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immigration law

Melania Trump has rejected suggestions that she violated visa rules when she started working as a model in New York.

In a statement, Donald Trump’s said she had followed immigration laws “at all times”.

Melania Trump has yet to clarify what type of visa she used during a 1995 photo shoot in New York.

The Republican candidate has taken a hard line on illegal immigration in his campaign.

So far, the Trump campaign has refused to say exactly which visas Melania Trump had, and when she had them.

Photo Flickr Marc Nozell

Photo Flickr Marc Nozell

The development comes during a turbulent week for the billionaire property developer.

There are reports of deep divisions in the GOP after a series of controversial statements by the nominee.

Melania Trump said she began working as a model in the US in 1996, but photos published at the weekend by a New York tabloid appear to have been taken in 1995 for a now defunct French magazine.

This discrepancy has raised questions about Melania Trump’s immigration status at the time and whether she had the right to work.

Paolo Zampolli, the owner of one modeling agency, says he sponsored Melania Trump for an H1B work visa in 1996.

Melania Trump has said that she had to go back to her native Slovenia every few months to renew her permit – something that is only generally necessary for tourist and business visas that do not permit work.

Donald Trump has also railed against the use of the H1B visa specifically, suggesting abuse of it is widespread and rampant.

Part of a tough Arizona immigration law giving police powers to check the immigration status of people stopped and arrested has been upheld by the US Supreme Court.

However, three of four challenges brought by the Obama administration were upheld by the court.

Arizona’s Governor Jan Brewer said the “heart” of the law had been upheld.

President Barack Obama and his Republican rival Mitt Romney are each battling for Hispanic votes ahead of November’s presidential election.

Mitt Romney reacted quickly to the court’s ruling, criticizing Barack Obama for not passing a national immigration-reform law.

In a statement, he said each US state has “the duty – and the right – to secure our borders and preserve the rule of law”.

In other developments at the court on Monday:

• A ruling on President Barack Obama’s landmark healthcare reform law was scheduled for Thursday

• The justices rejected mandatory sentencing of juveniles convicted of murder to life in prison without parole

• The court struck down a Montana campaign finance law that would limit corporate contributions to political campaigns

Part of a tough Arizona immigration law giving police powers to check the immigration status of people stopped and arrested has been upheld by the US Supreme Court

Part of a tough Arizona immigration law giving police powers to check the immigration status of people stopped and arrested has been upheld by the US Supreme Court

The Supreme Court judgement came after the US government argued that the law infringed on federal rights to oversee immigration policy.

Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah have all adopted variations of the Arizona law.

The headline provision, known as Section 2(B), that requires police to make a “reasonable attempt… to determine the immigration status” of anyone who is stopped for another violation, was upheld by the Supreme Court.

The court ruled it was too early to tell whether the clause caused a conflict with federal laws, but added that the provision could be open to legal challenge again at a later date.

The Supreme Court also struck down three other parts of the Arizona immigration law.

One clause would have required immigrants to carry proof of their status with them, and another would have made it a crime for undocumented workers to apply for a job.

The court also struck down a provision that would have allowed police to stop people purely on the suspicion that they were in the country illegally.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the opinion for the court, said the justices were unanimous in their decision to allow the “check your papers” provision to come into effect. The court was divided on other issues.

One justice, Antonin Scalia, dissented from the case, saying he would uphold all parts of the Arizona law, citing the sovereignty of individual states as defined in the US constitution.

Arizona’s Republican governor, Jan Brewer, called the court’s ruling a victory, saying the “heart” of the bill could now come into effect.

In a statement, Jan Brewer said the ruling was a victory for “all Americans who believe in the inherent right and responsibility of states to defend their citizens.

But she warned against misuse of the provision, adding: “Law enforcement will be held accountable should this statute be misused in a fashion that violates an individual’s civil rights.”

Other reaction to the law was nuanced, and at least partly open to interpretation: some claimed victory for backers of the law, while others saw the ruling as a partial victory for the administration.

Immigration has become a key issue as the US edges closer to this year’s presidential election.

President Barack Obama recently outlined a plan to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants who came to the US as children the option of legal status and work permits.

His Republican rival Mitt Romney has opposed Barack Obama’s plan, but has not said how he would address the issue of immigration.

Both men are courting Hispanic votes ahead of their showdown in November.