Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes says Phoenix can legally prohibit federal agents from using city property to carry out immigration raids because nothing in either state or federal law obligates local officials to help enforce immigration law.  “As a matter of federal law, localities like cities and counties can refuse cooperation with federal immigration enforcement […]

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Arizona Mirror
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Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes says Phoenix can legally prohibit federal agents from using city property to carry out immigration raids because nothing in either state or federal law obligates local officials to help enforce immigration law.  “As a matter of federal law, localities like cities and counties can refuse cooperation with federal immigration enforcement […]

The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Wednesday that further chips away at the landmark federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 drew sharp condemnation from some Nevada Democratic elected officials. The court’s decision declared a Louisiana congressional map unconstitutional, in a ruling critics warn undermines core tenets of the Voting Rights Act. “Allowing race to play any […]

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Nevada Current
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The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Wednesday that further chips away at the landmark federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 drew sharp condemnation from some Nevada Democratic elected officials. The court’s decision declared a Louisiana congressional map unconstitutional, in a ruling critics warn undermines core tenets of the Voting Rights Act. “Allowing race to play any […]

13 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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据《法兰克福汇报》和东黑森州新闻网报道:黑森州刑事警察局在多个联邦州展开搜查行动,打击一个涉嫌洗钱的犯罪团伙。据称,该团伙是受中国公民委托行事。

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法国国际广播电台
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据《法兰克福汇报》和东黑森州新闻网报道:黑森州刑事警察局在多个联邦州展开搜查行动,打击一个涉嫌洗钱的犯罪团伙。据称,该团伙是受中国公民委托行事。

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Wisconsin’s free newsletter here.Wisconsin will likely face limited immediate impact at both the legislative and congressional level from the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that narrowed how the Voting Rights Act can be used to challenge political maps. But it may make it easier for people to challenge school district and city council maps in court.The ruling in Louisiana v. Callais raises the bar for voting rights challenges by requiring stronger evidence that race, rather than political considerations, drove how districts were drawn, and making it easier for states to defend maps on non-racial grounds. Dan Lennington, the managing vice president and deputy counsel at the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, said that the boundaries that could be most easily struck down as a result of the Wednesday ruling are those that were drawn explicitly for racial reasons. Some examples, he said, are the boundaries for Milwaukee city council districts and certain school districts.Race is a common factor in drawing Milwaukee city council districts, though campaigns to add additional majority-minority districts haven’t always succeeded. For example, departing Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in December 2021 vetoed a proposed city council map because it didn’t include a third Latino-majority district, only for Mayor Cavalier Johnson to sign that same map several weeks later.Lennington also pointed to state laws that use race as a factor to determine school district boundaries. One of those laws explicitly mentions “racial composition of the pupils” as a factor for drawing boundaries — a law that he said is now implicated by the Callais decision.