Tag Archives: governors

SXSW Responds To Texas Governor’s “Don’t Come Back” Comment After Musicians Drop Out Of Fest Protesting Military Ties – Deadline

  1. SXSW Responds To Texas Governor’s “Don’t Come Back” Comment After Musicians Drop Out Of Fest Protesting Military Ties Deadline
  2. Bands pull out of SXSW over U.S. Army sponsorship, Gaza war The Hill
  3. SXSW, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Spar About Bands Pulling Out in Protest of Military Sponsorship Rolling Stone
  4. SXSW Responds To Texas Governor’s “Don’t Come Back” Comment After Musicians Drop Out Of Fest Protesting Military Ties Yahoo Entertainment
  5. SXSW ‘Fully Respects’ Artists Boycotting Festival Due to U.S. Army Sponsorship: ‘We Are Witnessing Unspeakable Tragedies’ and ‘Repressive Regimes’ Variety

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Emily Blunt attends Governors Awards solo after her conversation with John Krasinski goes viral – Page Six

  1. Emily Blunt attends Governors Awards solo after her conversation with John Krasinski goes viral Page Six
  2. Emily Blunt & John Krasinski’s Marriage Is Under the Spotlight After a Viral Video Leaves Fans Shocked Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Emily Blunt shrugs off THAT viral red carpet moment with husband John Krasinski as she makes a glamorous solo Daily Mail
  4. Emily Blunt fuels speculation over marital issues by attending Governors Awards alone Marca English
  5. Emily Blunt Raises Eyebrows With Solo Red Carpet Appearance After Viral ‘Divorce’ Clip Yahoo Entertainment

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California residents to pay the price for Newsom’s $20 fast food minimum wage: McDonald’s and Chipotle confirm they will HIKE menu costs in the Golden State to off-set Governor’s new labor bill – Daily Mail

  1. California residents to pay the price for Newsom’s $20 fast food minimum wage: McDonald’s and Chipotle confirm they will HIKE menu costs in the Golden State to off-set Governor’s new labor bill Daily Mail
  2. McDonald’s, Chipotle to hike menu prices after California Gov. Newsom approves $20 fast food minimum wage Fox Business
  3. McDonald’s & Chipotle Raising Menu Prices In California After Minimum Wage Increase TMZ
  4. California’s latest minimum wage hike is already making things worse Washington Examiner
  5. Chipotle’s Labor Costs Are Rising. Customers Will See It in Pricing. The Wall Street Journal
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NBA Board of Governors approves Hornets sale, ending Michael Jordan’s tenure as majority owner: Source – The Athletic

  1. NBA Board of Governors approves Hornets sale, ending Michael Jordan’s tenure as majority owner: Source The Athletic
  2. NBA’s board of governors approves sale of Hornets, sources say – ESPN ESPN
  3. Report: Michael Jordan’s sale of Hornets officially approved by NBA despite Knicks owner James Dolan’s lone vote against it Yahoo Sports
  4. James Dolan Blocks Michael Jordan Sale of Hornets: Why’d New York Knicks Owner Vote ‘No’? Sports Illustrated
  5. Michael Jordan’s Hornets sale approved by NBA’s board of governors: report Fox News
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Oklahoma governor’s feud with Native American tribes continues over revenue agreements – The Associated Press

  1. Oklahoma governor’s feud with Native American tribes continues over revenue agreements The Associated Press
  2. Oklahoma governor’s feud with Native American tribes continues over revenue agreements Yahoo News
  3. Oklahoma Lawmakers Return To Capitol For Special Session On Tribal Compacts News On 6
  4. ‘Respectful cooperation’: Stitt, Anoatubby emails precede meeting of their representatives NonDoc
  5. ‘A Governor who refuses to respect Oklahoma law’: Senate Pro Tem sends scathing invite requesting AG assist in federal lawsuit KFOR Oklahoma City
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Texas governor’s taskforce takes on teacher shortage crisis in new report – KXAN.com

  1. Texas governor’s taskforce takes on teacher shortage crisis in new report KXAN.com
  2. Texas Teacher Vacancy Task Force report calls for better pay, training The Dallas Morning News
  3. Texas’ teacher shortage task force calls for pay raises, more training The Texas Tribune
  4. How can Texas keep more teachers in classrooms? Here’s what a state committee found. Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  5. Texas teachers need raises, more training and better working conditions to fix shortages, state task force finds KPRC Click2Houston
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Minnesota governor signs bill codifying ‘fundamental right’ to abortion into law



CNN
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Minnesota’s Democratic Gov. Tim Walz signed a bill into law Tuesday that enshrines the “fundamental right” to access abortion in the state.

Abortion is already legal in Minnesota, but in the aftermath of the US Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, the Protect Reproductive Options Act goes a step further by outlining that every person has the fundamental right to make “autonomous decisions” about their own reproductive health as well as the right to refuse reproductive health care.

