Editor’s note: A judge ordered us to turn over privileged documents. We’re appealing to the Mississippi Supreme Court. Mississippi Today asks Supreme Court to overturn an order that threatens constitutional rights of journalists and all citizens. 06/6/2024 - 1:32 pm | View Link
A Watershed Supreme Court Term Will Not Drown The Administrative State The Supreme Court is deciding several important administrative law cases. These decisions could alter administrative power, but they won't end the Administrative State. 06/6/2024 - 8:50 am | View Link
What separates Sarah Klee Hood and John Mannion on the issues John Mannion and Sarah Klee Hood generally agree on most issues important to Democratic voters ahead of the June 25 primary election in the 22nd Congressional District. But Mannion and Klee Hood have ... 06/5/2024 - 11:00 pm | View Link
Defending the Constitution—The Judicial Branch and Its Role as Protector A recent survey conducted by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) found that less than one-third of Americans could not name a single enumerated right protected by the first ... 06/5/2024 - 10:55 pm | View Link
NC House Republicans advance a proposed constitutional amendment to prohibit non-citizen voting Republicans in the state House are moving to put a question on the November ballot that would write a prohibition on non-citizen voting into the state constitution, even though non-citizen voting is ... 06/5/2024 - 11:21 am | View Link
PARIS — U. S. President Joe Biden on Friday for the first time publicly apologized to Ukraine for a monthslong congressional holdup in American military assistance that let Russia make gains on the battlefield, as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appealed for bipartisan U. S. support “like it was during World War II.”
Speaking in Paris, a day after they both attended ceremonies marking the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy, Biden apologized to the Ukrainian people for the weeks of not knowing if more assistance would come while conservative Republicans in Congress held up a $61 billion military aid package for Ukraine for six months.
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Still, the Democratic president insisted that the American people were standing by Ukraine for the long haul.
The Colorado Republican Party sent an anti-LGBTQ+ email to supporters this week with a video that included an allusion to a virulently anti-gay religious organization, sparking criticism from Democrats and Republicans alike. Amid the backlash, the party then called for the burning of pride flags.
Monday’s email, titled “God hates pride,” repeats anti-LGBTQ+ smears and includes a video from a pastor expressing similar views.
Digging for more money to inject into affordable housing, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston is considering asking the City Council to refer a sales tax increase to the November ballot, administration officials confirmed to The Denver Post.
It’s too soon to say whether an affordable housing tax — the amount so far unspecified — will end up on what promises to be a lengthy Denver ballot in this presidential election year.
Protesters organized by a Colorado State University group staged a “die-in” demonstration over the weekend outside a Fort Collins company. They chanted, held signs accusing the company of having blood on its hands, and displayed fake body bags and red-stained dolls, according to a report by CSU’s student newspaper.
What was behind the protest?
Demonstrators were motivated by purported connections between the company, Woodward, and a component of a bomb dropped by Israel on a camp in Rafah, a city in the southern Gaza Strip, in late May.
The Denver Post looked into the connections to the Fort Collins-headquartered aerospace and industrial manufacturer.