“If a plaintiff comes to us and says that they live in a district that’s been racially gerrymandered, we would take a very close look at that case,” he said.Less likely impact on legislative and congressional levelThere likely won’t be much impact in Wisconsin at the congressional district level because there’s just one majority-minority district in the state, UW-Madison political science professor Barry Burden said ahead of the ruling. That district comprises much of Milwaukee and the surrounding suburbs in Milwaukee County. Even if Section 2 of the VRA did not apply, he said, the district would likely stay much the same given the general principle of keeping communities intact. A decision like the one handed down, he said, “would open the door if line drawers wanted to break up that county or city in some way, but I think it would probably be challenged on other grounds,” he said.Challenges to Wisconsin’s congressional maps have often had more to do with partisan than racial line-drawing. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, said he wasn’t surprised by the federal decision but reiterated his call for new congressional maps, which he said unfairly gave Republicans a 6-2 seat advantage in a swing state.But two recent judgments in Wisconsin state courts rejected challenges to the state’s congressional maps on the basis that they constitute an unconstitutional “anti-competitive” gerrymander. Those rulings focused not on race, but on whether courts can take up claims based on partisan advantage. Doug Poland, co-founder of the liberal law firm Law Forward, said this ruling could empower lawmakers to pursue partisan goals while making racial challenges harder to prove.But because of Wisconsin’s demographics — a largely white state, with the most significant minority populations concentrated around the Milwaukee area — the state has run into Section 2 challenges far less often than southern states, he said.“As a practical matter, this decision doesn’t have a big impact on Wisconsin at the moment,” he said. “That could change.”There’s more at play among state legislative districts, Burden said. The state has nine majority-minority legislative districts, where a single minority group makes up over half of the population: seven in the Assembly and two in the Senate. Two other districts — one in each chamber — are minority influence districts, where combined minority populations make up a majority.Democrats in Wisconsin have generally steered clear of breaking up minority districts to avoid violating the VRA, Burden said, but packing minority voters in one district sometimes costs them adjacent districts where they might have been competitive if the minority population was more evenly distributed. For that reason, there’s a history of Republicans supporting majority-minority districts in the state.The issue has been a factor in recent redistricting fights. In March 2022, the Wisconsin Supreme Court initially selected Evers’ legislative maps, which created an additional majority-Black Assembly district. But while Evers argued this addition was necessary to comply with the Voting Rights Act, it drew criticism from both sides of the aisle. A Black Democratic legislator criticized the move as diluting Black voices, while Republicans appealed the maps to the U.S. Supreme Court, which sided with the GOP and ordered the Wisconsin Supreme Court to select a different map.If any of the districts are found to be out of compliance with the U.S. Constitution under the ruling via some additional challenge, Burden said, Wisconsin may draw new districts sooner than later.“I don’t know who that advantages,” he said. “It probably depends who’s drawing the lines.”Lennington also pointed out President Donald Trump’s success with Black and Latino voters relative to past GOP candidates, adding that splitting majority-minority legislative districts wouldn’t necessarily give either party an advantage here.What he did predict, though, is that splitting such districts “might polarize us even more” if they were replaced with districts drawn on partisan as opposed to racial lines.“It just might make the red more red and the blue more blue,” he said.Alexander Shur is a reporter for Votebeat based in Wisconsin. Contact Alexander at ashur@votebeat.org.

