7 minutes

Midwest Newsroom
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You know this: The cost of life’s essentials is going up. Rising everyday expenses, including food, energy and transportation, are straining household budgets. We invite you to share how you are affording life in 2026 in a short survey.

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Midwest Newsroom
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You know this: The cost of life’s essentials is going up. Rising everyday expenses, including food, energy and transportation, are straining household budgets. We invite you to share how you are affording life in 2026 in a short survey.

As soon as Amanda Pacheco stepped onto the streets of Babcock Ranch — a fast-growing, master-planned community near Fort Myers, Florida — she knew it was where she and her family belonged. “It was like a Hallmark movie,” she said of that Friday night visit, dotted with groups of families, food trucks and live music. […]

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The 74
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As soon as Amanda Pacheco stepped onto the streets of Babcock Ranch — a fast-growing, master-planned community near Fort Myers, Florida — she knew it was where she and her family belonged. “It was like a Hallmark movie,” she said of that Friday night visit, dotted with groups of families, food trucks and live music. […]

La liste rouge des espèces menacées a été mise à jour ce jeudi 9 avril. C'est l'Union internationale pour la conservation de la nature (UICN) qui l'annonce. Le manchot empereur et l'otarie à fourrure antarctique sont désormais tous les deux classés comme espèces en danger. Un signal d’alarme, souligne l'organisation, alors que le changement climatique accélère la crise d’extinction sous nos yeux.

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Radio France Internationale
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La liste rouge des espèces menacées a été mise à jour ce jeudi 9 avril. C'est l'Union internationale pour la conservation de la nature (UICN) qui l'annonce. Le manchot empereur et l'otarie à fourrure antarctique sont désormais tous les deux classés comme espèces en danger. Un signal d’alarme, souligne l'organisation, alors que le changement climatique accélère la crise d’extinction sous nos yeux.

باتت المعرفة اليوم أمام تحديات جديدة في زمن التحولات المعرفية والتكنولوجية، مما يجعل الحاجة ملحة إلى امتلاك أدوات الوساطة بين اللغات والثقافات. وقد كانت الترجمة دائما جسرا سحريا لبناء شبكات التواصل بين العقول واللغات والثقافات. لذلك، يُعدّ الكتاب الصادر عن الهيئة الأكاديمية العليا للترجمة بأكاديمية المملكة المغربية، بعنوان “تعليم الترجمة وتعلّمها في المغرب: بين الاستراتيجيات … ظهرت المقالة تعليم الترجمة وتعلمها في المغرب أولاً على التنويري.

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محتوى
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باتت المعرفة اليوم أمام تحديات جديدة في زمن التحولات المعرفية والتكنولوجية، مما يجعل الحاجة ملحة إلى امتلاك أدوات الوساطة بين اللغات والثقافات. وقد كانت الترجمة دائما جسرا سحريا لبناء شبكات التواصل بين العقول واللغات والثقافات. لذلك، يُعدّ الكتاب الصادر عن الهيئة الأكاديمية العليا للترجمة بأكاديمية المملكة المغربية، بعنوان “تعليم الترجمة وتعلّمها في المغرب: بين الاستراتيجيات … ظهرت المقالة تعليم الترجمة وتعلمها في المغرب أولاً على التنويري.

Премьер-министр Израиля Биньямин Нетаниягу сообщил, что переговоры с Ливаном начнутся в кратчайшие сроки.

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Медуза
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Премьер-министр Израиля Биньямин Нетаниягу сообщил, что переговоры с Ливаном начнутся в кратчайшие сроки.

A câmara de deputados do Vietnã elegeu por unanimidade o secretário-geral To Lam como presidente do Vietnã durante a sessão do 16º Congresso Nacional, nesta terça-feira (7). A informação foi divulgada no site do governo do país. O seu mandato será de cinco anos, até 2031. To Lam ocupava o cargo de presidente desde maio […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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A câmara de deputados do Vietnã elegeu por unanimidade o secretário-geral To Lam como presidente do Vietnã durante a sessão do 16º Congresso Nacional, nesta terça-feira (7). A informação foi divulgada no site do governo do país. O seu mandato será de cinco anos, até 2031. To Lam ocupava o cargo de presidente desde maio […] Fonte

The state told Stan Grot he wasn’t able to administer elections after he was charged with a number of felonies in 2023.

