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Search resuls for: "Representative Mary Gay Scanlon"


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Let’s talk about why President Biden is spending three days in Pennsylvania this week — a lot of time by campaign standards. By now, you probably know that just a few swing states are pivotal to winning the White House in November. For Mr. Biden, the Keystone State is the most crucial. This fight is also personal: Mr. Biden is a native son of Pennsylvania who spent part of his childhood there, identifies with its working-class, regular-folk vibe and gets intuitively how the state is a microcosm for America. The goodish news for Mr. Biden is that he appears to be running neck-and-neck here with Mr. Trump, according to polling and campaign insiders, unlike in some other swing states where he is struggling a bit more.
Persons: Biden, It’s, Donald Trump, Scranton, Trump, , , Representative Mary Gay Scanlon, Biden’s Organizations: White House, Keystone State, Democrats, Representative Locations: Pennsylvania, America, Philadelphia
Republicans accuse the Biden administration of pursuing regulations that could impact the more than one-third of American households using gas stoves for cooking. "The White House wants to limit your ability to purchase and use gas stoves," House Rules Committee Chairman Tom Cole said on Monday. Democrats say they are trying to ensure new gas stoves do not lead to carbon monoxide poisoning or put children at risk of developing asthma. "Contrary to rhetoric out there, the government is not coming for anybody's gas stove," Democratic Representative Mary Gay Scanlon said on Monday. The votes come as the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has begun collecting information on health hazards of gas stove emissions.
Persons: Biden, Tom Cole, Mary Gay Scanlon, Richard Trumka, Donald Trump, Richard Cowan, Andy Sullivan, Chris Reese Organizations: Republican, Democratic, U.S . Consumer Product Safety, Gas, Protection, Department of Energy, Thomson
Representative Stephanie Bice, a Republican vote counter, said she was confident it would pass. "I think it's important to keep in mind the debt limit bill itself does not spend money," he wrote on Twitter. At least one, Representative Mary Gay Scanlon, is a member of a moderate group that supports the deal. The debt-ceiling standoff prompted ratings agencies to warn they might downgrade U.S. debt, which underpins the global financial system. Reporting by Moira Warburton and Andy Sullivan; Editing by Kieran Murray and Chris ReeseOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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