7 minutes

Inside Climate News
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The world’s largest meat company is backing away from its climate and deforestation commitments after claiming for several years that reducing its greenhouse gas emissions was a key goal. In its recent annual sustainability report, released last week, JBS dropped its ambitious commitment to reach net-zero emissions by 2040 and omitted any mentions of its […]

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Inside Climate News
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The world’s largest meat company is backing away from its climate and deforestation commitments after claiming for several years that reducing its greenhouse gas emissions was a key goal. In its recent annual sustainability report, released last week, JBS dropped its ambitious commitment to reach net-zero emissions by 2040 and omitted any mentions of its […]

Through commission and omission, the final four questions we must deal with on October 19 aim to support a provincial march into federal jurisdiction – say no to all nine! The post Danielle Smith’s referendum questions push right-wing policies intended to divide and weaken Canada appeared first on rabble.ca.

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rabble.ca
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Through commission and omission, the final four questions we must deal with on October 19 aim to support a provincial march into federal jurisdiction – say no to all nine! The post Danielle Smith’s referendum questions push right-wing policies intended to divide and weaken Canada appeared first on rabble.ca.

9 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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法国与西班牙队的一场“巨人之战”几小时后就要在达拉斯打响了,德尚指挥的法兰西军团想连续第三届进入世界杯决赛,首先必须扳倒亚马尔领衔的欧洲冠军西班牙。

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法国国际广播电台
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法国与西班牙队的一场“巨人之战”几小时后就要在达拉斯打响了,德尚指挥的法兰西军团想连续第三届进入世界杯决赛,首先必须扳倒亚马尔领衔的欧洲冠军西班牙。

Please join us in congratulating Diné journalist Chelsea Curtis on being named the 2026 Richard LaCourse Award for Investigative Journalism recipient by the Indigenous Journalists Association for her in-depth investigative reporting with Arizona Luminaria. Named for Yakama journalist Richard LaCourse, the award honors groundbreaking work by Indigenous journalists who serve as watchdogs, using innovative reporting […] The post AZ Luminaria reporter wins Indigenous Journalists Association’s top investigative award appeared first on AZ Luminaria.

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Arizona Luminaria
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Please join us in congratulating Diné journalist Chelsea Curtis on being named the 2026 Richard LaCourse Award for Investigative Journalism recipient by the Indigenous Journalists Association for her in-depth investigative reporting with Arizona Luminaria. Named for Yakama journalist Richard LaCourse, the award honors groundbreaking work by Indigenous journalists who serve as watchdogs, using innovative reporting […] The post AZ Luminaria reporter wins Indigenous Journalists Association’s top investigative award appeared first on AZ Luminaria.

Organizaciones locales, líderes de fe, aliados y miembros de la comunidad, se han unido para lanzar un proyecto humanitario para ayudar a cientos de niños que se quedaron sin hogar tras los terremotos que azotaron a Venezuela el 24 de junio.  La entrada UNISAL y entidades de fe lanzan proyecto humanitario para ayudar a niños venezolanos que quedaron solos tras los terremotos se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. UNISAL y entidades de fe lanzan proyecto humanitario para ayudar a niños venezolanos que quedaron solos tras los terremotos was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:32 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

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Enlace Latino NC
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Organizaciones locales, líderes de fe, aliados y miembros de la comunidad, se han unido para lanzar un proyecto humanitario para ayudar a cientos de niños que se quedaron sin hogar tras los terremotos que azotaron a Venezuela el 24 de junio.  La entrada UNISAL y entidades de fe lanzan proyecto humanitario para ayudar a niños venezolanos que quedaron solos tras los terremotos se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. UNISAL y entidades de fe lanzan proyecto humanitario para ayudar a niños venezolanos que quedaron solos tras los terremotos was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:32 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

Pickleball player Renee Love went to Better at Pickleball courts located at the Chula Vista Elite Athletic Training Center on Aug. 19, 2025, to take part in a few pickleball matches.  After a pickleball game, Love took a break on the side of the court to catch her breath.  She went to lean against a […]