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Bridge Michigan
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The state told Stan Grot he wasn’t able to administer elections after he was charged with a number of felonies in 2023.

Бүгүн, 9-апрелде Бишкекте өтүп жаткан күрөш боюнча Азия чемпионатында кыргызстандык балбан кыз Мээрим Жуманазарова алтын медал тагынды. Жуманазарова кыз-келиндер күрөшүнөн 68 килограммга чейинки салмакта финалда жапониялык Мива Морикаваны 2:1 эсебинде жеңип, мындай сыймыкка татыды. Ал бул чемпионатта чейрек финалда вьетнамдык Тхи Линг Дангды (11:1), жарым финалда кытайлык Зелу Лини утуп, финалга чыккан. Бул күнү 76 килограммга чейинки салмакта Айпери Медет кызы финалда монголиялык...

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Азаттык үналгысы
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Бүгүн, 9-апрелде Бишкекте өтүп жаткан күрөш боюнча Азия чемпионатында кыргызстандык балбан кыз Мээрим Жуманазарова алтын медал тагынды. Жуманазарова кыз-келиндер күрөшүнөн 68 килограммга чейинки салмакта финалда жапониялык Мива Морикаваны 2:1 эсебинде жеңип, мындай сыймыкка татыды. Ал бул чемпионатта чейрек финалда вьетнамдык Тхи Линг Дангды (11:1), жарым финалда кытайлык Зелу Лини утуп, финалга чыккан. Бул күнү 76 килограммга чейинки салмакта Айпери Медет кызы финалда монголиялык...

18 minutes

Radio France Internationale
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Le verdict est tombé sans surprendre personne : la Cour suprême a déclaré les activités de l’ONG Memorial comme « extrémistes ». L’affaire a été jugée à huis clos.

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Radio France Internationale
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Le verdict est tombé sans surprendre personne : la Cour suprême a déclaré les activités de l’ONG Memorial comme « extrémistes ». L’affaire a été jugée à huis clos.

