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Scroll to play video Muted Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Rev. Dr. Cynthia L. Hale Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Yesenia Mohammad Yesenia Mohammad Rev. Scroll to play video Muted October Zahou October Zahou Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Mike Wood Mike Wood Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Blake McClellan Blake McClellan October Zahou October Zahou Rev. Scroll to play video Muted Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez October Zahou October Zahou Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez October Zahou October Zahou Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez October Zahou October Zahou Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez October Zahou October Zahou Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez “For me, the most important issue “For me, the most important issue is definitely immigration.” is definitely immigration.” “I tell my students all the time, where I grew up, “I tell my students all the time, where I grew up, everybody looked like me. Dr. Cynthia L. Hale October Zahou October Zahou Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Bruce Leonard Bruce Leonard “I believe in choice.
Persons: Biden, Kamala Harris, Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Rev, Dr, Cynthia L, Hale Rev, Hale Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Yesenia Mohammad Yesenia Mohammad Rev, Hale, Mike Wood Mike Wood Yesenia Mohammad Yesenia Mohammad Bruce Leonard Bruce Leonard Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Blake McClellan Blake McClellan, Yesenia Mohammad Yesenia Mohammad Mike Wood Mike Wood Bruce Leonard Bruce Leonard, , , “ I’ve, ” “ I’ve, ” “, It’s, , ” “ Joe Rogan, Mr, Donald J, Trump, Zahou Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Mike Wood Mike Wood Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Blake McClellan Blake McClellan, Rev, Hale “, Kemp, Scigliano, it’s, Alena, Heather Breslin, ” Heather Breslin It’s, Melinda Hicks Melinda Hicks Sang, Zahou Blake McClellan Blake McClellan “ I’m, “ I’m, Zippora Fleming, Chanel Kho Chanel Kho, Kho, you’ll, Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez, Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez Yolanda Alvarado Sanchez “, ” It’s, We’ve, Harris, Arturo Foster, Chris Lipski, Zahou Blake McClellan Blake McClellan Bruce Leonard Bruce Leonard “, Let’s, ” Let’s, Robyn, “ It’s Organizations: Voters, NPR, Prosecutors, Republican, Mr, Atlanta, Labor, ” Labor, America, Colombian, Trump Locations: Georgia, Atlanta, Metro Atlanta, , “ Atlanta, California, New York, Fayette County, Philippines, Mexico, , America, United States, Decatur
Some of those contributors are among those involved in a donor collective supporting Mr. Trump. Mr. Buskirk, who made some money in the insurance business, has strong relationships with tech donors. Some of those contributors are among those involved in a donor collective called the Rockbridge Network that Mr. Buskirk created. Its twice-a-year meetings have drawn appearances by Mr. Trump, as well as megadonors including Peter Thiel, Rebekah Mercer, Steve Wynn and David Sacks. Mr. Buskirk gained a following in the Trump orbit with a publication called American Greatness.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, JD Vance, Christopher Buskirk, Mr, Vance, Buskirk, , Kamala Harris, Biden, Harris, Harris’s, Virginia “, Elon Musk, ” Mr, Peter Thiel, Rebekah Mercer, Steve Wynn, David Sacks, Donald Trump Jr Organizations: Trump ., America, The New York Times, Mr, PAC, Trump, Federal, Commission, America PAC, Rockbridge Network, Rockbridge, Mar, CNN Locations: Ohio, Arizona , Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina, Michigan , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Virginia
“I’ve never seen a Republican or Democratic pothole,” Mr. Dandoy, 71, a retired high school English teacher, would tell voters. One spectator was dead at Donald J. Trump’s campaign rally on the farm show grounds, two more were critically injured. E-mailers charged that the city failed to protect Mr. Trump, maybe even wanted him to be a target. Callers demanded that the city admit that Mr. Trump’s supporters staged the shooting. The mayor has tried to remind everyone that Butler is a community that accomplishes good things, that has worked through disagreements together.
