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Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., conducts a news conference in the Capitol Visitor Center after a meeting of the House Republican Conference on Tuesday, September 10, 2024. The spending proposal would have funded the government until next March. But it also would include the so-called SAVE Act, a bill that would require people to show proof of citizenship to register as a voter. Former President Donald Trump has said that Republicans should not pass any spending plan without the SAVE Act attached. The Republican presidential nominee also said the GOP should be ready to shut down the government if the voter identification proposal is not in the spending bill.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson, Donald Trump Organizations: Capitol Visitor Center, House Republican Conference, Republicans, GOP, NBC News, Congressional, SAVE, Democrat, Republican
A federal judge issued an injunction Tuesday partially blocking the enforcement of a New Hampshire law that bars some transgender students from competing on school sports teams that align with their gender identity. Last month, two transgender teenage girls and their families sued New Hampshire education officials, arguing that the measure violates Title IX civil rights rules, which prevent sex discrimination in federally funded education programs and activities. The Biden administration expanded Title IX rules in April to include protections for students on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. Moreover, the expansion of the Title IX rules is temporarily blocked in at least 10 states and faces ongoing court challenges in roughly 10 others. Chris Sununu, a Republican, took action on two separate bills affecting the state’s trans community in July, in addition to the sports measure.
Persons: Bill, Iris Turmelle, Turmelle, ” Turmelle, ” I’m, , Judge Landya McCafferty, Parker Tirrell, McCafferty, ” McCafferty, Goodwin Procter —, Parker, Iris, ” Chris Erchull, Biden, Donald Trump, Chris Sununu, Sununu Organizations: Pembroke Academy, United, Civil Liberties Union, New, NBC News, Advancement, White, New Hampshire Gov, Republican Locations: New Hampshire, Pembroke, United States, — Massachusetts, NH,
WASHINGTON — Thousands of overseas American diplomats are at risk of a sharp pay cut at the beginning of October unless Congress passes a legislative fix in the coming weeks. And a 22% reduction in their pay would be a needless and demoralizing harm. “The Department of State continues to work with Congress on the urgent need for an extension,” a State Department spokesperson said in a statement. The pay snafu, first reported by Politico, is the unintended consequence of a funding structure that requires action from Congress. With the fate of their wages tied to the funding fight, American diplomats could be left in the lurch.
Persons: Sen, Chris Coons, it’s, ” Coons, Ben Cardin, he’s, “ We’re, ” Cardin, there’s, ” AFSA, Hakeem Jeffries, Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, , , Tom Yazdgerdi Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, Foreign Relations, NBC News, Overseas, Washington , D.C, State Department, American Foreign Service Association, Congress, Senate Foreign, National Defense, U.S . Agency for International Development, Democratic, Republican, Senate, Department of State, Politico Locations: Washington ,, D, American, United States
GOP senators 'hesitant' to mandate IVF coverageBut there is scant evidence of a Republican appetite for that plan in Congress. “I don’t know that we need to go so far as to mandate IVF coverage,” Lummis said. Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., a former chair of the conservative Republican Study Committee and a Senate candidate, said he hasn’t seen a Trump policy plan on IVF to evaluate. “I don’t know what that would look like — to make it free.”Democrats say Trump is lying and trying to bamboozle voters. “Donald Trump will say anything that he thinks might be one more vote in favor of Donald Trump.
