Tariffs probably won't pare back how much produce Arizona imports from Mexico. But they could still wreak havoc on what we ...
About 1,500 members of Mexico’s National Guard have been deployed to Sonora's border with Arizona as part of Operativo ...
NOGALES, Ariz. — It's been two weeks since President Donald Trump took office and announced a long list of executive orders, ...
The Department of Justice said in a statement that it worked with the Mexican authorities who arrested the alleged leader of ...
Twenty-five percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico will come into effect on Saturday, while China has been threatened with a 10 ...
Business groups working in Arizona took steps to pressure D.C. and brace for President Donald Trump's painful new tax on ...
Mexico has begun to deploy 10,000 military troops to its border with the United States as part of the country’s effort to ...
Raymundo Rojas Bacilio, who was convicted in the U.S. of sexually abusing an 11-year-old, has been deported to Mexico for the ...
Guillermo Martinez, a fruit and vegetable importer, explains why we eat so much produce from Mexico and how tariffs could impact our grocery bills.
Tariffs have made headlines in recent days with higher duties in the works for Mexico, Canada and China. How does Arizona fit into all of this?
The back-and-forth is itself a telling new signal of what companies should expect under Trump, an Arizona business leader ...
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) removed Raymundo Rojas Bacilio, a Mexican citizen, on January 25th. Rojas was ...