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Votebeat
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Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Wisconsin’s free newsletter here.Wisconsin will likely face limited immediate impact at both the legislative and congressional level from the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that narrowed how the Voting Rights Act can be used to challenge political maps. But it may make it easier for people to challenge school district and city council maps in court.The ruling in Louisiana v. Callais raises the bar for voting rights challenges by requiring stronger evidence that race, rather than political considerations, drove how districts were drawn, and making it easier for states to defend maps on non-racial grounds. Dan Lennington, the managing vice president and deputy counsel at the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, said that the boundaries that could be most easily struck down as a result of the Wednesday ruling are those that were drawn explicitly for racial reasons. Some examples, he said, are the boundaries for Milwaukee city council districts and certain school districts.Race is a common factor in drawing Milwaukee city council districts, though campaigns to add additional majority-minority districts haven’t always succeeded. For example, departing Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in December 2021 vetoed a proposed city council map because it didn’t include a third Latino-majority district, only for Mayor Cavalier Johnson to sign that same map several weeks later.Lennington also pointed to state laws that use race as a factor to determine school district boundaries. One of those laws explicitly mentions “racial composition of the pupils” as a factor for drawing boundaries — a law that he said is now implicated by the Callais decision.“If a plaintiff comes to us and says that they live in a district that’s been racially gerrymandered, we would take a very close look at that case,” he said.Less likely impact on legislative and congressional levelThere likely won’t be much impact in Wisconsin at the congressional district level because there’s just one majority-minority district in the state, UW-Madison political science professor Barry Burden said ahead of the ruling. That district comprises much of Milwaukee and the surrounding suburbs in Milwaukee County. Even if Section 2 of the VRA did not apply, he said, the district would likely stay much the same given the general principle of keeping communities intact. A decision like the one handed down, he said, “would open the door if line drawers wanted to break up that county or city in some way, but I think it would probably be challenged on other grounds,” he said.Challenges to Wisconsin’s congressional maps have often had more to do with partisan than racial line-drawing. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, said he wasn’t surprised by the federal decision but reiterated his call for new congressional maps, which he said unfairly gave Republicans a 6-2 seat advantage in a swing state.But two recent judgments in Wisconsin state courts rejected challenges to the state’s congressional maps on the basis that they constitute an unconstitutional “anti-competitive” gerrymander. Those rulings focused not on race, but on whether courts can take up claims based on partisan advantage. Doug Poland, co-founder of the liberal law firm Law Forward, said this ruling could empower lawmakers to pursue partisan goals while making racial challenges harder to prove.But because of Wisconsin’s demographics — a largely white state, with the most significant minority populations concentrated around the Milwaukee area — the state has run into Section 2 challenges far less often than southern states, he said.“As a practical matter, this decision doesn’t have a big impact on Wisconsin at the moment,” he said. “That could change.”There’s more at play among state legislative districts, Burden said. The state has nine majority-minority legislative districts, where a single minority group makes up over half of the population: seven in the Assembly and two in the Senate. Two other districts — one in each chamber — are minority influence districts, where combined minority populations make up a majority.Democrats in Wisconsin have generally steered clear of breaking up minority districts to avoid violating the VRA, Burden said, but packing minority voters in one district sometimes costs them adjacent districts where they might have been competitive if the minority population was more evenly distributed. For that reason, there’s a history of Republicans supporting majority-minority districts in the state.The issue has been a factor in recent redistricting fights. In March 2022, the Wisconsin Supreme Court initially selected Evers’ legislative maps, which created an additional majority-Black Assembly district. But while Evers argued this addition was necessary to comply with the Voting Rights Act, it drew criticism from both sides of the aisle. A Black Democratic legislator criticized the move as diluting Black voices, while Republicans appealed the maps to the U.S. Supreme Court, which sided with the GOP and ordered the Wisconsin Supreme Court to select a different map.If any of the districts are found to be out of compliance with the U.S. Constitution under the ruling via some additional challenge, Burden said, Wisconsin may draw new districts sooner than later.“I don’t know who that advantages,” he said. “It probably depends who’s drawing the lines.”Lennington also pointed out President Donald Trump’s success with Black and Latino voters relative to past GOP candidates, adding that splitting majority-minority legislative districts wouldn’t necessarily give either party an advantage here.What he did predict, though, is that splitting such districts “might polarize us even more” if they were replaced with districts drawn on partisan as opposed to racial lines.“It just might make the red more red and the blue more blue,” he said.Alexander Shur is a reporter for Votebeat based in Wisconsin. Contact Alexander at ashur@votebeat.org.