Persons: WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s, Trump, , , Marjorie Taylor Greene, aren’t, Greene, isn’t, Sen, Josh Hawley, “ it’s, ” Hawley, hadn’t, ” Trump, “ We’re, it’s, Thom Tillis, we’ve, We’ve, ” Sen, Joni Ernst, Bill Cassidy, Trump hadn’t, ” Cassidy, that’s, It's, Cynthia Lummis, ” Lummis, Karoline Leavitt didn’t, Rand Paul, it'd, ” Paul, you’re, Tim Burchett, Jim Banks, hasn’t, Elizabeth Warren, ” Warren, “ Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Ohio Sen, Vance, Donald Trump’s, ” “ Trump, Katie Britt, ” Britt Organizations: Trump, NBC News, Republicans, Congress, NBC, Republican Party, Republican, Health, Education, Labor, Pensions, Democratic Party, Alabama Supreme, CBS, Democratic, , GOP, Committee, Senate, Ohio Locations: Iowa, Alabama, Ky
But broadband companies have been focused on transitioning their customers to other affordable options to help them make up the expired discount, according to the companies’ earnings calls. In the wake of the ACP’s expiration, broadband companies have reported losing some customers. While broadband providers were generally supportive of the ACP, many in the industry believed the subsidy benefitted too wide a swath of U.S. households. During the second quarter, Charter reported a loss of 149,000 internet customers, while Comcast reported a decline of 120,000 broadband customers. Charter has tried to retain its low-income consumer base by rolling out new savings deals like offering ACP customers a free unlimited mobile line for one year.
Persons: , , Craig Moffett, , Blair Levin, Mike Carey, Nikki Budzinski, GOP Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, Donald Trump’s, Vance quieted, ” Gigi Sohn, Joe Biden, Sohn, Wall, they’re, ” Sohn, ” Carey, ” Budzinski, Chris Winfrey, “ We’ve, ” Moffett, MoffettNathanson, Gigi Sohn’s Organizations: Charter, Verizon, Comcast, Program, Federal Communications Commission, Democratic, Republican, Street Research, CNBC, NBC News, Capitol, Republicans, Emergency, GOP, Republican House, ACP, FCC, , Universal Service Fund, USF, Charter Communications Locations: MoffettNathanson, Ohio, U.S, New York
WASHINGTON — Despite mounting opposition from his own party, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., vowed Tuesday to stay the course and put his government funding package on the House floor on Wednesday. His initial strategy to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month is expected to fail and deal House Republicans an embarrassing blow. Due to their paper-thin majority, Republicans can afford only a handful of GOP defections on the vote, and many more than that have publicly voiced their opposition. “I am in this to win this,” Johnson told reporters at his weekly news conference. Afterward, the speaker added: “We are going to put the SAVE Act and the CR together, and we’re going to move that through the process.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, Johnson, , ” Johnson, , Jim Banks, Cory Mills, Matt Rosendale, Montana —, Mills, Dan Meuser, ” Meuser, “ Shutdowns, Sen, Thom Tillis, Bill Cassidy, “ I’m, ” Cassidy Organizations: SAVE, Democratic, White, GOP, Republicans Locations: WASHINGTON, Jim Banks of Indiana, Florida, Montana, Mexico
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson’s strategy to tie a short-term government funding bill to a Donald Trump-backed proposal to overhaul voting laws was on life support Monday after a band of conservative rebels vowed to vote no on the package. Without a stopgap funding bill, money will run out and the federal government will shut down at the end of the month. Because of the GOP’s razor-thin majority, Johnson, R-La., can afford only four Republican defections if all members vote. Mills slammed Johnson's strategy as a “farce” and said it would do nothing to secure the southern border. Instead, they are pushing for a "clean CR" — short-term funding with nothing attached to it.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Donald Trump, Johnson, — Cory Mills, Matt Rosendale, Tim Burchett, Jim Banks, Thomas Massie, Trump, Mills, , ” Mills, Rosendale, , Chuck Schumer, Joe Biden, ” Schumer, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, … Donald Trump Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republicans, White, Capitol, Senate, GOP, House, Republican, , Locations: Florida, Montana, Tennessee, Indiana, Kentucky
“I think President Trump is saying exactly what I have been saying, and that is we need assurances on election security and to fund the government,” Johnson told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “The Lead” Tuesday. “I talked with the president a lot, President Trump, and that has always been my advice that we run this race on policy, on record, not rhetoric, on policy, not personality,” he said. On Vice President Kamala Harris, Johnson said, “She has a big, a big task ahead of her tonight. To this day, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have not said the names of those service members. In fact, Joe Biden said on the debate stage in June that we hadn’t lost any service members on his watch.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, Republicans “ don’t, , , Trump, ” Johnson, CNN’s Jake Tapper, Trump’s, Johnson, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Michael McCaul, Harris, Tapper, Kamala Harris’s, That’s Organizations: Washington CNN —, Republicans, Security, GOP, SAVE, noncitizens, House Foreign, Republican Locations: Kabul, Afghanistan, Texas
Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday said congressional Republicans should pursue a government shutdown if they cannot attach a hardline voting bill to the temporary funding resolution that would keep the government open. "The House Republican CR is an unserious and uncooked product," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the Senate floor Tuesday. That same day, the House approved the rule for the CR, which would fund the government until March 2025, with the SAVE Act included. The final House vote to pass the funding bill is set to take place on Wednesday. But even if it passes, the bill would still be dead on arrival in the Democratic controlled Senate.