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Times of San Diego
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Pickleball player Renee Love went to Better at Pickleball courts located at the Chula Vista Elite Athletic Training Center on Aug. 19, 2025, to take part in a few pickleball matches.  After a pickleball game, Love took a break on the side of the court to catch her breath.  She went to lean against a […]

17 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation on Monday to make building affordable housing easier throughout California. In a press conference at a new residential building under construction in Oakland’s Chinatown neighborhood, Newsom signed Assembly Bill 179. The bill, which passed the Legislature on July 2, allocates more bond money and low-income tax credits to build affordable housing. The new law, which takes effect immediately, also lowers impact fees, which builders are required to pay when building new homes. The bill also stipulates providing roughly $900 million of state money to the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program, with 97% of it going to large cities and counties. About 3% is allocated to tribes. Newsom said the effort was a change in state and local policy that effectively made the development of affordable housing more difficult over the last several decades. “It was intentionally designed – it wasn’t by chance,” Newsom said at the press conference. “It wasn’t by happenstance. It was designed not to build, and that required us not just to think differently and to argue for different results, but to rebuild the machine.” The last several years saw a shift in the political will in Sacramento and in communities across the state to change laws to move building projects along faster, Newsom added – seeing the construction of more than 3.5 million new housing units across the state. The building that housed the press conference in Oakland on Monday is the first phase of a two-block residential development that will ultimately provide 9,700 affordable homes for seniors, according to Janelle Chan, CEO of the East Bay Asian Local Development Corp. Roughly $26 million in tax credits from the state and tax-exempt bonds helped pay for that one development alone. “This building is truly a result of years of community planning,” Chan said at the press conference. “The community rallied around this idea of re-connecting the site back into our neighborhood and filling it once again with homes, culture and life.” According to a report released this year by the California Affordable Housing Partnership, California put state funds toward paying for 23,000 new homes in 2025, which was 20% of the funding needed to meet statewide goals of funding the necessary number of affordable housing units. Data from the National Low-Income Housing Coalition show that the state needs 982,000 more affordable homes to address an ever-worsening affordable housing shortage. George Andrews, press secretary for the Assembly Republican Caucus, told The Center Square on Monday that while Newsom’s efforts to increase affordable housing is a good thing, it took too long to ramp up efforts to meet the state’s housing needs. “Any effort to cut red tape is welcome,” Andrews said. “It also raises an obvious question: If this was the answer, why did it take until the final months of Gov. Newsom's administration to do it?” Newsom promised to build 3.5 million new homes by 2025, but as of last year, didn’t meet that mark, Andrews said. “He didn't come close,” Andrews added. “That was his benchmark, and by that measure, he fell short.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation on Monday to make building affordable housing easier throughout California. In a press conference at a new residential building under construction in Oakland’s Chinatown neighborhood, Newsom signed Assembly Bill 179. The bill, which passed the Legislature on July 2, allocates more bond money and low-income tax credits to build affordable housing. The new law, which takes effect immediately, also lowers impact fees, which builders are required to pay when building new homes. The bill also stipulates providing roughly $900 million of state money to the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program, with 97% of it going to large cities and counties. About 3% is allocated to tribes. Newsom said the effort was a change in state and local policy that effectively made the development of affordable housing more difficult over the last several decades. “It was intentionally designed – it wasn’t by chance,” Newsom said at the press conference. “It wasn’t by happenstance. It was designed not to build, and that required us not just to think differently and to argue for different results, but to rebuild the machine.” The last several years saw a shift in the political will in Sacramento and in communities across the state to change laws to move building projects along faster, Newsom added – seeing the construction of more than 3.5 million new housing units across the state. The building that housed the press conference in Oakland on Monday is the first phase of a two-block residential development that will ultimately provide 9,700 affordable homes for seniors, according to Janelle Chan, CEO of the East Bay Asian Local Development Corp. Roughly $26 million in tax credits from the state and tax-exempt bonds helped pay for that one development alone. “This building is truly a result of years of community planning,” Chan said at the press conference. “The community rallied around this idea of re-connecting the site back into our neighborhood and filling it once again with homes, culture and life.” According to a report released this year by the California Affordable Housing Partnership, California put state funds toward paying for 23,000 new homes in 2025, which was 20% of the funding needed to meet statewide goals of funding the necessary number of affordable housing units. Data from the National Low-Income Housing Coalition show that the state needs 982,000 more affordable homes to address an ever-worsening affordable housing shortage. George Andrews, press secretary for the Assembly Republican Caucus, told The Center Square on Monday that while Newsom’s efforts to increase affordable housing is a good thing, it took too long to ramp up efforts to meet the state’s housing needs. “Any effort to cut red tape is welcome,” Andrews said. “It also raises an obvious question: If this was the answer, why did it take until the final months of Gov. Newsom's administration to do it?” Newsom promised to build 3.5 million new homes by 2025, but as of last year, didn’t meet that mark, Andrews said. “He didn't come close,” Andrews added. “That was his benchmark, and by that measure, he fell short.”