Persons: Butler, Bob Dandoy, “ I’ve, Mr, Dandoy, Donald J, Trump, Trump’s Organizations: Republican, Democratic, Secret Service, Mr Locations: Pa, texted
Behind Jaden Grayson Was an Overwhelming Loss. In Front of Him, Uncertainty. After a tornado killed the grandmother who raised him in rural Mississippi, Jaden went to live with his uncle in Arkansas, leaving everything he had known behind.
Persons: Jaden Grayson, Jaden Locations: Mississippi, Arkansas
Jeff Landry as he signed bill after bill this week on public education in the state, making it clear he believed God was guiding his hand. One new law requires that transgender students be addressed by the pronouns for the gender on their birth certificates (“God gives us our mark,” he said). Then he signed into law a mandate that the Ten Commandments be hung in every public classroom, demonstrating a new willingness for Louisiana to go where other states have not. “We don’t quit,” Mr. Landry, a Republican, said at the signing ceremony. And Mr. Landry, a Catholic who has been vocal about his faith’s influence in shaping his politics, wants to lead the charge.
Persons: Jeff Landry, , , don’t, ” Mr, Landry Organizations: Fatima Catholic School, Republican, Catholic Locations: Lafayette, La, Louisiana
Jeff Landry signed legislation on Wednesday requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in every public classroom in Louisiana, making the state the only one with such a mandate and reigniting the debate over how porous the boundary between church and state should be. Critics, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the Freedom From Religion Foundation, vowed a legal fight against the law they deemed “blatantly unconstitutional.” But it is a battle that proponents are prepared, and in many ways, eager, to take on. “I can’t wait to be sued,” Mr. Landry said on Saturday at a Republican fund-raiser in Nashville, according to The Tennessean. And on Wednesday, as he signed the measure, he argued that the Ten Commandments contained valuable lessons for students. “If you want to respect the rule of law,” he said, “you’ve got to start from the original law giver, which was Moses.”
Persons: Jeff Landry, , ” Mr, Landry, , “ you’ve, Moses Organizations: American Civil Liberties Union, Religion Foundation, Republican Locations: Louisiana, Nashville
A series of water main breaks in Atlanta caused widespread disruption on Saturday, as outages and severely reduced water pressure forced some businesses to close and infuriated residents who criticized city officials for failing to provide timely updates. Reports of interrupted service began on Friday after corroded water pipes burst near downtown; it was unclear exactly when the ruptures occurred. The disruptions continued into Saturday, with many people still experiencing very low water pressure. They said that the “system is gradually being brought back online,” allowing for water pressure to increase. The outages forced businesses to close or limit their services, and some hospitals had to divert patients and cancel certain procedures.
Persons: Megan Thee Organizations: Residents Locations: Atlanta,
Can Biden Recapture Lightning in a Bottle in Georgia?
  + stars: | 2024-05-18 | by ( Rick Rojas | Maya King | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The official purpose of Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s trip to Georgia in the final days of 2020 was to rally support for two Democratic Senate candidates facing tight runoffs. “I have to say, it feels pretty good,” Mr. Biden told a crowd in Atlanta, reveling in the distinction of being the first Democrat to win Georgia in a presidential election in nearly 30 years. The moment — along with the Democrats’ win of both Senate seats a few weeks later, tipping control of the chamber — seemed to affirm the party’s resurgence in a state long dominated by Republicans. This weekend, as Mr. Biden returns to Atlanta with ambitions of winning the state again in a rematch with former President Donald J. Trump, he faces a much different climate. The optimism that soared among Georgia Democrats after his win has been overtaken by frustration and worry, not just about his campaign prospects but also about the direction of the country.
Persons: Joseph R, Biden, , Mr, Donald J, Trump Organizations: Democratic, Democrat, Georgia, Democrats ’, Republicans, Georgia Democrats Locations: Georgia, Atlanta, reveling
That didn’t work. In 2015, they collected signatures to bring their proposal up for a vote, but didn’t get enough. This time, they made it to a ballot and won the election, only to be stalled by a lengthy court battle. But the Louisiana Supreme Court cleared the way on Friday for the formation of St. George, a city of nearly 100,000 people that joins the ranks of the state’s largest cities, falling between Lafayette and Lake Charles in population. It is the first city to be incorporated in Louisiana in nearly two decades.