20 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) — Maine business leaders are calling on state lawmakers to reject a proposed wealth tax on the state's top earners to plug gaps in spending, warning that it would hurt the economy and drive job creators to lower-tax states. In an open letter to lawmakers, Maine Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Patrick Woodcock urged them to not to move ahead with provisions of the supplemental budget that call for a new 2% surtax on incomes over $1 million and tapping out the state's so-called “rainy day" reserve fund. "At a time when Maine should be focused on growing Maine’s economy by strengthening our business climate, encouraging investment, and supporting long-term growth, the budget will tax our job creators, depletes our budget reserves, and fails to enact the pro-growth tax policies to support research and development and reward hard-working employees here in Maine," he wrote. Woodcock said the governor's budget proposal is "a laundry list of short-term populist impulses that collectively will undermine our state’s long-term economic growth." "As a result, the proposed surtax would increase the tax burden on job creators, reinvestment, and expansion," he said. "This will slow economic activity, discourage capital investment, make Maine less competitive relative to other states and will directly impact Maine’s ability to attract and retain top talent in our state." The Legislature's Democratic-controlled budget committee added the surtax in a change to the state's two-year budget. The 2% tax would apply to taxable income above $1 million for single filers, $1.5 million for heads of households and $1.5 million for joint filers. The Legislature's nonpartisan budget office said the tax would impact about 2,600 tax filers and rope in $150 million over two years. Mills, who is seeking the Democratic Party's nomination to run for U.S. Senate, initially opposed the wealth tax but said she agreed to support it in exchange for property tax relief in the spending plan, which is still being debated by lawmakers. "It is crucial that we maintain these important investments for Maine people into the future, especially as we face such economic uncertainty because of actions of the Trump Administration," Mills said. But business leaders said the supplemental budget includes other items that raise concerns for employers, including a provision that calls for tapping $324 million from Maine’s Budget Stabilization Fund to help pay for Mill's proposal to cut $300 "affordability" checks to taxpayers this year. In his letter, Woodcock called the proposal "fiscally imprudent" and said it "prioritizes short-term relief over long-term economic growth." He said the plan to raid the stabilization fund, also comes as legislative leaders have proposed rolling back tax incentives for businesses and doing away with a program that allows employers to deduct a portion of their property taxes for purchases. "Maine needs to focus on economic growth, workforce development, and fiscal responsibility by maintaining a stable, predictable tax environment that supports businesses of all sizes and encourages investment across the state," he wrote.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) — Maine business leaders are calling on state lawmakers to reject a proposed wealth tax on the state's top earners to plug gaps in spending, warning that it would hurt the economy and drive job creators to lower-tax states. In an open letter to lawmakers, Maine Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Patrick Woodcock urged them to not to move ahead with provisions of the supplemental budget that call for a new 2% surtax on incomes over $1 million and tapping out the state's so-called “rainy day" reserve fund. "At a time when Maine should be focused on growing Maine’s economy by strengthening our business climate, encouraging investment, and supporting long-term growth, the budget will tax our job creators, depletes our budget reserves, and fails to enact the pro-growth tax policies to support research and development and reward hard-working employees here in Maine," he wrote. Woodcock said the governor's budget proposal is "a laundry list of short-term populist impulses that collectively will undermine our state’s long-term economic growth." "As a result, the proposed surtax would increase the tax burden on job creators, reinvestment, and expansion," he said. "This will slow economic activity, discourage capital investment, make Maine less competitive relative to other states and will directly impact Maine’s ability to attract and retain top talent in our state." The Legislature's Democratic-controlled budget committee added the surtax in a change to the state's two-year budget. The 2% tax would apply to taxable income above $1 million for single filers, $1.5 million for heads of households and $1.5 million for joint filers. The Legislature's nonpartisan budget office said the tax would impact about 2,600 tax filers and rope in $150 million over two years. Mills, who is seeking the Democratic Party's nomination to run for U.S. Senate, initially opposed the wealth tax but said she agreed to support it in exchange for property tax relief in the spending plan, which is still being debated by lawmakers. "It is crucial that we maintain these important investments for Maine people into the future, especially as we face such economic uncertainty because of actions of the Trump Administration," Mills said. But business leaders said the supplemental budget includes other items that raise concerns for employers, including a provision that calls for tapping $324 million from Maine’s Budget Stabilization Fund to help pay for Mill's proposal to cut $300 "affordability" checks to taxpayers this year. In his letter, Woodcock called the proposal "fiscally imprudent" and said it "prioritizes short-term relief over long-term economic growth." He said the plan to raid the stabilization fund, also comes as legislative leaders have proposed rolling back tax incentives for businesses and doing away with a program that allows employers to deduct a portion of their property taxes for purchases. "Maine needs to focus on economic growth, workforce development, and fiscal responsibility by maintaining a stable, predictable tax environment that supports businesses of all sizes and encourages investment across the state," he wrote.

21 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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據法新社引述越南高官透露,“越共總書記兼國家主席蘇林定於4月15日至17日訪問中國”,屆時他將與習近平會面。

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法國國際廣播電台
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據法新社引述越南高官透露,“越共總書記兼國家主席蘇林定於4月15日至17日訪問中國”,屆時他將與習近平會面。

21 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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据法新社引述越南高官透露,“越共总书记兼国家主席苏林定于4月15日至17日访问中国”,届时他将与习近平会面。

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法国国际广播电台
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据法新社引述越南高官透露,“越共总书记兼国家主席苏林定于4月15日至17日访问中国”,届时他将与习近平会面。

བཀྲིས་ལྷུན་པོར་ནང་ཆོས་དང་ཚན་རིག་གི་བགྲོ་གླེང་འཚོཊ་ཤིང་། ཚན་རིག་གིས་བྱམས་སྙིང་རྗེ་གོང་སྤེལ་ཐད་ཕན་གྱི་ཡོད་པ་གསུངས།

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ཨེ་ཤེ་ཡ་རང་དབང་རླུང་འཕྲིན་ཁང་
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བཀྲིས་ལྷུན་པོར་ནང་ཆོས་དང་ཚན་རིག་གི་བགྲོ་གླེང་འཚོཊ་ཤིང་། ཚན་རིག་གིས་བྱམས་སྙིང་རྗེ་གོང་སྤེལ་ཐད་ཕན་གྱི་ཡོད་པ་གསུངས།

