The L.A. City Ethics Commission said Lee accepted lavish gifts from men who sought business with the city.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

The L.A. City Ethics Commission said Lee accepted lavish gifts from men who sought business with the city.

Deux juges de la Cour pénale internationale (CPI) sont à leur tour visés par des sanctions de Washington. Les États-Unis veulent empêcher la Cour de poursuivre des ressortissants américains ou alliés de pays qui n’en sont pas membres. Depuis l’arrivée de Donald Trump à la Maison Blanche, l’administration distille une à une ses sanctions.

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

Deux juges de la Cour pénale internationale (CPI) sont à leur tour visés par des sanctions de Washington. Les États-Unis veulent empêcher la Cour de poursuivre des ressortissants américains ou alliés de pays qui n’en sont pas membres. Depuis l’arrivée de Donald Trump à la Maison Blanche, l’administration distille une à une ses sanctions.

Deputada afirma que fará enfrentamento à extrema direita e deixa nova candidatura em aberto ‘Não vim fazer amigos’: Heloísa Helena toma posse no lugar de Glauber Braga e promete disputa dura no Congresso apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

Feed icon
Brasil de Fato
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Deputada afirma que fará enfrentamento à extrema direita e deixa nova candidatura em aberto ‘Não vim fazer amigos’: Heloísa Helena toma posse no lugar de Glauber Braga e promete disputa dura no Congresso apareceu primeiro no Brasil de Fato.

32 minutes

Mongabay
Feed icon

The arrival of generative artificial intelligence has unsettled journalism in familiar ways. Traffic models look fragile. Copyright is contested. The marginal cost of producing words has collapsed. It is tempting to conclude that news is becoming less valuable just as machines become more fluent. So far for Mongabay, the opposite is happening. AI systems are […]

Feed icon
Mongabay
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

The arrival of generative artificial intelligence has unsettled journalism in familiar ways. Traffic models look fragile. Copyright is contested. The marginal cost of producing words has collapsed. It is tempting to conclude that news is becoming less valuable just as machines become more fluent. So far for Mongabay, the opposite is happening. AI systems are […]

34 minutes

FactCheck.org
Feed icon

President Donald Trump blitzed through a prime-time address to the nation on Dec. 17, but while short, Trump's speech contained a number of inaccurate or misleading claims, many of which he has repeated in public speeches for months. The post FactChecking Trump’s Rapid-Fire Prime-Time Address appeared first on FactCheck.org.

Feed icon
FactCheck.org
Attribution+

President Donald Trump blitzed through a prime-time address to the nation on Dec. 17, but while short, Trump's speech contained a number of inaccurate or misleading claims, many of which he has repeated in public speeches for months. The post FactChecking Trump’s Rapid-Fire Prime-Time Address appeared first on FactCheck.org.

La tarde de este jueves culminó la intensa búsqueda policial con la entrega del último gendarme que permanecía prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis. Este funcionario compareció finalmente frente a una unidad policial, después de permanecer escondido. Con su entrega, se completa un total de 47 funcionarios de Gendarmería imputados en la causa. Todos ellos pasarán … Continua leyendo "Se entrega último gendarme prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis: 47 exfuncionarios detenidos" The post Se entrega último gendarme prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis: 47 exfuncionarios detenidos appeared first on BioBioChile.

Feed icon
BioBioChile
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

La tarde de este jueves culminó la intensa búsqueda policial con la entrega del último gendarme que permanecía prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis. Este funcionario compareció finalmente frente a una unidad policial, después de permanecer escondido. Con su entrega, se completa un total de 47 funcionarios de Gendarmería imputados en la causa. Todos ellos pasarán … Continua leyendo "Se entrega último gendarme prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis: 47 exfuncionarios detenidos" The post Se entrega último gendarme prófugo de la Operación Apocalipsis: 47 exfuncionarios detenidos appeared first on BioBioChile.