Persons: Donald Trump, don't, Mike Johnson, Chuck Schumer, Johnson, Trump's, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Sahil Kapur Organizations: Trump, Republican, Congressional Democrats, Republicans, SAVE, Democratic, Senate, NBC Locations: New York City, U.S, Ky
Washington CNN —A six-month House GOP government funding plan cleared a key hurdle on Tuesday, but remains at risk of failing as Speaker Mike Johnson attempts to navigate a shutdown fight with his narrow majority. The House voted 209-206 to approve a rule to govern debate for the funding plan, which includes a controversial measure that targets noncitizen voting. But at least six House Republicans have come out against the funding bill, which is enough to sink it in the House amid Democratic opposition, and the bill is considered dead-on-arrival in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The six-month funding plan from House Republicans would extend government funding until March 2025. Many House conservatives are also generally opposed to short-term funding bills, arguing instead in favor of spending cuts.
Persons: Washington CNN —, Mike Johnson, Biden, Donald Trump, Trump, don’t, , Johnson, CNN’s Manu Raju, , “ I’m, “ I’ve, We’ll Organizations: Washington CNN, GOP, Republicans, Democratic, SAVE, noncitizens, Truth, Security
In the wake of the ACP's expiration, broadband companies reported losing some customers. "But that doesn't take away from the families for whom this was important, and could now lose access to broadband." Pete Marovich | ReutersStill, Sohn believes bipartisan support for the ACP should make reauthorizing it a political slam dunk for Democrats. While broadband providers were generally supportive of the ACP, many in the industry believed the subsidy benefitted too wide a swath of U.S. households. Charter Communications CEO Chris Winfrey said in July that the ACP's expiration impacted both losses and low income broadband connections after the company had "put a lot of effort into the ACP program."
Persons: Craig Moffett, Blair Levin, Mike Carey, Nikki Budzinski, GOP Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, Donald Trump's, Vance quieted, Gigi Sohn, Biden, Pete Marovich, Sohn, Wall, they're, Carey, Budzinski, Chris Winfrey Organizations: Istock, Getty, Charter, Verizon, Comcast, Program, Federal Communications Commission, Democratic, Republican, Street Research, CNBC, Capitol, Republicans, Emergency, GOP, Republican House, ACP, Commerce, Science, Washington , D.C, Reuters, Universal Service Fund, USF, Charter Communications Locations: MoffettNathanson, Ohio, Washington ,, U.S, New York
Concerns about the use of cryptocurrencies for illegal activity resulted in an effective ban on crypto mining and transactions. After a massive public outcry at the end of 2021, mining companies in Kazakhstan were effectively cut off from the grid. Today, the US makes up about 40% of the global hashrate — up from 17% during China's 2021 peak — making America the biggest hub for bitcoin mining. However, in recent years, bitcoin mining has become increasingly concentrated in the hands of a small number of private companies. Given how much energy bitcoin mining consumes, it's worth questioning whether its presence in the US is really worth the trade-off.