The young Milwaukee artist creates paintings with rich colors and powerful Black figures. The post Squire Robinson leads a new generation of Milwaukee artists with his distinctly bold style appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

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Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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The young Milwaukee artist creates paintings with rich colors and powerful Black figures. The post Squire Robinson leads a new generation of Milwaukee artists with his distinctly bold style appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

Federal agencies and investigators have offered limited information, prompting calls for outside scrutiny.

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The Texas Tribune
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Federal agencies and investigators have offered limited information, prompting calls for outside scrutiny.

ویدیوی منتسب به انفجارهای شدید در کنارک هم‌زمان با آغاز دوباره حملات آمریکا به جمهوری اسلامی در روز سه‌شنبه

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صدای آمریکا
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ویدیوی منتسب به انفجارهای شدید در کنارک هم‌زمان با آغاز دوباره حملات آمریکا به جمهوری اسلامی در روز سه‌شنبه

29 minutes

Mídia NINJA
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Em um cenário marcado por guerras e disputas políticas, o Mundial segue sendo um dos poucos acontecimentos capazes de reunir os povos O post Copa promove união em meio à polarização apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

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Mídia NINJA
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Em um cenário marcado por guerras e disputas políticas, o Mundial segue sendo um dos poucos acontecimentos capazes de reunir os povos O post Copa promove união em meio à polarização apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

Sharon K. Moorefield – Jun 21, 2026
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31 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Sharon K. Moorefield, age 86, passed away peacefully on June 21, 2026. After moving to Fort Worth in the 1960s, Sharon made the city her home for more than six decades. She was devoted to her husband, Charles “Chuck” Moorefield, and together they built a life centered on family. Although Chuck passed away in 1996, she never stopped loving him, and many in Fort Worth knew her by the personalized license plate on her car that read, “Ms. Chuck,” a simple reminder of the man who always held a special place in her heart. Before becoming a homemaker, Sharon worked as a waitress, but her greatest joy was caring for her family and home. She had a way of making people feel welcome and loved, and for Sharon, family was never limited to blood—if she cared about you, you became family. She enjoyed life’s simple pleasures, bowling leagues with Chuck, bingo, her dogs, and drives around town, but nothing brought her more joy than being surrounded by the people she loved, sharing laughter and making memories together. In her later years, Sharon lived with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Though those illnesses changed many things, they never changed the love she shared with her family or the love they had for her. Sharon was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Chuck, and by her children. She is survived by her grandson, Shawn, and his family, as well as countless others who became like family and were blessed by her love and friendship. Those who knew Sharon will remember her warm smile, faithful heart, and the way she made people feel at home. Though she will be deeply missed, we find comfort in knowing she is reunited with Chuck and her loved ones, resting peacefully in the presence of her Savior. A private memorial service will be held at a later date.