22 minutes

ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
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سەرۆکی ویلایەتە یەکگرتوەکانی ئەمەریکا دۆناڵد ترامپ پاش کۆبوونەوەی لەگەڵ مارک ڕووتە سکرتێری گشتی ناتۆ لە کۆشکی سپی، ڕەخنەی لە شێوازی وەڵامدانەوەی ناتۆ گرت سەبارەت بە شەڕی دژ بە ڕژێمی ئێران. دۆناڵد ترامپ ڕۆژی پێنجشەممە لە تۆڕی تروث رایگەیاند "ناتۆ لەوێ نەبوو" واتە لەگەڵمان نەبوو، ئەمەش لەکاتێکدا ئەمەریکا داوای یارمەتیکرد بۆ کردنەوەی تەنگەی هورمز، بەڵام کۆمەڵێک لە وڵاتانی ئەورووپایی یارمەتی ئەمەریکایان نەدا و ڕێگەشیان نەدا لە ئاسمانیانەوە کەرەستەی سەربازی بۆ شەڕی ئێران بگوازرێتەوە. ترامپ...

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ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
Public Domain

سەرۆکی ویلایەتە یەکگرتوەکانی ئەمەریکا دۆناڵد ترامپ پاش کۆبوونەوەی لەگەڵ مارک ڕووتە سکرتێری گشتی ناتۆ لە کۆشکی سپی، ڕەخنەی لە شێوازی وەڵامدانەوەی ناتۆ گرت سەبارەت بە شەڕی دژ بە ڕژێمی ئێران. دۆناڵد ترامپ ڕۆژی پێنجشەممە لە تۆڕی تروث رایگەیاند "ناتۆ لەوێ نەبوو" واتە لەگەڵمان نەبوو، ئەمەش لەکاتێکدا ئەمەریکا داوای یارمەتیکرد بۆ کردنەوەی تەنگەی هورمز، بەڵام کۆمەڵێک لە وڵاتانی ئەورووپایی یارمەتی ئەمەریکایان نەدا و ڕێگەشیان نەدا لە ئاسمانیانەوە کەرەستەی سەربازی بۆ شەڕی ئێران بگوازرێتەوە. ترامپ...

רב ערב 09.04.26
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

24 minutes

ערב רב
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כל מה שחדש באתר המגזין הפוסט רב ערב 09.04.26 הופיע ראשון בערב רב Erev Rav

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ערב רב
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כל מה שחדש באתר המגזין הפוסט רב ערב 09.04.26 הופיע ראשון בערב רב Erev Rav