“This is very simple, very right to the point,” Walz said Tuesday on “CNN Tonight.” “We trust women in Minnesota, and that’s not what came out of the [Supreme Court’s] decision, so I think it’s critically important that we build a fire wall.”

With the passage of the bill, Minnesota is now the first state to codify abortion via legislative action since Roe v. Wade was reversed, the office of the bill’s lead author in Minnesota’s state Senate, told CNN.

“Last November, Minnesotans spoke loud and clear: They want their reproductive rights protected – not stripped away,” Walz said in a news release. “Today, we are delivering on our promise to put up a firewall against efforts to reverse reproductive freedom. No matter who sits on the Minnesota Supreme Court, this legislation will ensure Minnesotans have access to reproductive health care for generations to come. Here in Minnesota, your access to reproductive health care and your freedom to make your own health care decisions are preserved and protected.”

The bill states that local government cannot restrict a person’s ability to exercise the “fundamental right” to reproductive freedom. It also clarifies that this right extends to accessing contraception, sterilization, family planning, fertility services and counseling regarding reproductive health care.

“The Pro Act also goes beyond just granting those rights to abortion, it really says all reproductive healthcare decisions aren’t our business, including access to contraception, including access to really anything that is related to personal and private decisions about your reproductive life,” Megan Peterson, the executive director of pro-abortion rights campaign UnRestrict Minnesota, told CNN following Walz’s signing of the bill.

In a letter to Walz ahead of the signing, Republican legislature leaders argued that the bill went too far and urged the governor to veto what they called “an extreme law.”

“As the PRO Act was being rushed through the legislature, Republicans offered reasonable amendments with guardrails to protect women and children,” state Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson and House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth wrote, “Sadly, each of these amendments were struck down by a Democrat majority.”

In 1995, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled in Doe v. Gomez that abortion was a fundamental right protected under the state’s constitution. The Protect Reproductive Options Act ensures that even in the event of a new state Supreme Court reversing the ruling, the right to abortion will be protected under state law.

“By passing this law, Minnesotans will have a second layer of protection for their existing reproductive rights. A future Minnesota Supreme Court could overturn Doe v. Gomez, but with the PRO Act now in State law, Minnesotans will still have a right to Reproductive healthcare,” Luke Bishop, a spokesperson for Democratic State Sen. Jennifer McEwen, the bill’s author in the Senate, told CNN over email.

Following the governor’s signature of the bill, the White House applauded Minnesota’s efforts, pointing to the popular support for women’s rights to make their own health care decisions.

“Americans overwhelmingly support a woman’s right to make her own health care decisions, as so clearly demonstrated last fall when voters turned out to defend access to abortion – including for ballot initiatives in California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana, and Vermont,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement.

“While Congressional Republicans continue their support for extreme policies including a national abortion ban, the President and Vice President are calling on Congress to restore the protections of Roe in federal law,” she wrote. “Until then, the Biden-Harris Administration will continue its work to protect access to abortion and support state leaders in defending women’s reproductive rights.”

This story has been updated with additional information.

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South Dakota governor’s grocery tax repeal hits GOP pushback

PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — South Dakota lawmakers are considering a number of tax cuts this year, including Gov. Kristi Noem’s campaign promise to repeal the grocery tax. The only problem is deciding on which ones.

Republican lawmakers are proposing alternative tax cut schemes, such as scaling back the sales tax and property tax. Other lawmakers also say the state has a long list of programs to fund this year, leaving little room in the surplus for tax cuts.

Although Democrats have proposed grocery tax cuts for years, they gained a powerful bipartisan ally when Noem made it a key part of her reelection campaign. Noem, who is considering a 2024 White House bid, has trumpeted the proposal as the largest tax cut in South Dakota history.

Noem says cutting the tax, which brings in more than $100 million annually, would help household budgets squeezed by inflation.

“They need relief — and we can afford to give it to them,” the Republican governor said in a statement.

Advocates for repealing the grocery tax say it weighs heaviest on low-income people who spend a larger percentage of their income on food. Only 13 states levy taxes on groceries, and South Dakota is just one of three that tax groceries at the rate of other sales, according to the Tax Foundation, a pro-industry think tank.

But many of the governor’s fellow Republicans have been resistant.

House Speaker Hugh Bartels said that when he has discussed the grocery tax repeal with the governor’s staff, his message has been that constituents are not calling for it.

“I’m waiting until the budgeting process is done,” he said, adding “You’ve got to weigh the option of unfunded programs and tax cuts.”

For people like Fred Steffen, who traveled to the Capitol on Wednesday to tell lawmakers of shortfalls in the state’s program to provide home health aides to disabled adults such as his son, it made little sense to discuss tax cuts when it appears government programs lack necessary funding.

“If they are talking about cutting the food tax, there’s a place in there that could benefit the disabled population,” he said.

Pierre resident Barry Sargent said he generally supports tax cuts but fears they could cut into essential government services if not well planned.