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Fort Worth Report
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Sharon K. Moorefield, age 86, passed away peacefully on June 21, 2026. After moving to Fort Worth in the 1960s, Sharon made the city her home for more than six decades. She was devoted to her husband, Charles “Chuck” Moorefield, and together they built a life centered on family. Although Chuck passed away in 1996, she never stopped loving him, and many in Fort Worth knew her by the personalized license plate on her car that read, “Ms. Chuck,” a simple reminder of the man who always held a special place in her heart. Before becoming a homemaker, Sharon worked as a waitress, but her greatest joy was caring for her family and home. She had a way of making people feel welcome and loved, and for Sharon, family was never limited to blood—if she cared about you, you became family. She enjoyed life’s simple pleasures, bowling leagues with Chuck, bingo, her dogs, and drives around town, but nothing brought her more joy than being surrounded by the people she loved, sharing laughter and making memories together. In her later years, Sharon lived with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Though those illnesses changed many things, they never changed the love she shared with her family or the love they had for her. Sharon was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Chuck, and by her children. She is survived by her grandson, Shawn, and his family, as well as countless others who became like family and were blessed by her love and friendship. Those who knew Sharon will remember her warm smile, faithful heart, and the way she made people feel at home. Though she will be deeply missed, we find comfort in knowing she is reunited with Chuck and her loved ones, resting peacefully in the presence of her Savior. A private memorial service will be held at a later date.

32 minutes

Utah News Dispatch
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President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Monday to again shrink Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments in Utah.  The move continues a longstanding game of tug-of-war between multiple presidential administrations that has changed the boundaries of the national monuments several times over nearly a decade.  It also marks the second time Trump […]

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Utah News Dispatch
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President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Monday to again shrink Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments in Utah.  The move continues a longstanding game of tug-of-war between multiple presidential administrations that has changed the boundaries of the national monuments several times over nearly a decade.  It also marks the second time Trump […]

En el condado de Durham Enlace Latino NC identificó tres centros de salud y clínicas comunitarias, además de una clínica afiliada a la Asociación de Clínicas Gratuitas y Benéficas de Carolina del Norte que atienden a pacientes en el área. Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham El Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham ofrece servicios clínicos y […] La entrada ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:15 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

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Enlace Latino NC
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En el condado de Durham Enlace Latino NC identificó tres centros de salud y clínicas comunitarias, además de una clínica afiliada a la Asociación de Clínicas Gratuitas y Benéficas de Carolina del Norte que atienden a pacientes en el área. Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham El Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham ofrece servicios clínicos y […] La entrada ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:15 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

En el condado de Durham Enlace Latino NC identificó tres centros de salud y clínicas comunitarias, además de una clínica afiliada a la Asociación de Clínicas Gratuitas y Benéficas de Carolina del Norte que atienden a pacientes en el área. Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham El Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham ofrece servicios clínicos y […] La entrada ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:15 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

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Enlace Latino NC
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En el condado de Durham Enlace Latino NC identificó tres centros de salud y clínicas comunitarias, además de una clínica afiliada a la Asociación de Clínicas Gratuitas y Benéficas de Carolina del Norte que atienden a pacientes en el área. Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham El Departamento de Salud del Condado de Durham ofrece servicios clínicos y […] La entrada ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Cuáles son los centros y clínicas comunitarias disponibles en el condado de Durham? was first posted on julio 13, 2026 at 6:15 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

32 minutes

Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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Harambee, Riverwest and other neighborhoods along the Beerline Trail are getting more air quality sensors as part of a project with MKE FreshAir Collective and Riverworks Development Corp. The post MKE FreshAir Collective adding air quality sensors along Beerline Trail appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

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Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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Harambee, Riverwest and other neighborhoods along the Beerline Trail are getting more air quality sensors as part of a project with MKE FreshAir Collective and Riverworks Development Corp. The post MKE FreshAir Collective adding air quality sensors along Beerline Trail appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