Regulators on Thursday approved a slight reduction to the profits shareholders are allowed to receive from California’s three major investor-owned utilities.  The decision dropped all three major investor-owned power companies’ returns by 0.3%, bringing the shareholder return for Pacific Gas & Electric to just below double digits for the first time in at least two […]

Feed icon
CalMatters
Attribution+

Regulators on Thursday approved a slight reduction to the profits shareholders are allowed to receive from California’s three major investor-owned utilities.  The decision dropped all three major investor-owned power companies’ returns by 0.3%, bringing the shareholder return for Pacific Gas & Electric to just below double digits for the first time in at least two […]

37 minutes

The Center Square
Feed icon

It may be hard to believe, but President Franklin D. Roosevelt once offered a blueprint for property tax reform that remains relevant to state policymakers trying to address property tax reform. Interestingly, this blueprint didn’t come from his progressive New Deal agenda, but rather from a campaign speech he delivered 93 years ago during the 1932 presidential campaign. At the time, then–New York Gov. Roosevelt was not only criticizing President Herbert Hoover for the Great Depression, but also for what he perceived to be the fiscal recklessness of the Hoover administration. He condemned Hoover’s excessive spending and mounting deficits – issues that were primarily the result of the economic downturn. On September 29, 1932, speaking in Sioux City, Iowa, Roosevelt addressed agricultural policy and tariffs, but also made striking remarks about the size and inefficiency of government. Regarding the federal government, Roosevelt warned that it had grown too large and wasteful: “Later in this campaign I propose to analyze the enormous increase in the growth of what you and I call bureaucracy. We are not getting an adequate return for the money we are spending in Washington, or to put it another way, we are spending altogether too much money for Government services that are neither practical nor necessary. And then, in addition to that, we are attempting too many functions. We need to simplify what the Federal Government is giving to the people.” He also accused Hoover of leading “the greatest spending Administration in peace times in all our history,” charging that it had “piled bureau on bureau, commission on commission,” and failed to anticipate the declining earning power of ordinary Americans. “Bureaus and bureaucrats, commissions and commissioners have been retained at the expense of the taxpayer,” Roosevelt lamented. But Roosevelt’s critique wasn’t limited to the federal government, he extended his call for reform to local governments as well. Speaking to Iowans, he emphasized the importance of examining how public funds are distributed across various levels of government: “Half of what you and I pay for the support of Government — in other words, on the average in this country fifty cents out of every dollar — goes to local government, that is, cities, townships, counties and lots of other small units; and the other half, the other fifty cents, goes to the State and Nation. This fifty cents that goes to local government, therefore, points to the necessity for attention to local government.” Although he was running for federal office, Roosevelt urged local governments to adopt fiscally conservative principles: “As a broad proposition you and I know we are not using our present agencies of local government with real economy and efficiency. That means we must require our public servants to give a fuller measure of service for what they are paid. It means we must eliminate useless office holders. It means every public official; every employee of local government must determine that he owes it to the country to cooperate in the great purpose of saving the taxpayers’ money.” He also warned that “we have too many tax layers,” arguing that true relief could come only through “resolute, courageous cutting.” Even though he acknowledged he had no direct authority over local governments, Roosevelt said he felt a moral obligation to address the issue of government efficiency and taxpayer responsibility: “And I propose to use this position of high responsibility to discuss up and down the country, in all seasons and at all times, the duty of reducing taxes, of increasing the efficiency of Government, of cutting out the underbrush around our governmental structure, of getting the most public service for every dollar paid in taxation. That I pledge you, and nothing I have said in the campaign transcends in importance this covenant with the taxpayers of the United States.” Roosevelt’s message in Sioux City was one of fiscal conservatism—calling for spending restraint, streamlined government, and more efficient public service. Coolidge regarded “a good budget as among the most noblest monuments of virtue.” “Economy in the cost of government is inseparable from reduction in taxes. We cannot have the latter without the former.” stated Coolidge. Those same principles are urgently needed today as Iowa grapples with the challenge of rising property taxes. State policymakers across the nation are trying to figure out a policy solution to rising property taxes. Government spending drives taxation and if tax relief is the objective, then policymakers must work to limit spending through conservative budgeting and reforming government. Unfortunately, Roosevelt’s rhetoric in Sioux City did not match his policies under the New Deal. Nevertheless, 93 years ago in Sioux City, FDR, whether intentional or not, provided the framework to address property tax reform through limiting spending and reducing government.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

