Indiana's admission expanded U.S. governance into the Old Northwest and altered the sectional and political balance as a new free state in the growing nation.
On December 11, 1816, the Indiana Territory was formally admitted to the United States as the nineteenth state during James Madison's presidency.
Indiana's admission expanded U.S. governance into the Old Northwest and altered the sectional and political balance as a new free state in the growing nation.
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The Senate Majority Leader filed a cloture motion to bring the House-passed short-term bill—authorizing enforcement of the administration's deportation priorities pending litigation—up for debate and a vote in the Senate.
The Republican-controlled House passed emergency legislation aimed at authorizing executive-branch enforcement priorities for deportations while courts adjudicate the injunction.
President Trump signed a congressional supplemental appropriations bill providing federal disaster relief funding to states affected by the Midwest spring floods.
President Trump met with bipartisan congressional leaders to discuss a potential border-security and asylum reform package aimed at strengthening enforcement and streamlining adjudication.