“I don’t think anybody’s against paying taxes as long as they’re used for stuff that they can see — that benefits people or pays for schools or pays for roads,” he said.

Republican state Rep. Chris Karr, who has pushed for a reduction in the state’s sales tax, pointed to the state’s $310 million in ongoing revenue growth and argued that the state could afford to fund programs and cut taxes.

“Those dollars belong to the people,” he said.

But a recent report from the state’s legislative research office shows that South Dakota’s revenue growth has been driven by inflation and federal stimulus funds rather than organic economic growth.

State Sen. Reynold Nesiba, the Senate’s Democrat leader, suggested the competing proposals and pressing needs could result in an incremental tax cut, such as reducing, rather than repealing the tax on groceries.

He said, “I think there is a way forward to compromise.”

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US issues new sanctions targeting Russian proxies in Ukraine, Russian governors and an oligarch tied to Putin

One of Ukraine’s most senior military officers said that nearly 400 clashes have taken place between Ukrainian and Russian forces in the eastern regions of Ukraine this week.

Brig. Gen. Oleksiy Hromov, deputy chief of the Ukrainian military’s Main Operational Directorate, said Russia continues to launch attacks using missiles and artillery along a wide front.

“Since Dec. 8, the enemy has launched 41 missile strikes,” including 38 attacks with S-300 missiles, on the civilian infrastructure of Ukraine and positions of troops.

Russia has also launched 32 drones loaded with explosives at energy facilities, including 15 self-detonating drones at the civilian infrastructure of Kyiv, he said. Almost all the Iranian-made drones were intercepted.

Hromov said that “388 military clashes with the enemy took place in eastern Ukraine this week” and claimed the Russians had experienced heavy casualties.

“During Dec. 1 and 2, up to 500 wounded were taken to hospitals in Luhansk, mostly from among the mercenaries of the Wagner private military company,” he claimed.

“In total, as of Dec. 4, more than 3,600 wounded Russian servicemen from the so-called special contingent were in hospitals in the occupied territories,” Hromov claimed. There is no way to verify the estimate.

Hromov also said that Ukrainian attacks on Russian positions and facilities behind the front lines continued.

“During the week, artillery units have struck 309 enemy targets, including 34 control points, 24 warehouses with ammunition and fuel,” he said.

Additionally, he said, high-precision weapons had targeted 58 sites, including five ammunition warehouses.

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Kari Lake sues Arizona elections officials over governor’s race loss

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Republican Kari Lake, who lost the race for Arizona governor, sued state elections officials Friday, challenging the vote counting and certification of the midterm election and asking a court to declare her the winner.

Lake, who rose to national attention backing former president Donald Trump’s false claims of 2020 election fraud, was expected to file the suit, which came after Arizona’s election results were certified Monday.

The suit targets Lake’s opponent, Governor-elect Katie Hobbs (D), who is currently Arizona’s secretary of state, along with top officials in Maricopa County, the most populous in the state. As secretary of state, Hobbs certified Arizona’s election results.

In the 70-page lawsuit, Lake asks the Maricopa County Superior Court for an order “declaring that Kari Lake is the winner of the 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election,” or alternatively throwing out the results of the election and requiring the county to conduct a new election.

Lake is the highest-profile election denier to contest her own loss in the midterm elections. Most others who lost have conceded defeat.

Even before midterm voting began, Lake refused to say she would accept the results of the gubernatorial election unless she won. She described the race as “botched” before it was called.

The lawsuit repeats unsupported claims that Lake has previously made about Maricopa County’s election and alleges that Hobbs and the county officials have “shattered” public trust in the election process.

Hobbs’s campaign called the lawsuit baseless, saying it was a “desperate attempt to undermine our democracy and throw out the will of the voters.”

“Arizonans made their voices heard and elected Katie Hobbs as governor. No nuisance lawsuit will change that,” Hobbs’s campaign said in a statement on Twitter.

Like Trump, Lake has sought to sow doubt in the election results via social media, asking users to share their accounts of voting issues in Maricopa County. She has shared stories of some voters who had to wait in lines to cast their ballots due to a printing error.

“The Election Day debacle … preclude[s] the Defendants in this action from certifying Hobbs as the winner of the election,” the lawsuit reads.

The suit partly hinges on those claims, alleging “illegal” votes and saying Republican voters were “disenfranchised.” There is no evidence voters could not cast their ballots because of the mechanical glitch, according to a report by election officials.

A leaked call last month showed that attorneys for her campaign and the Republican National Committee questioned a lawyer for Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, about perceived voting problems. After her loss, advisers urged Lake not to claim the election was stolen, as Trump did in 2020, The Washington Post reported.

Lake also asks the judges to order a “forensic examination” into what the lawsuits lists as problems on Election Day, to throw out any invalid ballots, and to allow her to inspect Maricopa County’s ballots.

Lake’s attorney and campaign did not immediately respond to requests from The Post on Friday.

Meryl Kornfield contributed to this report.



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