Persons: Xi Jinping, Zoe Liu, hasn't, pushback, haven't, Jeremy Fisher, Fisher, Gladys Anderson, Kelley Sayre, Stephanie Marsh, Marsh, Gavin Newsom, would've, Donald Trump, Trump, Satoshi Nakamoto, Saifedean Ammous, Cheyanne Diehl, wasn't, Biden, Joe Biden, Liu Pengyu, America Organizations: Council, Foreign Relations, Mining, Cambridge, Goodyear, Sierra, Environmental, New York Times, Tech, Gov, Securities and Exchange Commission, July's Bitcoin, SEC, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc, Nasdaq, Embassy, EV, Sierra Club, City Council, Digital Locations: China, Kazakhstan, America, Utah, West Virginia, Akron , Ohio, Rockdale , Texas, Murphy , North Carolina, Massillon , Ohio, Bono , Arkansas, Vilonia , Arkansas, Akron, California, Nashville, Massillon, Ohio, Chinese, Massillon's City, In Arkansas, Wyoming, Washington, Harrison , Arkansas
A shutdown would close federal agencies and national parks, while limiting public services and furloughing millions of workers just weeks before the election. House Republicans have now settled on some lines of attack, which they'll highlight in politically charged GOP hearings and investigations into both Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. House GOP probesAfter spending much of the 118th Congress focused on investigating Biden, House Republicans are now shifting their focus to Democrats’ new presidential ticket. Republicans are also focusing on the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, which the Trump campaign has criticized Harris over. The Trump campaign responded by calling the story "fake news."
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Tim Walz, Mike Johnson, it’s, Johnson, Republicans ’, Chuck Schumer, Patty Murray, Biden, Walz, Trump, McCaul, Antony Blinken, ” There’s, The, Jamie Raskin, Robert Garcia, Abdel Fattah El, , Schumer Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, Republicans, Harris . House Republicans, Minnesota Gov, Republican, SAVE, GOP, noncitizens, Democratic, House Republicans, Education Department, Chinese Communist Party, The Biden, Energy, Biden, Harris Energy, Veterans Affairs Committee, Harris Administration, Democrats, Trump, Washington Post, Justice Department, NBC News Locations: Afghanistan, Trump, Minnesota, China, Egypt
JD Vance's plan to tackle high childcare costs may not take into account the looming retirement crisis facing millions of older Americans. When Kirk asked how Vance planned to address the issue, Vance suggested extended family members step in to relieve the financial burden on parents. AdvertisementNot many states require childcare workers to have college degrees or certifications. But he may have been referring to a new law in the nation's capital that requires many childcare workers to have a two-year associate degree, among other training. Vance has condemned universal childcare, calling it a subsidy for the affluent and a "class war against normal people."
Persons: JD Vance's, Vance, Donald Trump's, Charlie Kirk, , Kirk, didn't, who's, that's, Linda, Katie Britt, Alabama, Mike Lee of, Laurie Furstenfeld Organizations: Service, Bank of America, Survey, Social Security, Business, Republicans, Congress, Child Care Law, asheffey Locations: California, Florida, Mike Lee of Utah, Berkeley , California
Thailand is working on a new game plan to boost foreigner arrivals and increase tourism spending: casinos. The strategy has worked for Macao — which has overtaken Las Vegas as the world's largest gambling hub — and Singapore, with two successful 14-year-old casinos. If Thailand's draft bill gets passed into law, the country could be Macao and Singapore's largest competitor by the end of the decade, industry watchers told CNBC. If the law gets passed, Thailand's casinos could generate 187 billion Thai baht ($5.5 billion) in revenues, or 1% of the country's GDP, according to Maybank research. The Thai economy grew 1.9% in 2023, and is expected to grow 2.7% this year, the finance ministry said.