(The Center Square) — Legal watchdog groups are accusing New York trial lawyers of funneling millions of dollars into democratic lawmakers’ political campaigns in an effort to stall Gov. Kathy Hochul’s crackdown on auto insurance fraud. The American Tort Reform Association said the New York State Trial Lawyers Association contributed nearly $6.5 million to state lawmakers between 2022 and 2025, including sizable contributions to political action committees controlled by Democratic Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins. "It’s no surprise that wealthy lawyers who benefit most from the status quo are fighting tooth and nail to keep the cash machine flowing to pad their pockets — and to maintain their influence in Albany," said Lauren Sheets Jarrell, the association’s vice president and counsel for civil justice policy. "While they’re dumping millions into political campaigns and TV ads to squeeze more out of everyone else, hardworking families pay for their greed." The campaign contributions were highlighted in a recent report by the Lawsuit Reform Alliance of New York, which said trial lawyers have fueled a "fraudemic" of bogus claims with TV ads and are now pouring money into efforts to maintain the status quo in Albany. "New Yorkers are being gaslit by their elected representatives at the request of the ambulance chaser lobby," Tom Stebbins, the group's executive director, said in a statement. "Every family, local government, trucking company, grocery store owner, and farmer knows that their insurance costs are out of control and the sensational trial lawyer billboards on the highway are a big piece of the puzzle." "It’s time to shake the stink of past plaintiffs' lawyer influence schemes and shenanigans and get on board with these reforms," he added. "Legislators need to serve their constituents, not their trial lawyer donors." Hochul's plans call for cracking down on auto fraud by toughening state regulations, ramping up investigations of alleged insurance fraud, and targeting physicians who provide bogus diagnoses for victims of staged crashes. Hochul's proposal, unveiled as part of her budget, would revive the defunct state Motor Vehicle Theft and Insurance Fraud Prevention Board and empower it to investigate and prosecute insurance fraud. The plan also calls for legal action against New York drivers who illegally register their vehicles in other states, which critics say artificially decreases insurance coverage and raises costs. "Gov. Hochul is offering commonsense solutions to crack down on fraud and make New York more affordable for everyone, and instead of doing something that might help their constituents, lawmakers are siding with politically connected trial attorneys," Sheets Jarrell said. New Yorkers pay some of the highest car insurance rates in the nation, totaling just over $4,000 annually on average, nearly $1,500 above the national average, according to state and federal data. Government and industry groups say insurance rates are driven up by a combination of fraud, litigation, legal loopholes and enforcement gaps. On Tuesday, the delivery giant FedEx filed a lawsuit against a New York law firm, accusing it of orchestrating a multi-million dollar scheme that used staged car accidents to drive up insurance payouts. The company filed a lawsuit under a RICO statute, which is normally used by prosecutors to target organized crime.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) — Legal watchdog groups are accusing New York trial lawyers of funneling millions of dollars into democratic lawmakers’ political campaigns in an effort to stall Gov. Kathy Hochul’s crackdown on auto insurance fraud. The American Tort Reform Association said the New York State Trial Lawyers Association contributed nearly $6.5 million to state lawmakers between 2022 and 2025, including sizable contributions to political action committees controlled by Democratic Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins. "It’s no surprise that wealthy lawyers who benefit most from the status quo are fighting tooth and nail to keep the cash machine flowing to pad their pockets — and to maintain their influence in Albany," said Lauren Sheets Jarrell, the association’s vice president and counsel for civil justice policy. "While they’re dumping millions into political campaigns and TV ads to squeeze more out of everyone else, hardworking families pay for their greed." The campaign contributions were highlighted in a recent report by the Lawsuit Reform Alliance of New York, which said trial lawyers have fueled a "fraudemic" of bogus claims with TV ads and are now pouring money into efforts to maintain the status quo in Albany. "New Yorkers are being gaslit by their elected representatives at the request of the ambulance chaser lobby," Tom Stebbins, the group's executive director, said in a statement. "Every family, local government, trucking company, grocery store owner, and farmer knows that their insurance costs are out of control and the sensational trial lawyer billboards on the highway are a big piece of the puzzle." "It’s time to shake the stink of past plaintiffs' lawyer influence schemes and shenanigans and get on board with these reforms," he added. "Legislators need to serve their constituents, not their trial lawyer donors." Hochul's plans call for cracking down on auto fraud by toughening state regulations, ramping up investigations of alleged insurance fraud, and targeting physicians who provide bogus diagnoses for victims of staged crashes. Hochul's proposal, unveiled as part of her budget, would revive the defunct state Motor Vehicle Theft and Insurance Fraud Prevention Board and empower it to investigate and prosecute insurance fraud. The plan also calls for legal action against New York drivers who illegally register their vehicles in other states, which critics say artificially decreases insurance coverage and raises costs. "Gov. Hochul is offering commonsense solutions to crack down on fraud and make New York more affordable for everyone, and instead of doing something that might help their constituents, lawmakers are siding with politically connected trial attorneys," Sheets Jarrell said. New Yorkers pay some of the highest car insurance rates in the nation, totaling just over $4,000 annually on average, nearly $1,500 above the national average, according to state and federal data. Government and industry groups say insurance rates are driven up by a combination of fraud, litigation, legal loopholes and enforcement gaps. On Tuesday, the delivery giant FedEx filed a lawsuit against a New York law firm, accusing it of orchestrating a multi-million dollar scheme that used staged car accidents to drive up insurance payouts. The company filed a lawsuit under a RICO statute, which is normally used by prosecutors to target organized crime.