It may be hard to believe, but President Franklin D. Roosevelt once offered a blueprint for property tax reform that remains relevant to state policymakers trying to address property tax reform. Interestingly, this blueprint didn’t come from his progressive New Deal agenda, but rather from a campaign speech he delivered 93 years ago during the 1932 presidential campaign. At the time, then–New York Gov. Roosevelt was not only criticizing President Herbert Hoover for the Great Depression, but also for what he perceived to be the fiscal recklessness of the Hoover administration. He condemned Hoover’s excessive spending and mounting deficits – issues that were primarily the result of the economic downturn. On September 29, 1932, speaking in Sioux City, Iowa, Roosevelt addressed agricultural policy and tariffs, but also made striking remarks about the size and inefficiency of government. Regarding the federal government, Roosevelt warned that it had grown too large and wasteful: “Later in this campaign I propose to analyze the enormous increase in the growth of what you and I call bureaucracy. We are not getting an adequate return for the money we are spending in Washington, or to put it another way, we are spending altogether too much money for Government services that are neither practical nor necessary. And then, in addition to that, we are attempting too many functions. We need to simplify what the Federal Government is giving to the people.” He also accused Hoover of leading “the greatest spending Administration in peace times in all our history,” charging that it had “piled bureau on bureau, commission on commission,” and failed to anticipate the declining earning power of ordinary Americans. “Bureaus and bureaucrats, commissions and commissioners have been retained at the expense of the taxpayer,” Roosevelt lamented. But Roosevelt’s critique wasn’t limited to the federal government, he extended his call for reform to local governments as well. Speaking to Iowans, he emphasized the importance of examining how public funds are distributed across various levels of government: “Half of what you and I pay for the support of Government — in other words, on the average in this country fifty cents out of every dollar — goes to local government, that is, cities, townships, counties and lots of other small units; and the other half, the other fifty cents, goes to the State and Nation. This fifty cents that goes to local government, therefore, points to the necessity for attention to local government.” Although he was running for federal office, Roosevelt urged local governments to adopt fiscally conservative principles: “As a broad proposition you and I know we are not using our present agencies of local government with real economy and efficiency. That means we must require our public servants to give a fuller measure of service for what they are paid. It means we must eliminate useless office holders. It means every public official; every employee of local government must determine that he owes it to the country to cooperate in the great purpose of saving the taxpayers’ money.” He also warned that “we have too many tax layers,” arguing that true relief could come only through “resolute, courageous cutting.” Even though he acknowledged he had no direct authority over local governments, Roosevelt said he felt a moral obligation to address the issue of government efficiency and taxpayer responsibility: “And I propose to use this position of high responsibility to discuss up and down the country, in all seasons and at all times, the duty of reducing taxes, of increasing the efficiency of Government, of cutting out the underbrush around our governmental structure, of getting the most public service for every dollar paid in taxation. That I pledge you, and nothing I have said in the campaign transcends in importance this covenant with the taxpayers of the United States.” Roosevelt’s message in Sioux City was one of fiscal conservatism—calling for spending restraint, streamlined government, and more efficient public service. Coolidge regarded “a good budget as among the most noblest monuments of virtue.” “Economy in the cost of government is inseparable from reduction in taxes. We cannot have the latter without the former.” stated Coolidge. Those same principles are urgently needed today as Iowa grapples with the challenge of rising property taxes. State policymakers across the nation are trying to figure out a policy solution to rising property taxes. Government spending drives taxation and if tax relief is the objective, then policymakers must work to limit spending through conservative budgeting and reforming government. Unfortunately, Roosevelt’s rhetoric in Sioux City did not match his policies under the New Deal. Nevertheless, 93 years ago in Sioux City, FDR, whether intentional or not, provided the framework to address property tax reform through limiting spending and reducing government.

El presidente de EE UU desafía las previsiones negativas y apuesta por promesas de crecimiento en un contexto de inflación persistente, precios altos y una popularidad en retroceso.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

El presidente de EE UU desafía las previsiones negativas y apuesta por promesas de crecimiento en un contexto de inflación persistente, precios altos y una popularidad en retroceso.

41 minutes

Mirror Indy
Feed icon

Some think a new corporation should control IPS buildings and buses. Advocates say not so fast. The post IPS advocates prepare to take their fight back to the Statehouse appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Feed icon
Mirror Indy
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Some think a new corporation should control IPS buildings and buses. Advocates say not so fast. The post IPS advocates prepare to take their fight back to the Statehouse appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Following a Trump administration proposal to cut off all Medicare and Medicaid dollars to hospitals that give gender-affirming care to youth, advocates are sounding the alarm.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

Following a Trump administration proposal to cut off all Medicare and Medicaid dollars to hospitals that give gender-affirming care to youth, advocates are sounding the alarm.