لەشکری ئەمەریکا ڕایگەیاند لە بەرامبەر ئەو هێرشانەی ڕژێمی ئێران دەیانکاتە سەر خەڵکی سیڤیلی بێ تاوان و کەشتییە بازرگانییەکان لە تەنگەی هورمز، لەسەر فەرمانی سەرۆک ترامپ فڕۆکە جەنگییەکانمان بۆ شەوی سێیەم هێرشی ئاسمانییان کردە سەر هێزەکانی ئێران. فەرماندەیی ناوەندیی لەشکری ئەمەریکا (سێنتکۆم) دووشەممە ڕایگەیاند،" ئەمڕۆ لە کاتژمێر 4:45 ی پاش نیوەڕۆ بە کاتی ڕۆژهەڵاتی ئەمەریکا، فەرماندەیی ناوەندی لەشکری ئەمەریکا بۆ شەوی سێیەم لەسەر یەک هێرشە ئاسمانییەکانی لە دژی ئێران دەستپێکرد، ئەمەش لەسەر...

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ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
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لەشکری ئەمەریکا ڕایگەیاند لە بەرامبەر ئەو هێرشانەی ڕژێمی ئێران دەیانکاتە سەر خەڵکی سیڤیلی بێ تاوان و کەشتییە بازرگانییەکان لە تەنگەی هورمز، لەسەر فەرمانی سەرۆک ترامپ فڕۆکە جەنگییەکانمان بۆ شەوی سێیەم هێرشی ئاسمانییان کردە سەر هێزەکانی ئێران. فەرماندەیی ناوەندیی لەشکری ئەمەریکا (سێنتکۆم) دووشەممە ڕایگەیاند،" ئەمڕۆ لە کاتژمێر 4:45 ی پاش نیوەڕۆ بە کاتی ڕۆژهەڵاتی ئەمەریکا، فەرماندەیی ناوەندی لەشکری ئەمەریکا بۆ شەوی سێیەم لەسەر یەک هێرشە ئاسمانییەکانی لە دژی ئێران دەستپێکرد، ئەمەش لەسەر...

34 minutes

Arkansas Advocate
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Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders will travel to Belgium, England and Ireland next week for an overseas trade mission, officials announced Monday.  Sanders’ trip is scheduled from July 19-24 and includes a stop at the Farnborough International Airshow in England and meetings with business and government leaders in Belgium and Ireland, according to a press […]

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Arkansas Advocate
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Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders will travel to Belgium, England and Ireland next week for an overseas trade mission, officials announced Monday.  Sanders’ trip is scheduled from July 19-24 and includes a stop at the Farnborough International Airshow in England and meetings with business and government leaders in Belgium and Ireland, according to a press […]