Gov. Abigail Spanberger on Wednesday announced she signed another slate of bipartisan bills as part of her affordability agenda, just days before her Monday action deadline. The latest tranche of legislation set to become law focused on health, housing and ratepayer protections. Utility costs have skyrocketed in the state and power demand is strained by […]

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Virginia Mercury
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Gov. Abigail Spanberger on Wednesday announced she signed another slate of bipartisan bills as part of her affordability agenda, just days before her Monday action deadline. The latest tranche of legislation set to become law focused on health, housing and ratepayer protections. Utility costs have skyrocketed in the state and power demand is strained by […]

25 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Michigan ranks among the nation’s biggest losers in interstate migration, with residents continuing to leave at a steady pace. This is according to a new analysis from the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, which found Michigan ranked 43rd-worst nationally for net interstate migration in 2022, with the state losing a resident every 1 hour and 2 minutes on average. The report, which used Internal Revenue Service migration data, also found Michigan struggling to retain key taxpayer demographics. The state ranked 38th worst nationally for residents earning more than $200,000 and 45th for net migration among residents under age 35, indicating losses among both higher earners and younger workers. Looking at longer-term trends, Michigan ranked 41st nationally for net change in residents from interstate migration between 2013 and 2022. Researchers said the findings reflect a broader national shift, with taxpayers continuing to move from higher-tax states to lower-tax states. “Taxpayers are fleeing high-tax states and heading to low-tax ones,” the report stated. In 2022, a taxpayer moved to Texas or Florida roughly every four and a half minutes, while one left California about every two and a half minutes. Texas, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee ranked as the top destinations for migrants, while California, New York, Illinois, New Jersey and Massachusetts saw the largest losses. The report emphasized that migration data offers a clear signal of taxpayer preferences. “Polls may miss the mark,” the report stated. “Elections can swing on the personality and character of the candidates, but taxpayers voting with their feet are usually making a financial decision.” It also points to tax policy as the most consistent driver of those decisions, while acknowledging other factors such as housing, jobs and family ties. “At the macro level, the single best predictor of which states will gain new residents from interstate migration and which states will lose them is tax policy,” the report added. The report highlights that migration trends are especially pronounced among higher-income households. Florida gained more than 50,000 residents earning over $200,000 in 2022, far more than any other state, while Texas also saw significant gains. Younger Americans are also contributing to the shift, though the report notes their ongoing mobility can make trends harder to interpret. “Bringing in young people is not much good if many of them head for the exits once they are ready to truly settle down,” the report stated. Those population shifts carry fiscal consequences. The report estimates Michigan’s losses will result in a roughly $113 million reduction in state and local tax revenue in 2026. The cumulative impact between 2013 and 2022 is estimated at $755 million. “A steady loss of taxpayers to other states can pose a real problem to a state’s budget over the long term,” the report warns. “After all, a taxpayer who moves from California to Florida in 2013 does not merely stop paying taxes to California in 2013 — their tax dollars go to Florida for every subsequent year that they stay in Florida. This compounding effect can make the long-term impact of migration quite devastating (or, in the winners’ case, enriching) to a state’s budget.” More-recent census data showed some shift in positive population growth, making it likely Michigan will hold onto all 13 of its Electoral College votes when congressional seats are reapportioned in 2030. This is according to previous reporting by The Center Square. In response to the NTUF report, Michigan Forward, a conservative advocacy group, placed blame on Democratic leadership in the state, particularly Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. “When people are looking for a place to live, work, and raise a family, they’re not choosing Michigan, and Gretchen Whitmer has no one to blame but herself,” said Gabe Butzke, a spokesperson for the group. “She prevented income tax relief, vetoed education scholarships, and passed a radical Green New Deal that will raise the average Michigan resident’s energy bill by $2,700 a year, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise when people look for somewhere else to live.” Whitmer, who has promoted policies aimed at economic growth and population retention throughout her time as governor, recently said she would give herself an “A” grade for her performance in making Michigan a place people want to live and work.