Persons: Ben Lee, , Lee, Srettha Thavisin, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Yin Shao Yang Organizations: Macao, Las Vegas, CNBC, IGamiX Management, Consulting, Tourism, Thai, Investment Bank Locations: Pattaya, Thailand, Singapore, Macao, Macau
State and local governments often lease or sell land to builders, including affordable housing developers, particularly in areas with high demand for homes. In a rare overlap of goals between the two campaigns, Harris and Trump have both proposed building housing on federal land. Some Republican lawmakers agree that more federal land should be used for homes. The Biden administration has proposed selling hundreds of acres of land in Nevada controlled by the Bureau of Land Management to local governments to build thousands of new homes. But repurposing federal land for new residential communities in Nevada would likely mean more sprawl, which comes with both environmental and economic concerns.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Trump, Matthew Murphy, doesn't, George McCarthy, McCarthy, MidPen, It's, Abby Goldware Potluri, Harris couldn't, Republican Sen, Mike Lee of, He's, Biden, Maurice Page, Page Organizations: Service, Democratic, Republican, Biden, Business, NYU's Furman Center, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy's, Geospatial Solutions, Lincoln Institute of Land, Center for Geospatial Solutions, Privately, Center, Trump, of Land Management, US Postal Service, Republican Party, General Services Administration, DC, Bureau, Land Management, Las Vegas, Nevada Housing Coalition Locations: State, Nevada, Utah, Massachusetts, Florida, . Massachusetts, San Mateo County, San Francisco, MidPen, Saudi, Mike Lee of Utah, Fort Lauderdale, Las
Democratic presidential nominee and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and vice presidential nominee Tim Walz walk down the steps from Air Force Two at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport in Savannah, Georgia, U.S., August 28, 2024. Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris in a new interview Thursday defended her vice presidential record on immigration and blamed her Republican rival Donald Trump for killing a bipartisan bill aimed to address the U.S.-Mexico border. "He killed the bill, a border security bill that would have put 1500 more agents on the border," she said. Harris vowed to sign that bill into law if she beats Trump in the Nov. 5 election. The vice president picked two hot-button issues to illustrate her point.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, Donald Trump, Harris, Dana Bash, Joe Biden, Trump, Walz, Sen, JD Vance, Thursday's, Bash, you've Organizations: Democratic, U.S, Air Force, Savannah, Hilton Head International, Republican, CNN, Minnesota Gov, Trump, Kim's, National Association of Black Journalists Locations: Savannah , Georgia, U.S, Mexico, Ohio
Researchers have begun measuring the impact of legalized sports gambling on American households, and the initial results paint a worrisome picture about how its expansion has affected bettors’ finances. In separate papers released this month, academics have found that households in states where gambling was legalized saw significantly reduced savings, as well as lower investments in assets like stocks that are generally considered more financially sound. Meanwhile, states that legalized sports betting saw their residents’ aggregate credit scores decrease, while bankruptcies increased. North Carolina became the most recent state to offer online sports betting earlier this year. Earlier this year, the major sports betting platforms formed the Responsible Online Gaming Association to address problem gambling.
Persons: , Scott Baker, Charles Schwab, Baker, “ It’s, ” Baker, “ Rather, Brett Hollenbeck, Nicholas Scutari, Adam Candee, Candee, ” Candee Organizations: Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, of Columbia, Trade, Vanguard, Fidelity, UCLA’s Anderson School of Management, Auto, New York, Gaming Commission, Addiction Services, Legal, Online, Association Locations: New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, North Carolina, California, Texas, U.S
Researchers have begun measuring the impact of legalized sports gambling on American households, and the initial results paint a worrisome picture about how its expansion has affected bettors' finances. Meanwhile, states that legalized sports betting saw their residents' aggregate credit scores decrease, while bankruptcies increased. North Carolina became the most recent state to offer online sports betting earlier this year. Earlier this year, the major sports betting platforms formed the Responsible Online Gaming Association to address problem gambling. Yet there is likely a limit to how much the platforms will seek to restrict their own activities.