El juez Ismael Moreno cita al exasesor de Ábalos y al empresario a comparecer, a petición de la Fiscalía Anticorrupción, por un nuevo presunto delito de tráfico de influencias en la adquisición de las mascarillas de Soluciones de Gestión.

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Mundiario
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El juez Ismael Moreno cita al exasesor de Ábalos y al empresario a comparecer, a petición de la Fiscalía Anticorrupción, por un nuevo presunto delito de tráfico de influencias en la adquisición de las mascarillas de Soluciones de Gestión.

The apartments would be for people making between 50% and 70% of the area median income. The post Stringtown ‘neighborhood drama’ fuels debate about planned apartments appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Mirror Indy
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The apartments would be for people making between 50% and 70% of the area median income. The post Stringtown ‘neighborhood drama’ fuels debate about planned apartments appeared first on Mirror Indy.

No member of the Orleans delegation voted for the bill, which specifically targets the Orleans Parish clerks offices and will leave Calvin Duncan locked out of his position.

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Verite
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No member of the Orleans delegation voted for the bill, which specifically targets the Orleans Parish clerks offices and will leave Calvin Duncan locked out of his position.

Daqui a um mês, os colombianos vão às urnas para escolher o sucessor de Gustavo Petro na presidência do país. O candidato Iván Cepeda é o escolhido pelo campo da esquerda para esse desafio. O pleito será inevitavelmente impactado pela atual situação da América Latina, que vive sob a ingerência do governo de Donald Trump […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Daqui a um mês, os colombianos vão às urnas para escolher o sucessor de Gustavo Petro na presidência do país. O candidato Iván Cepeda é o escolhido pelo campo da esquerda para esse desafio. O pleito será inevitavelmente impactado pela atual situação da América Latina, que vive sob a ingerência do governo de Donald Trump […] Fonte

19 minutes

South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette will no longer speak at South Carolina State University’s commencement ceremony next week, following outcry from students and legislators, the university president announced Wednesday. The announcement, which was also the historically Black university’s first public acknowledgement it had initially selected Evette to speak, included no alternative speaker for the […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette will no longer speak at South Carolina State University’s commencement ceremony next week, following outcry from students and legislators, the university president announced Wednesday. The announcement, which was also the historically Black university’s first public acknowledgement it had initially selected Evette to speak, included no alternative speaker for the […]

Bass, who currently serves as the mayor of L.A., covered topics ranging from her homelessness approach to city infrastructure.

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Bass, who currently serves as the mayor of L.A., covered topics ranging from her homelessness approach to city infrastructure.

Louisiana’s elected Republican leaders are debating whether to postpone the May 16 primary elections for the state’s six seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, even though absentee ballots have mailed out and early voting in the election is scheduled to start Saturday.  The GOP leaders had indicated the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in a […]

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Louisiana Illuminator
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Louisiana’s elected Republican leaders are debating whether to postpone the May 16 primary elections for the state’s six seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, even though absentee ballots have mailed out and early voting in the election is scheduled to start Saturday.  The GOP leaders had indicated the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in a […]

سازمان ملل: جمهوری اسلامی از آغاز جنگ ٢١ نفر را اعدام و بیش از ۴هزار نفر را بازداشت کرده‌است

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سازمان ملل: جمهوری اسلامی از آغاز جنگ ٢١ نفر را اعدام و بیش از ۴هزار نفر را بازداشت کرده‌است

25 minutes

Times of San Diego
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Robins' staff have begun introducing Val to her new roommate, "Bernie," another coyote living in the center.

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Times of San Diego
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Robins' staff have begun introducing Val to her new roommate, "Bernie," another coyote living in the center.

Ataques de drones ucranianos a terminais de exportação de petróleo na Rússia podem reduzir a produção do país e pressionar preços no mercado global. É o que avalia Igor Ushkov, analista-chefe do Fundo Nacional de Segurança Energética da Rússia. “Se não conseguirmos exportar plenamente o nosso petróleo, teremos que reduzir o volume de produção”, afirmou […] Fonte

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Ataques de drones ucranianos a terminais de exportação de petróleo na Rússia podem reduzir a produção do país e pressionar preços no mercado global. É o que avalia Igor Ushkov, analista-chefe do Fundo Nacional de Segurança Energética da Rússia. “Se não conseguirmos exportar plenamente o nosso petróleo, teremos que reduzir o volume de produção”, afirmou […] Fonte

32 minutes

Times of San Diego
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With the results beating Wall Street's expectations, and the AI chip announcement, shares rose as high as $182.20 in after-hours trading.

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Times of San Diego
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With the results beating Wall Street's expectations, and the AI chip announcement, shares rose as high as $182.20 in after-hours trading.

Congrats to Artemis the German shepherd!

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Congrats to Artemis the German shepherd!

Volunteer-run God’s Bounty food pantry has served the southeast side for 15 years. The post This institution provides free groceries to Franklin Township residents appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Volunteer-run God’s Bounty food pantry has served the southeast side for 15 years. The post This institution provides free groceries to Franklin Township residents appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Unlike the fiasco that was the 2025-26 budget process, both the Michigan House of Representatives and the Michigan Senate have completed their 2026-27 fiscal year budgets and advanced them out of their respective chambers. The House cleared that hurdle last week, while the Senate did so on Wednesday afternoon, passing Senate Bill 878 along strict […]

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Michigan Advance
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Unlike the fiasco that was the 2025-26 budget process, both the Michigan House of Representatives and the Michigan Senate have completed their 2026-27 fiscal year budgets and advanced them out of their respective chambers. The House cleared that hurdle last week, while the Senate did so on Wednesday afternoon, passing Senate Bill 878 along strict […]

38 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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The policy requires Fort Worth leaders to prioritize care for wooded areas, wetlands, wildflowers, and lake and riverfronts.