(The Center Square) - Arizona Republican voters will decide on who takes on state Attorney General Kris Mayes in the Nov. 3 general election. Senate President Warren Petersen, R-Glendale, and attorney Rodney Glassman are competing in the Republican primary. Mayes is running unopposed in the Democratic primary. The primary elections for both parties will be held on July 21. Petersen said he has the “most legal experience and the most experience doing what the attorney general does.” “This is a management policy position. I’m the only person in this race who has managed one of the largest institutions over the last four years as Senate president,” Petersen told The Center Square. Petersen also said he has been called the “de facto attorney general” because Arizona law allows a Senate president to have legal standing. “I am now managing over 110 cases or amicus briefs,” he said. Despite Petersen highlighting his legal experience, Glassman told The Center Square that he is the “only” person in the Republican primary who has “ever practiced law.” Glassman, who is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force JAG Corps Reserve, has a history as a prosecutor and private-sector attorney. Petersen is “unqualified to run the largest law office in the state,” the attorney said, citing the fact that Petersen received his law license in 2023. Glassman added that Petersen “has never prosecuted a criminal as a lawyer and has never worked in a law office as a lawyer. The attorney said Petersen is named as the client in lawsuits. “He has not filed any lawsuits. He has used tax dollars to hire private sector attorneys to do legal work on behalf of the state,” Glassman noted. The Center Square followed up with Petersen’s campaign regarding Glassman’s claims that he has never practiced law, but the campaign did not respond before publication. As attorney general, Petersen said he would focus on fighting crime, upholding laws and the state Constitution, and eliminating “fraud and corruption.” Glassman said on his first day in office as attorney general, he would remove Arizona from “42 politically charged lawfare lawsuits [Mayes] has filed against the Trump administration and rescind the political indictments Mayes has made against President Trump’s allies.” On how he would work with a Democratic governor as attorney general, Petersen highlighted his experience working in a divided government over the last four years. In his role as Senate president, Petersen has negotiated budgets with Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs. Petersen said if Hobbs were to break any laws, he would hold her accountable. Glassman said regardless of which party is in the governor's office, the attorney general works for the people of Arizona. In the past, Glassman has run as a Democrat. He was a Democratic member of the Tucson City Council from 2007 to 2009. As the Democratic candidate, he lost to former Sen. Jon McCain in the 2010 Arizona Senate general election. Glassman told The Center Square he left the Democratic Party on the same day President Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, July 16, 2015. The attorney noted over time, the Democratic Party “went insane.” Since 2018, Glassman has campaigned as a Republican. During this time span, he has run for Arizona Corporation Commission, Maricopa County assessor and attorney general, but has failed to win these races. According to records from the Arizona Secretary of State's Office, Glassman has a cash-on-hand advantage over Petersen of $2.3 million to $1.5 million. Glassman received more than $502,000 in donations from individuals and $5,000 from the Western Alliance Bancorporation Political Action Committee. Petersen got more than $281,000 in donations from individuals and $15,200 from political committees. The largest contributions from political action committees came from Pinnacle West PAC at $2,500, UNS Energy Corp. PAC at $2,000 and Blue Cross & Blue Shield PAC at $1,000. Both Glassman and Petersen have less cash on hand than Mayes, who has $2.6 million. Of that, more than $895,000 came from donations by individuals, and $20,500 was donated by political committees. The largest PAC contribution was a $10,000 donation by the Arizona Education Association Fund for Public Education. The AEA is the state's largest teacher union. Mayes said her top three priorities if she were to be reelected attorney general would be to “continue making Arizona safer by taking on the cartels and fraudsters, protect working families by holding powerful corporations accountable, and defend Arizona's water supplies, economy, and constitutional rights.” Mayes told The Center Square by email that her office has “seized more than 27 million fentanyl pills off [Arizona] streets, reduced fraudulent Medicaid billing by more than 92%, recovered over $1.5 billion for Arizona taxpayers, consumers, and businesses and held powerful corporations accountable when they broke the law and drove up costs for working families.” The attorney general said her “office has never backed down from taking on those harming Arizonans.” “My job isn't to protect the powerful. It's to protect the people of Arizona, and that's exactly what we've done,” she added. Regarding the concern that she has been too focused on suing the Trump administration, Mayes said she has saved Arizona taxpayers $1.5 billion by challenging the administration. “Protecting Arizona means doing both: protecting Arizonans from any crime occurring in our state and standing up to any administration when its actions hurt Arizonans,” she explained.