Persons: Scott Baker, Charles Schwab, Baker, It's, Brett Hollenbeck, Nicholas Scutari, Adam Candee, Candee Organizations: Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, of Columbia, Trade, Vanguard, Fidelity, UCLA's Anderson School of Management, Auto, New York, Gaming Commission, Addiction Services, Legal, Online, Association Locations: New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, North Carolina, California, Texas, U.S
"We joined OpenAI because we wanted to ensure the safety of the incredibly powerful AI systems the company is developing," the researchers, William Saunders and Daniel Kokotajlo, wrote in the letter. "But we resigned from OpenAI because we lost trust that it would safely, honestly, and responsibly develop its AI systems." AdvertisementThey continued: "Developing frontier AI models without adequate safety precautions poses foreseeable risks of catastrophic harm to the public." SB1047 "has inspired thoughtful debate," and OpenAI supports some of its safety provisions, Kwon's letter, dated a day before the researchers' letter was sent, read. "We cannot wait for Congress to act — they've explicitly said that they aren't willing to pass meaningful AI regulation," Saunders and Kokotajlo wrote.
Persons: , Gavin Newsom, William Saunders, Daniel Kokotajlo, Saunders, Kokotajlo, Sam Altman, Jason Kwon, Scott Wiener, Kokotajlo aren't, OpenAI, California's, — they've, Newsom Organizations: Service, Politico, California Gov, Business, California Legislature, Wiener Locations: California
"OpenAI opposes even the extremely light-touch requirements in SB 1047, most of which OpenAl claims to voluntarily commit to, raising questions about the strength of those commitments." They said the existing federal legislation OpenAI is using to support its case is "woefully inadequate." They said they hoped their letter would help push the California legislature to pass SB 1047. In an email to Business Insider, a spokesperson for OpenAI said the letter misrepresented the company's position on the bill. "We strongly disagree with the mischaracterization of our position on SB 1047.
Persons: , OpenAI, California Sen, Scott Wiener, Sam Altman, William Saunders, Daniel Kokotajlo, Saunders, Wiener, we've Organizations: Service, Business, Congressional, Labor, U.S, AI Safety Locations: California, Sacramento, OpenAI
The Department of Veterans Affairs has clawed back billions of dollars that countless veterans were given as incentives to leave the military, including when it needed to downsize, according to new data obtained by NBC News. Disabled veterans have been told in the last 12 fiscal years to return nearly $3 billion in special separation pay — lump-sum incentives that were offered when the U.S. had to reduce its active-duty force or release slightly injured service members, the data shows. The justification of the recoupment rule carried over in the 1990s when other forms of special separation payments — unrelated to disabilities — were authorized. Those payments, including the Special Separation Benefit (SSB), were designed instead to help the Defense Department manage its force size. He was told to pay back the money in 2017 after he filed for VA disability for PTSD and other conditions.