Persons: George ., George Locations: Baton Rouge, La, St, Louisiana, Lafayette, Lake Charles
WHY WE’RE HEREWe’re exploring how America defines itself one place at a time. In Mississippi, a tradition of house tours is about more than architecture. It’s a window into how a city sees its past and its ambitions for the future. It was also a highlight of the longstanding tradition known as Pilgrimage. Every spring, the city’s finest antebellum homes are opened to the public for a few weeks, inviting people in to marvel at the craftsmanship and the opulence.
Organizations: . Homeowners Locations: Mississippi, Riverview, Southern, Columbus, Alabama
She is also a mother living in the Nashville suburbs with three school-age children. She worries about their safety, especially after three 9-year-olds were among the six killed in a school shooting in the city last year. But those concerns weren’t enough to persuade Ms. Dixon that Tennessee lawmakers were right to pass a bill on Tuesday that would allow teachers and other school employees to carry concealed handguns on campus in an effort to protect students. She suspected that lawmakers didn’t either. “Everyone is grasping at straws because no one has the answer,” Ms. Dixon, 38, said.
Persons: Devon Dixon, , , Dixon, didn’t, ” Ms Organizations: Covenant School Locations: Nashville, Tennessee
Tennessee lawmakers passed a bill on Tuesday to allow teachers and other school staff members to carry concealed handguns on school campuses. The measure, if it goes into law, would require those carrying guns to undergo training and have the approval of school officials, but parents and most other school employees would not be notified. The bill is one of the most significant pieces of public safety legislation to advance in Tennessee after a shooting just over a year ago at a private Christian school in Nashville left three students and three staff members dead. The attack galvanized parents at the school and many others in Tennessee — including the state’s Republican governor — to demand action that could prevent similar violence. “It is really hard, even as a new mom, to stand here and have to be composed on a piece of legislation that I know puts my son’s life at risk,” she added.
Persons: , , don’t, London Lamar Organizations: Tennessee —, Republican, London Locations: Tennessee, Nashville, , Memphis
Georgia lawmakers voted on Thursday to tighten the state’s already strict immigration laws in response to the killing of Laken Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student, whose death became ensnared in the broader fight over immigration policy after a man from Venezuela who entered the country illegally was charged with her murder. In the frenzied final hours of the legislative session, the state’s House of Representatives gave final approval to a measure that would require local law enforcement agencies to scrutinize the immigration status of people in their custody and to cooperate with federal immigration authorities. The legislation was the result of a vow from Republican lawmakers to crack down after Ms. Riley’s body was found last month in a wooded area on the University of Georgia campus in Athens. Her death rattled the community that is the home of the state’s flagship university, roughly 70 miles from Atlanta. The case quickly reverberated beyond Georgia, with Republicans arguing that her killing exemplified a failure by President Biden to adequately respond to an influx of migrants.
Persons: Laken Riley, Biden Organizations: University of Georgia Locations: Georgia, Venezuela, Athens, Atlanta
Adlar Stelly is 42 years old, which means it is fair to say that he has been involved in farming crawfish in Louisiana for just shy of 42 years. He grew up surrounded by the shallow ponds dotted with the netted crawfish traps set by his father. At 7, he was steering the boat while his older brother pulled in the traps. He and his brother now have some 3,000 acres of ponds of their own in southern Louisiana. But over all that time, he has never experienced a season as distressing as this one, where, week after frustrating week, the traps have been so consistently bare.
Persons: Stelly Locations: crawfish, Louisiana
In 2017, Louisiana overhauled its criminal justice system with broad bipartisan support, all in an effort to lose the distinction of having the nation’s highest incarceration rate. Lawmakers, urged on by a new Republican governor, rushed through a special session last month to roll back the 2017 changes. The latter change is meant to allow the state to bring back capital punishment after more than a decade. “I promised the people of this state, if elected governor, I would do everything within my power to improve the safety of our communities,” Gov. Jeff Landry said as he declared victory when the session concluded last week.
