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Biden pitches to the middle class as Democrats fight for support in advance of midterms
By: Jacob Fischler - October 16, 2022
PORTLAND, Ore. — President Joe Biden at a community center here Saturday promoted Democrats’ efforts to bring down health care costs, in a visit to a normally Democratic state three weeks before midterm elections that will determine control of Congress for the next two years. Speaking on the first day of Medicare open enrollment, Biden […]
Trump to be subpoenaed by Jan. 6 panel as the ‘central cause’ of Capitol insurrection
By: Jacob Fischler - October 14, 2022
The U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol voted unanimously Thursday to subpoena Donald Trump, saying the former president must be held accountable as the “central cause” of a violent attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The panel’s seven Democrats and two Republicans voted to authorize a subpoena […]
Four things to watch for at the upcoming Jan. 6 hearing
By: Jacob Fischler - October 13, 2022
The U.S. House committee investigating a pro-Trump mob’s attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is back. It will hold its first hearing in nearly three months Thursday—and potentially its last. In a break from most of the panel’s previous eight hearings in June and July, Thursday’s meeting will not drill down into one […]
‘What century are we in?’ Biden asks of University of Idaho ban on abortion counseling
By: Jacob Fischler - October 5, 2022
The federal law prohibiting sex discrimination also bars colleges and universities from denying counseling and other services to abortion patients and contraception to all students—even in states where abortion is now severely restricted, the U.S. Education Department said Tuesday. The guidance, which clarifies the longstanding rules for federal Title IX funding that virtually all colleges […]
U.S. Supreme Court mulls federal water rules, wetlands designations in Idaho case
By: Jacob Fischler - October 4, 2022
The U.S. Supreme Court opened its term Monday with an Idaho case that could significantly restrict the federal government’s power to enforce clean water laws and prove crucial in determining wetland protections. The oral arguments came just months after the court’s 6-3 conservative majority limited executive authority to address climate change in a case involving […]
A new justice at the U.S. Supreme Court, and an Idaho wetlands case up first
By: Jacob Fischler - October 3, 2022
Justice Jackson is installed for new term that begins today When the U.S. Supreme Court opens its fall term on Monday, a few things will be different. A Black woman, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, will hear oral arguments for the first time ever. And the public will be allowed into the room for the first […]
USDA to spend $500 million extending high-speed internet to rural America
By: Jacob Fischler - September 22, 2022
More than $24 million targeted for Robeson and Scotland Counties in southeastern NC The U.S. Department of Agriculture will send more than $500 million in loans and grants to telecommunications providers to bring high-speed internet to rural areas across 20 states, Secretary Tom Vilsack said Wednesday. The department will spend $360 million in grants and […]
‘Crisis pregnancy centers’ that oppose abortion questioned by U.S. Senate Democrats
By: Jacob Fischler - September 21, 2022
Seven U.S. Senate Democrats questioned a leading Ohio-based antiabortion group Tuesday about its practice of collecting personal information from patients seeking abortions. So-called crisis pregnancy centers—facilities that often mirror abortion provider aesthetics but actually provide services to discourage abortion—collect sensitive data from patients. That presents troubling new complications as states move to increase penalties for […]
Biden administration targets deep waters near Oregon, Maine for new offshore wind power
By: Jacob Fischler - September 19, 2022
WASHINGTON—The Biden administration will seek to add deep-water offshore wind energy, a developing technology that isn’t yet widely used, to its mix of renewable energy sources, administration leaders said last week.Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland told reporters on a White House call that their departments would advance efforts to increase capacity […]
PR work for ‘Big Oil’ helped stymie climate action, U.S. House Democrats say
By: Jacob Fischler - September 14, 2022
NC-based John Locke Foundation defends oil and gas industry WASHINGTON – Public relations firms aligned with oil and gas companies have tested the limits of their industry ethics and caused major slowdowns to federal climate change policy, Democrats on a U.S. House panel said at a Wednesday hearing. The firms’ conduct went beyond the bounds […]
Confronting history, Congress studies addition of lynching sites to national park system
By: Jacob Fischler - September 13, 2022
The U.S. House is considering a bill that would put lynching sites in western Tennessee on track to become part of the National Park Service, part of a trend this year of Congress using the agency to advance discussions of the nation’s troubled and often violent racial history. A bill from U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, […]
A third of U.S. House Democrats oppose Manchin permitting deal in stopgap spending bill
By: Jacob Fischler - September 12, 2022
WASHINGTON – The group of U.S. House Democrats asking the chamber’s leaders not to include environmental permitting changes in a stopgap spending deal this month comprises 72 members, including senior leaders of budget and spending committees and factions across the caucus’ ideological spectrum. The 72 signers on a letter sent late last week make up […]