43 minutes

Oregon Capital Chronicle
Feed icon

The Trump administration has ordered Washington’s last coal-fired power station to continue burning coal, just weeks before it was scheduled to shut down and convert to natural gas fuel. This has sparked yet another clash between the federal government and Washington state, where leaders are aiming to get coal power out of the electricity grid […]

Feed icon
Oregon Capital Chronicle
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The Trump administration has ordered Washington’s last coal-fired power station to continue burning coal, just weeks before it was scheduled to shut down and convert to natural gas fuel. This has sparked yet another clash between the federal government and Washington state, where leaders are aiming to get coal power out of the electricity grid […]

A coalition of New Mexico environmental advocacy groups this week endorsed $218 million in funding requests that would bolster water conservation and restoration projects. Lawmakers are expected to tackle these projects as they craft the state’s budget in January’s legislative session.

Feed icon
Source NM
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

A coalition of New Mexico environmental advocacy groups this week endorsed $218 million in funding requests that would bolster water conservation and restoration projects. Lawmakers are expected to tackle these projects as they craft the state’s budget in January’s legislative session.

Attorney General Gentner Drummond says tribal wildlife plans in Oklahoma supersede the state’s on their reservations.

Feed icon
KOSU
Attribution+

Attorney General Gentner Drummond says tribal wildlife plans in Oklahoma supersede the state’s on their reservations.

46 minutes

Mississippi Today
Feed icon

The board that oversees Mississippi's public universities will allow Denise Jones Gregory, interim president of Jackson State, to apply for the permanent role.

Feed icon
Mississippi Today
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The board that oversees Mississippi's public universities will allow Denise Jones Gregory, interim president of Jackson State, to apply for the permanent role.

47 minutes

Oregon Capital Chronicle
Feed icon

The U.S. House on Thursday passed, 211-204, a bill to remove Endangered Species Act protections for the gray wolf outside Alaska. The bill, sponsored by Colorado Republican Lauren Boebert, would direct the Interior secretary to reissue a 2020 rule removing ESA protections that delisted wolves other than the Mexican wolf in the lower 48 states, while stipulating […]

Feed icon
Oregon Capital Chronicle
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The U.S. House on Thursday passed, 211-204, a bill to remove Endangered Species Act protections for the gray wolf outside Alaska. The bill, sponsored by Colorado Republican Lauren Boebert, would direct the Interior secretary to reissue a 2020 rule removing ESA protections that delisted wolves other than the Mexican wolf in the lower 48 states, while stipulating […]