Persons: , Jeff Landry, ” Mr, Landry Organizations: Republican, Bills, Locations: Louisiana
On the day that Mr. Bilodeau headed in, there was another fiery confrontation. A crowd marched to the development site, where some protesters threw fireworks and Molotov cocktails, setting equipment ablaze. The police arrested nearly two dozen protesters, including Mr. Bilodeau. As Mr. Bilodeau saw it, he was taking a principled stand against the destruction of the forest. But prosecutors had a darker take: They charged Mr. Bilodeau and 22 others with domestic terrorism.
Persons: Timothy Bilodeau, Bilodeau, Molotov Locations: Atlanta, Boston
In an Alabama Supreme Court decision that has rattled the world of reproductive medicine, a majority of the justices said the law was clear that frozen embryos should be considered children: “Unborn children are ‘children.’”But the court’s chief justice, Tom Parker, drew on more than the Constitution and legal precedent to explain his determination. “Human life cannot be wrongfully destroyed without incurring the wrath of a holy God,” he wrote in a concurring opinion that invoked the Book of Genesis and the prophet Jeremiah and quoted at length from the writings of 16th- and 17th-century theologians. “Even before birth,” he added, “all human beings have the image of God, and their lives cannot be destroyed without effacing his glory.”
Persons: , Tom Parker, , Jeremiah, Organizations: Alabama Supreme Locations: Alabama
Fani T. Willis, the district attorney in Fulton County, Ga., pushed back on Sunday against the criticism and questions about her judgment that have followed a court filing accusing her of being romantically involved with the outside lawyer she hired to lead the racketeering case against former President Donald J. Trump. Ms. Willis emerged from almost a week of silence to address the congregation at Big Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, one of the oldest Black churches in Atlanta, which had invited her to be the keynote speaker for a service dedicated to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. She did not address the allegation that she was in a relationship with Nathan Wade, the special prosecutor she hired in 2021, who has earned more than $650,000 in the job to date. Instead, she said that Mr. Wade had “impeccable credentials” for the role and suggested that the accusations were just the latest thing to make her job hard to bear. Ms. Willis, 52, said she was “as flawed as they come,” but that she was also subjected to an added level of scrutiny and even to personal danger as a Black woman in such a high-profile role, taking on arguably the most powerful figure in the Republican Party.
Persons: Willis, Donald J, Trump, Martin Luther King Jr, Nathan Wade, Wade Organizations: Big Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Republican Party Locations: Fulton County ,, Big, Atlanta
Rosalynn Carter’s Life in Photos
  + stars: | 2023-11-29 | by ( Rick Rojas | More About Rick Rojas | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Rosalynn Carter, who died on Nov. 19 at the age of 96, was a bridge — between generations, between the quiet simplicity of small-town life and the chaotic arenas of national and international politics, between competing notions of a woman’s place in the home and in the world. She was a humanitarian who confronted dictators about rights abuses and made a mission of eradicating Guinea worm disease — a parasitic infection that had once seemed intractable but that she and others came remarkably close to eliminating in her lifetime. She was also a grandmother who kept sending her grandson birthday cards stuffed with $20 bills well into his 40s, and made pimento sandwiches to hand out to family members and even strangers on flights. In recent days, there has been a cascade of remembrances from relatives, friends and aides, and others who knew Rosalynn Carter only from her legacy. Many remarked on how much the world had changed over the course of her life, and how she had been an agent of that transformation, leveraging her influence as first lady, her own political instincts and her sheer force of will.