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Fort Worth Report
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The policy requires Fort Worth leaders to prioritize care for wooded areas, wetlands, wildflowers, and lake and riverfronts.

(The Center Square) – Federal student loan debt is nearing $1.7 trillion, as more than 70% of graduates are not working in their degree field. Yet 72% of students across the U.S. believe their college tuition is a good investment, according to a new WalletHub survey. The report found that only 28% of students say their tuition is not a good investment, highlighting a divide in how students perceive the value of higher education. Meanwhile, 52% said their school is not doing enough to make them financially literate. “I think the one misstep that came out of the [Greatest] Generation post-Depression was this notion that you have to go to college to get a job,” Chip Lupo, Wallet Hub Analyst, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview. Lupo said more emphasis should be placed on alternatives such as trade schools and military training, rather than spending tens of thousands of dollars on a four-year degree and “nothing to show for it.” More than half of respondents, 53%, said social media pressures them to spend beyond their means, adding to financial strain. The survey also revealed mixed views on federal student loans. One in three students said the federal government should not provide loans to individuals attending schools with high tuition costs. Sixty-seven percent of students believe the federal government should provide loans to schools with expensive tuition. “College is expensive across the board. Where is the dividing line between what's expensive and what isn't? It's all relative,” Lupo said. The survey highlights that many students still view college as a worthwhile investment, particularly when it leads to stable employment. However, the findings suggest that confidence in the value of a degree is still strong despite the growing debt burdens. Over 70% of college graduates have not found jobs in their field, raising concerns about the return on investment in higher education. The U.S. Department of Education has proposed new rules aimed at holding colleges and universities accountable for programs that leave graduates with low earnings, as student loan debt continues to grow at $1.7 trillion, The Center Square previously reported. The WalletHub survey was conducted with over 200 full-time and part-time students at a two-year or four-year school. The California State University system declined to comment on the survey’s findings, and the University of California system did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.

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(The Center Square) – Federal student loan debt is nearing $1.7 trillion, as more than 70% of graduates are not working in their degree field. Yet 72% of students across the U.S. believe their college tuition is a good investment, according to a new WalletHub survey. The report found that only 28% of students say their tuition is not a good investment, highlighting a divide in how students perceive the value of higher education. Meanwhile, 52% said their school is not doing enough to make them financially literate. “I think the one misstep that came out of the [Greatest] Generation post-Depression was this notion that you have to go to college to get a job,” Chip Lupo, Wallet Hub Analyst, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview. Lupo said more emphasis should be placed on alternatives such as trade schools and military training, rather than spending tens of thousands of dollars on a four-year degree and “nothing to show for it.” More than half of respondents, 53%, said social media pressures them to spend beyond their means, adding to financial strain. The survey also revealed mixed views on federal student loans. One in three students said the federal government should not provide loans to individuals attending schools with high tuition costs. Sixty-seven percent of students believe the federal government should provide loans to schools with expensive tuition. “College is expensive across the board. Where is the dividing line between what's expensive and what isn't? It's all relative,” Lupo said. The survey highlights that many students still view college as a worthwhile investment, particularly when it leads to stable employment. However, the findings suggest that confidence in the value of a degree is still strong despite the growing debt burdens. Over 70% of college graduates have not found jobs in their field, raising concerns about the return on investment in higher education. The U.S. Department of Education has proposed new rules aimed at holding colleges and universities accountable for programs that leave graduates with low earnings, as student loan debt continues to grow at $1.7 trillion, The Center Square previously reported. The WalletHub survey was conducted with over 200 full-time and part-time students at a two-year or four-year school. The California State University system declined to comment on the survey’s findings, and the University of California system did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.