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) - Arizona Republican voters will decide on who takes on state Attorney General Kris Mayes in the Nov. 3 general election. Senate President Warren Petersen, R-Glendale, and attorney Rodney Glassman are competing in the Republican primary. Mayes is running unopposed in the Democratic primary. The primary elections for both parties will be held on July 21. Petersen said he has the “most legal experience and the most experience doing what the attorney general does.” “This is a management policy position. I’m the only person in this race who has managed one of the largest institutions over the last four years as Senate president,” Petersen told The Center Square. Petersen also said he has been called the “de facto attorney general” because Arizona law allows a Senate president to have legal standing. “I am now managing over 110 cases or amicus briefs,” he said. Despite Petersen highlighting his legal experience, Glassman told The Center Square that he is the “only” person in the Republican primary who has “ever practiced law.” Glassman, who is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force JAG Corps Reserve, has a history as a prosecutor and private-sector attorney. Petersen is “unqualified to run the largest law office in the state,” the attorney said, citing the fact that Petersen received his law license in 2023. Glassman added that Petersen “has never prosecuted a criminal as a lawyer and has never worked in a law office as a lawyer. The attorney said Petersen is named as the client in lawsuits. “He has not filed any lawsuits. He has used tax dollars to hire private sector attorneys to do legal work on behalf of the state,” Glassman noted. The Center Square followed up with Petersen’s campaign regarding Glassman’s claims that he has never practiced law, but the campaign did not respond before publication. As attorney general, Petersen said he would focus on fighting crime, upholding laws and the state Constitution, and eliminating “fraud and corruption.” Glassman said on his first day in office as attorney general, he would remove Arizona from “42 politically charged lawfare lawsuits [Mayes] has filed against the Trump administration and rescind the political indictments Mayes has made against President Trump’s allies.” On how he would work with a Democratic governor as attorney general, Petersen highlighted his experience working in a divided government over the last four years. In his role as Senate president, Petersen has negotiated budgets with Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs. Petersen said if Hobbs were to break any laws, he would hold her accountable. Glassman said regardless of which party is in the governor's office, the attorney general works for the people of Arizona. In the past, Glassman has run as a Democrat. He was a Democratic member of the Tucson City Council from 2007 to 2009. As the Democratic candidate, he lost to former Sen. Jon McCain in the 2010 Arizona Senate general election. Glassman told The Center Square he left the Democratic Party on the same day President Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, July 16, 2015. The attorney noted over time, the Democratic Party “went insane.” Since 2018, Glassman has campaigned as a Republican. During this time span, he has run for Arizona Corporation Commission, Maricopa County assessor and attorney general, but has failed to win these races. According to records from the Arizona Secretary of State's Office, Glassman has a cash-on-hand advantage over Petersen of $2.3 million to $1.5 million. Glassman received more than $502,000 in donations from individuals and $5,000 from the Western Alliance Bancorporation Political Action Committee. Petersen got more than $281,000 in donations from individuals and $15,200 from political committees. The largest contributions from political action committees came from Pinnacle West PAC at $2,500, UNS Energy Corp. PAC at $2,000 and Blue Cross & Blue Shield PAC at $1,000. Both Glassman and Petersen have less cash on hand than Mayes, who has $2.6 million. Of that, more than $895,000 came from donations by individuals, and $20,500 was donated by political committees. The largest PAC contribution was a $10,000 donation by the Arizona Education Association Fund for Public Education. The AEA is the state's largest teacher union. Mayes said her top three priorities if she were to be reelected attorney general would be to “continue making Arizona safer by taking on the cartels and fraudsters, protect working families by holding powerful corporations accountable, and defend Arizona's water supplies, economy, and constitutional rights.” Mayes told The Center Square by email that her office has “seized more than 27 million fentanyl pills off [Arizona] streets, reduced fraudulent Medicaid billing by more than 92%, recovered over $1.5 billion for Arizona taxpayers, consumers, and businesses and held powerful corporations accountable when they broke the law and drove up costs for working families.” The attorney general said her “office has never backed down from taking on those harming Arizonans.” “My job isn't to protect the powerful. It's to protect the people of Arizona, and that's exactly what we've done,” she added. Regarding the concern that she has been too focused on suing the Trump administration, Mayes said she has saved Arizona taxpayers $1.5 billion by challenging the administration. “Protecting Arizona means doing both: protecting Arizonans from any crime occurring in our state and standing up to any administration when its actions hurt Arizonans,” she explained.

Sus referencias a la justicia, la democracia y el papel de las instituciones han provocado una fuerte reacción del Ejecutivo y han reactivado un debate de fondo sobre los límites de la crítica religiosa en una sociedad aconfesional.

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Sus referencias a la justicia, la democracia y el papel de las instituciones han provocado una fuerte reacción del Ejecutivo y han reactivado un debate de fondo sobre los límites de la crítica religiosa en una sociedad aconfesional.