Persons: Rosalynn Carter Locations: Guinea
To them, she was more than a first lady. Rosalynn Carter was the wife with strong opinions and few reservations about sharing them, the mother who had to intervene when her eldest son’s catastrophic attempt at baking a cake led to a kitchen fire, the grandmother who kept a stash of blueberries in the freezer and the great-grandmother who would race toddlers with her walker. “She was happiest whenever there was a new baby,” Josh Carter, one of her grandsons, recalled on Wednesday from the pulpit of Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, the small town in Georgia farm country from which she never strayed too far even as she was drawn out into the world. The simple red brick church, where Mrs. Carter had worshiped for decades, was filled for her funeral on Wednesday with the people who had known her as a mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, aunt, neighbor and friend. Her husband, Jimmy, who is 99 and has been in hospice care since February, was also there, sitting in a wheelchair near the front of the church.
Persons: Rosalynn Carter, ” Josh Carter, Carter, Jimmy Organizations: Maranatha Baptist Church Locations: Maranatha, Plains, Georgia
His face was pale and gaunt, his legs were wrapped in a blanket, and his eyes never seemed to make contact with the family members huddled around him. But on Tuesday, Jimmy Carter was there, in the front row of a church in Atlanta, just a few feet from the coffin holding Rosalynn Carter, his wife of 77 years. Mr. Carter, 99, was some 164 miles from his home in Plains, Ga., where he had been in hospice care since February. He was brought into the church in a wheelchair, as the crowd of mourners at the memorial service looked on, many of them catching their first glimpse of him in nine months. That he would make such a trek in his condition was, to some, shocking — and, to his family, worrisome.
Persons: gaunt, Jimmy Carter, Rosalynn Carter, Carter, Mr Locations: Atlanta, Plains , Ga
Nov. 25, 2023A regular golf cart has no turn signals, no radio, no protection from the elements other than a thin roof and rain flaps. Press the pedal to the floor and it can maybe — maybe — accelerate to 15 miles per hour. If you are 12, commanding that cart feels like power. “You had that little sense of adventure,” said Caroline Lawson, 17, thinking back a few years to her earliest experiences driving a golf cart. “It’s just that little sense of, ‘Whee!’”
Persons: , , Caroline Lawson, It’s, Locations: Atlanta, Peachtree City , Ga
There was a time, Rosalynn Carter once confessed, when she dreaded going back to Plains, her tiny Georgia hometown. She was enjoying her life as a young sailor’s wife, relishing the freedom and sense of adventure that came from being so far from home. “I had been self-sufficient and independent from my mother and Jimmy’s mother,” Mrs. Carter, who died on Sunday at the age of 96, recalled several years ago in an interview. “And I knew that if I went home, I was going to have to come back to them.”The anger faded. Eventually, she said, no matter where she was in the world, she was always eager to get home to Plains.
Persons: Rosalynn Carter, Jimmy, , ” Mrs, Carter Organizations: U.S . Navy Locations: Plains, Georgia
For months, Bettersten Wade called the police in Jackson, Miss., desperate for any update or sign that detectives were making progress in tracking down Dexter, her 37-year-old son who left their home one day in March and vanished. They never seemed any closer to finding him, she said. And yet, records show that investigators for the Jackson Police Department knew exactly where Dexter Wade was. An off-duty police officer driving an SUV had struck and killed him on the same day that his mother last saw him, according to officials and coroner’s records. A deputy coroner said he was identified by a bottle of prescription medication he was carrying and through fingerprints.
Persons: Bettersten Wade, Dexter, Dexter Wade, Wade Organizations: Jackson Police Department Locations: Jackson, Miss
There had been plenty during his seven years in office: a deadly, devastating tornado; the coronavirus pandemic; neglected roads that the city could not afford to fix. But Smiths Station pulled through. Mr. Copeland had devised a plan to pay for repaving roads. Many in the city would have welcomed it. Then, on Nov. 3, sheriff’s deputies, who had been called by worried friends of Mr. Copeland to check on him, trailed him until he pulled over miles from Smiths Station and fatally shot himself.
Persons: F.L, Copeland Jr, Bubba, Copeland, Copeland’s Organizations: Smiths, Sims, Smiths Station Locations: Ala, Alabama
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