The funding freeze "violates the separation of powers," Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell said, as a colleague from California called it "arbitrary and capricious."
Mass. AG Campbell is co-leading a lawsuit of 23 states to stop the Trump Administration’s new policy pausing federal grants and loans.
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell said she plans to ask the state Legislature for additional funding this budget season in preparation for her office’s anticipated legal battles with
In light of new policies under the Trump administration allowing ICE agents to make arrests within schools, the Massachusetts AG released guidance for the state’s schools to protect all
Educators across Massachusetts are mobilizing, learning immigration policies and familiarizing themselves with their students' rights now that President Trump is authorizing federal agents to enter schools.
Federal aid is a major source of revenue for states. According to Pew Charitable Trusts, federal grants represented 36.4% of total revenue for state governments in fiscal year 2022.
It was not immediately clear how much money headed to Massachusetts might be affected by the pause, but it could carry major implications.
President Donald Trump's budget office on Wednesday rescinded an order freezing spending on federal grants, less than a day after Massachusetts and other states sued and a federal judge intervened.
While she sues major social media companies, Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell is also pushing lawmakers to restrict cellphone use in schools.
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell has sued President Donald Trump over an executive order that seeks to cancel the constitutional guarantee that children born in the United States are citizens — regardless of their parents' legal status.
Proposed legislation could make it that when the school bell rings, the phones won’t. Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell recently introduced<a class="excerpt-read-more" href=" More
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell is pushing for a statewide ban on cellphones and other personal electronic devices in school classrooms to boost learning.