47 minutes

The Center Square
Feed icon

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Justice is suing Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger for access to the state's voter rolls. The Justice Department said information provided by Raffensperger's office did not include all of the information requested, including the voter's full name, date of birth, residential address, state driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number. Raffensperger said he shared the state's maintenance practices and public voter roll data with the Justice Department on Dec. 8. "Georgia has the cleanest voter rolls in the country because we verify citizenship through the federal SAVE database, use SSA data to remove dead voters, and share data with other states to identify and remove voters who have moved," Raffensperger said in a statement. "We look forward to working together to eliminate the federal barriers that prevent even cleaner voter rolls. Hardworking Georgians can rest easy knowing this data was shared strictly in accordance with state law that protect voters’ privacy." The Justice Department is asking a judge to cite Raffensperger under the Civil Rights Act and order him to provide the date with all the information within five days of any court order. Last week, Fulton County Clerk of Court Che Alexander was also accused by the Justice Department of failing to produce voter rolls. The clerk's office said it is not at liberty to comment on pending legislation. Trump has been at odds with Raffensperger after a 2021 phone call with President Donald Trump, in which the president told Raffensperger, "I just want to find 11,780 votes," referring to the number by which he was trailing former President Joe Biden in the race. Biden was declared the winner of the presidential election in Georgia. The phone call between Trump and Raffensperger was part of an indictment against Trump and 18 others on election interference charges. The case was dismissed last month. The District of Columbia, Illinois and Wisconsin were also sued on Thursday, bringing the number of states facing lawsuits over their voter rolls to 22. “The law is clear: states need to give us this information, so we can do our duty to protect American citizens from vote dilution,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said in a release. “Today’s filings show that regardless of which party is in charge of a particular state, the Department of Justice will firmly stand on the side of election integrity and transparency.” Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi voluntarily released their voter rolls, according to the Justice Department. TCS was unsuccessful prior to publication getting confirmation from Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett's office.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Justice is suing Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger for access to the state's voter rolls. The Justice Department said information provided by Raffensperger's office did not include all of the information requested, including the voter's full name, date of birth, residential address, state driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number. Raffensperger said he shared the state's maintenance practices and public voter roll data with the Justice Department on Dec. 8. "Georgia has the cleanest voter rolls in the country because we verify citizenship through the federal SAVE database, use SSA data to remove dead voters, and share data with other states to identify and remove voters who have moved," Raffensperger said in a statement. "We look forward to working together to eliminate the federal barriers that prevent even cleaner voter rolls. Hardworking Georgians can rest easy knowing this data was shared strictly in accordance with state law that protect voters’ privacy." The Justice Department is asking a judge to cite Raffensperger under the Civil Rights Act and order him to provide the date with all the information within five days of any court order. Last week, Fulton County Clerk of Court Che Alexander was also accused by the Justice Department of failing to produce voter rolls. The clerk's office said it is not at liberty to comment on pending legislation. Trump has been at odds with Raffensperger after a 2021 phone call with President Donald Trump, in which the president told Raffensperger, "I just want to find 11,780 votes," referring to the number by which he was trailing former President Joe Biden in the race. Biden was declared the winner of the presidential election in Georgia. The phone call between Trump and Raffensperger was part of an indictment against Trump and 18 others on election interference charges. The case was dismissed last month. The District of Columbia, Illinois and Wisconsin were also sued on Thursday, bringing the number of states facing lawsuits over their voter rolls to 22. “The law is clear: states need to give us this information, so we can do our duty to protect American citizens from vote dilution,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said in a release. “Today’s filings show that regardless of which party is in charge of a particular state, the Department of Justice will firmly stand on the side of election integrity and transparency.” Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi voluntarily released their voter rolls, according to the Justice Department. TCS was unsuccessful prior to publication getting confirmation from Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett's office.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday to loosen federal restrictions on marijuana, which Trump said reflected the drug’s potential medical benefits while discouraging recreational use. The order moves cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III on the Federal Drug Administration’s list of controlled substances. Schedule I, the most restrictive category under federal law, indicates […]

Feed icon
Alaska Beacon
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday to loosen federal restrictions on marijuana, which Trump said reflected the drug’s potential medical benefits while discouraging recreational use. The order moves cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III on the Federal Drug Administration’s list of controlled substances. Schedule I, the most restrictive category under federal law, indicates […]

En Côte d’Ivoire, la campagne pour les élections législatives débute vendredi 19 décembre au matin. Elle s’étendra sur une semaine, jusqu’au vendredi 26 décembre à minuit. Au total, 255 sièges de députés sont en jeu. Le scrutin est prévu le samedi 27 décembre. L’Assemblée nationale sortante était dominée par le Rassemblement des Houphouëtistes pour la démocratie et la paix (RHDP), qui détenait 163 sièges. Le RHDP, le parti au pouvoir, part favori à ce scrutin, organisé deux mois après la réélection à 89,77 % du président Alassane Ouattara.

Feed icon
Radio France Internationale
Attribution+

En Côte d’Ivoire, la campagne pour les élections législatives débute vendredi 19 décembre au matin. Elle s’étendra sur une semaine, jusqu’au vendredi 26 décembre à minuit. Au total, 255 sièges de députés sont en jeu. Le scrutin est prévu le samedi 27 décembre. L’Assemblée nationale sortante était dominée par le Rassemblement des Houphouëtistes pour la démocratie et la paix (RHDP), qui détenait 163 sièges. Le RHDP, le parti au pouvoir, part favori à ce scrutin, organisé deux mois après la réélection à 89,77 % du président Alassane Ouattara.

52 minutes

FAIR
Feed icon

Despite Trump’s pronouncement, a "peace" has not held, though the fantasy narrative has.

Feed icon
FAIR
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Despite Trump’s pronouncement, a "peace" has not held, though the fantasy narrative has.