Oil and Gas Production Is Booming. So Are Its GOP Donations. Along with Pfluger, the other top five recipients of oil and gas money this cycle are all Republicans: Trump ($501,014), his ex-rivals Govs. Ron DeSantis ($496,927) and Nikki Haley ($431,817), and ... 05/3/2024 - 11:00 pm | View Link
UK's new climate action plan unlawful, London's High Court rules Britain's latest climate action plan is unlawful, London's High Court ruled on Friday in a legal challenge by three environmental campaign groups over emissions targets. Friends of the Earth, ... 05/2/2024 - 11:44 pm | View Link
Takeaways from the Democrats’ trove of Big Oil documents Those documents, and a 65-page report, were published yesterday and represent the next phase of House Oversight Democrats’ investigation into Big Oil’s alleged climate misinformation campaign, which ... 04/30/2024 - 11:34 pm | View Link
Hanford’s new plan to clean up 56 million gallons of nuclear waste State and federal officials revealed a new roadmap for neutralizing the Western Hemisphere’s most polluted site via a technique known as grouting. 04/30/2024 - 12:58 am | View Link
Colorado governor, Democrats reach long-term air quality and transit deal with oil and gas industry, environmentalists The grand compromise is aimed at heading off the passage of more stringent rules for the drilling industry and an expensive ballot box fight in November ... 04/29/2024 - 12:50 pm | View Link
Why did SD Governor Kristi Noem decide to publish her story about killing her allegedly 'untrainable' dog? Her state's Senate Minority Leader offers three theories: Inoculation from others telling it; lifting her national profile - and distraction from her governing record.
Without cameras on Hope Hicks' testimony, media outlets were left with only a transcript to analyze why she broke down in tears. "It's a mistake to say Hope Hicks cried because she knew she just ended Donald Trump's career," says Elie Honig, "or she cried because she had just collapsed on cross-examine.
Reproductive rights organizers in two states with near-total abortion bans, Missouri and South Dakota, submitted roughly double the signatures needed to allow ballot measures that would put abortion before voters.
In South Dakota, organizers have submitted 55,000 signatures in support of the ballot measure granting a limited right to abortion—far more than the 35,000 required.