Persons: , Damon Bird, , ” Salahudin Majeed, Bird, Salahudin Majeed, ” Majeed, , ’ ” Majeed, , ” Marquis Barefield, Marquis Barefield, ” Barefield, John Colage, Terrence Hayes, Hayes, Colage, ” Colage, Domenick Fini, Denis McDonough’s, Majeed, recoupment, Ruben Gallego, Gallego Organizations: of Veterans Affairs, NBC News, Disabled, NBC, Army, ” Army, Congressional Research Service, Defense Department, DAV, American Veterans, ” Navy, U.S ., Appeals, Veterans, Veterans ’ Appeals, RAND Corporation Locations: U.S, , Haslet , Texas, USS Iowa, Missouri, Texas, Iraq
Harris hasn’t yet released many details about her strategy to wipe out medical debt, but policy experts say a newly implemented medical debt relief program from North Carolina could offer a roadmap. Roy Cooper announced that nearly 100 hospitals in the state had signed on to participate in the Medical Debt Relief Incentive Program, which he said will incentivize hospitals to eliminate $4 billion in medical debt for 2 million low- and middle-income patients over the next two years. At a campaign event last week in Raleigh, North Carolina, Harris thanked Cooper for canceling medical debt in his state, and Cooper introduced Harris at the convention Thursday. Hospitals will get additional federal funds if they forgive existing debt and move to prevent future medical debt. “I see medical debt as the most salient example of a health care system which isn’t working,” he said.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Harris hasn’t, Roy Cooper, Cooper, Neale Mahoney, , ” Mahoney, , Adam Gaffney, Larry Levitt, Levitt, , Mahoney, Harris ’, ” Levitt, Will, aren’t, Ciara Zachary, Zachary, it’s, Barack Obama, ” Zachary Organizations: Democratic, Convention, North Carolina Gov, Debt Relief, Stanford University, White, National Economic Council, Cambridge Health Alliance, Consumer Financial, White House, North Carolina Department of Health, Human Services, Medicaid, UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, Medicare, Services, Republican, Affordable Locations: United States, Chicago, U.S, KFF, North Carolina, Raleigh , North Carolina, “ North Carolina, Massachusetts,
Spokesperson Jillian Cowherd said the voter registration process is started at the DMV, but completed at the Virginia Elections Department. It’s also used to verify voter rolls. But user and data errors in the DHS system — such as confusing people who share the same name — have led to people being inaccurately flagged on voter rolls, Clapman said. She said Youngkin’s announcement of noncitizen voters “stokes election denial generally, undermining faith in election results. Last October, election officials under Youngkin removed nearly 3,400 legal Virginia voters from the rolls, after misclassifying probation violators as felons.
Persons: Glenn Youngkin, , Donald Trump, Mike Johnson, noncitizens, Youngkin, Trump, , Alice Clapman, Brennan, Johnson, Griffin Neal, Christian Martinez, Jossie Flor Sapunar, Jillian Cowherd, It’s, Clapman, it’s, Tony Castrilli, Castrilli, Gretchen Reinemeyer, Reese Brogdon, don’t, Reinemeyer, she’s, ” Reinemeyer, Brennan Center’s Clapman, “ stokes, ” Clapman, Virginia, Trump’s, J.Christian Adams Organizations: Virginia Gov, NBC News, NBC, stoke, Brennan Center for Justice, Louisiana Republican, SAVE, CASA, Social, Virginia Elections Department, Elections Department, Social Security Administration, of Homeland Security, DHS, Fairfax County, Local, The League, United Latin, Locations: Virginia, Local Virginia, Louisiana, Fairfax County, Arlington County, Manassas, Richmond
But the consequences — but the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious. Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails, and how he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States. But Donald Trump believes a border deal would hurt his campaign, so he ordered his allies in Congress to kill the deal. Because, you know, they know — they know he is easy to manipulate with flattery and favors. They know Trump won’t hold autocrats accountable because he wants to be an autocrat himself.
Persons: Kamala Harris’s, Let’s, Doug, Cole, Ella, Dougie, Joe Biden, Joe, Tim Walz, Shyamala Harris, Donald Harris, Aretha, Coltrane, Miles, Kamala, Don’t, Shelton, Uncle Sherman, Aunt Mary, Uncle Freddie, Auntie Chris —, Family, , Maya, Michelle, Thurgood Marshall, Constance Baker Motley, Wanda, Kamala Harris, I’ve, Donald Trump, doesn’t, , miscarrying, Couples, John Lewis, Trump, Putin, Said, Zelensky, Biden, Kim Jong, let’s Organizations: Democratic, Mayflower, White, U.S . Capitol, Capitol, U.S, Supreme, Trump, Social Security, Affordable, of Education, Medicare, Congress, Republicans, NATO, Fellow Locations: America, India, California, Jamaica, , Illinois, Wisconsin, East, United States of America, Oakland, Calif, United States, China, Said Russia, Russia, Ukraine, Gaza, Israel, Iran, An America, American
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