Clinton thought she would ‘throw up’ listening to Supreme Court emergency abortion arguments Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Thursday she thought she would “throw up” while listening to the recent oral arguments in the Supreme Court over emergency access ... 05/9/2024 - 4:19 am | View Link
Supreme Court Justice Challenges Donald Trump Lawyer—'What Was That About?' Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson pointedly asked Trump lawyer John Sauer. The exchange occurred during oral arguments on Thursday in Trump's Supreme Court challenge to his indictment in Washington ... 04/25/2024 - 4:02 am | View Link
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson says it’s ‘cruel and unusual’ to criminalize homelessness “We’re talking about sleeping … that is a basic function,” Justice Jackson said during Monday’s oral arguments in a ... A decision in the case is expected as early as June. 04/23/2024 - 11:00 am | View Link
Strategic guidelines for justice and home affairs They build on the progress achieved by the Stockholm programme, the multiannual programme for justice and home affairs for 2010-2014. A mid-term review of these guidelines was completed in 2017. After ... 01/16/2015 - 7:58 am | View Link
Moms for Liberty, the most prominent group in the rightwing movement against “woke” public schools, is well known for its crusades against LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum and anti-racism initiatives in classrooms. Since 2021, the group, which counts 130,000 members, across 48 states, has claimed—at school board meetings, conferences, and on social media—that left-wing teachers are turning students into social justice warriors.
Those efforts—of playing politics in public schools in the name of excising politics—has proved great preparation for its leaders’ current project: Railing against what they see as an antisemitic agenda in certain public schools, even as Moms for Liberty itself reels from allegations of antisemitism in its own ranks.
Earlier this week, leaders of several public school systems testified before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce in the latest hearing on antisemitism in America’s educational institutions.
In March, the politerati were atwitter over what appeared major news: Longtime political operator, lobbyist, wheeler-dealer, and (pardoned) felon Paul Manafort was in talks to join Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign. This seemed an odd move, given all of Manafort’s schemings over the years. A more recent Manafort business venture—unknown to the public—raises further questions about him and his attempt to return to the Trump fold.
Coloradans can expect two years of free college for qualifying students, long-term property tax reform after years of Band-Aid measures, and denser development following a legislative session that Democratic leaders called a “breakthrough” for many of their long-held policy goals.
A year removed from the bitter divisions and policy losses that marked the 2023 General Assembly, Gov.
Denver’s revamped migrant program in recent days began enrolling the roughly 800 people who are expected to be the first beneficiaries of a new approach city leaders consider innovative.
Participants will receive six months of housing, help with living costs, job training and legal support as the city files asylum claims on their behalf in an effort to get them qualified for work permits.
Those are the “haves” among the city’s migrant community, the people who qualify for the narrower, more intensive — and less expensive — scope of the city’s new strategy, announced by Mayor Mike Johnston last month.
But there will be many more “have-nots” under the city’s retooled migrant response.