. Kevin Dopf asks how many of his students are United States citizens. Every hand shoots up. “So, how did all you people become citizens?” he asks. “Did you pass a test?”“No,” one young woman says tentatively. “We were born here.”It’s a good thing.
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RT @EECastilloAP: Once a migratory highway, the Darien Gap has been left empty under Trump crackdown. By @meganjanetsky & Matías Delacroix…

This is a great piece. Beautiful, achingly sad and even funny. A mother reflects on her miscarriages. From @AshleyRParker https://t.co/nRNgPdW5zs

RT @sbauerAP: Africa knew Trump's 'America First' pledge meant it might be last. Then came the freeze on aid https://t.co/U1OUR0xR1H