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Michigan ranks among the nation’s biggest losers in interstate migration, with residents continuing to leave at a steady pace. This is according to a new analysis from the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, which found Michigan ranked 43rd-worst nationally for net interstate migration in 2022, with the state losing a resident every 1 hour and 2 minutes on average. The report, which used Internal Revenue Service migration data, also found Michigan struggling to retain key taxpayer demographics. The state ranked 38th worst nationally for residents earning more than $200,000 and 45th for net migration among residents under age 35, indicating losses among both higher earners and younger workers. Looking at longer-term trends, Michigan ranked 41st nationally for net change in residents from interstate migration between 2013 and 2022. Researchers said the findings reflect a broader national shift, with taxpayers continuing to move from higher-tax states to lower-tax states. “Taxpayers are fleeing high-tax states and heading to low-tax ones,” the report stated. In 2022, a taxpayer moved to Texas or Florida roughly every four and a half minutes, while one left California about every two and a half minutes. Texas, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee ranked as the top destinations for migrants, while California, New York, Illinois, New Jersey and Massachusetts saw the largest losses. The report emphasized that migration data offers a clear signal of taxpayer preferences. “Polls may miss the mark,” the report stated. “Elections can swing on the personality and character of the candidates, but taxpayers voting with their feet are usually making a financial decision.” It also points to tax policy as the most consistent driver of those decisions, while acknowledging other factors such as housing, jobs and family ties. “At the macro level, the single best predictor of which states will gain new residents from interstate migration and which states will lose them is tax policy,” the report added. The report highlights that migration trends are especially pronounced among higher-income households. Florida gained more than 50,000 residents earning over $200,000 in 2022, far more than any other state, while Texas also saw significant gains. Younger Americans are also contributing to the shift, though the report notes their ongoing mobility can make trends harder to interpret. “Bringing in young people is not much good if many of them head for the exits once they are ready to truly settle down,” the report stated. Those population shifts carry fiscal consequences. The report estimates Michigan’s losses will result in a roughly $113 million reduction in state and local tax revenue in 2026. The cumulative impact between 2013 and 2022 is estimated at $755 million. “A steady loss of taxpayers to other states can pose a real problem to a state’s budget over the long term,” the report warns. “After all, a taxpayer who moves from California to Florida in 2013 does not merely stop paying taxes to California in 2013 — their tax dollars go to Florida for every subsequent year that they stay in Florida. This compounding effect can make the long-term impact of migration quite devastating (or, in the winners’ case, enriching) to a state’s budget.” More-recent census data showed some shift in positive population growth, making it likely Michigan will hold onto all 13 of its Electoral College votes when congressional seats are reapportioned in 2030. This is according to previous reporting by The Center Square. In response to the NTUF report, Michigan Forward, a conservative advocacy group, placed blame on Democratic leadership in the state, particularly Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. “When people are looking for a place to live, work, and raise a family, they’re not choosing Michigan, and Gretchen Whitmer has no one to blame but herself,” said Gabe Butzke, a spokesperson for the group. “She prevented income tax relief, vetoed education scholarships, and passed a radical Green New Deal that will raise the average Michigan resident’s energy bill by $2,700 a year, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise when people look for somewhere else to live.” Whitmer, who has promoted policies aimed at economic growth and population retention throughout her time as governor, recently said she would give herself an “A” grade for her performance in making Michigan a place people want to live and work.

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — More than two years after the discovery of a $1.8 billion accounting error within the state’s books, South Carolina’s top banker continues to balk at taking out long-term loans for major construction projects at the state’s three research universities. This leaves the ultimate cost to public colleges — and therefore students and taxpayers […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — More than two years after the discovery of a $1.8 billion accounting error within the state’s books, South Carolina’s top banker continues to balk at taking out long-term loans for major construction projects at the state’s three research universities. This leaves the ultimate cost to public colleges — and therefore students and taxpayers […]

Shtetet e Bashkuara kanë qenë të qarta në qëndrimin e tyre se, normalizimi i marrëdhënieve është rruga e vetme përpara për Kosovën dhe Serbinë.

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Radio Evropa e Lirë
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Shtetet e Bashkuara kanë qenë të qarta në qëndrimin e tyre se, normalizimi i marrëdhënieve është rruga e vetme përpara për Kosovën dhe Serbinë.