CT's State Elections Enforcement Commission found Rep. Elliott slightly shy of the $335,500 needed to qualify for a $3.75 million grant.

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CT Mirror
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CT's State Elections Enforcement Commission found Rep. Elliott slightly shy of the $335,500 needed to qualify for a $3.75 million grant.

State officials say it could take years for students to access Workforce Pell grants, with aid initially available only to students in a handful of carefully scrutinized programs. Federal financial aid for career training is here. When will Wisconsinites benefit? is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

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Wisconsin Watch
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State officials say it could take years for students to access Workforce Pell grants, with aid initially available only to students in a handful of carefully scrutinized programs. Federal financial aid for career training is here. When will Wisconsinites benefit? is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

In ‘a win for artists,’ performer, director and community organizer Signe Harriday is taking the lead at Pillsbury United Communities. The post For one of Minneapolis’ largest nonprofits, a theater kid has become the boss appeared first on MinnPost.

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MinnPost
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In ‘a win for artists,’ performer, director and community organizer Signe Harriday is taking the lead at Pillsbury United Communities. The post For one of Minneapolis’ largest nonprofits, a theater kid has become the boss appeared first on MinnPost.

(The Center Square) – Another Wisconsin group has filed a lawsuit against the state’s Department of Public Instruction, this time over a $34,000 price tag to receive records related to educator license denials since 2018. The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty requested records of those denials for applicants that failed to complete an approved program on Aug. 13, 2025 and received a response that DPI would charge $17,007 to review the 1,381 denied applications by hand. WILL then attempted to narrow the request and DPI doubled the cost estimate to $34,014. “An informed electorate is essential to representative government, which is why Wisconsin law strongly favors public access to government records,” WILL Associate Counsel Lauren Greuel said in a statement. “After months of delay, DPI is attempting to price the public out of that access by imposing tens of thousands of dollars in unlawful fees. Government transparency cannot depend on whether citizens can afford to pay for it.” WILL filed the lawsuit asking the court to direct DPI to release the records without the fees, which the group calls “unlawful,” stating that state open records law allows only limited fees for producing records that may not exceed an agency’s actual, necessary, and direct costs. “Manually reviewing by hand and screenshotting each denied application are not actual, necessary, and direct costs the DPI may impose,” WILL argued. “Even if the DPI could charge for those tasks, DPIs unreasonable delay in responding to the request, coupled with its excessive $34,014 fee, amounts to an unlawful denial of access to public records. WILL is asking the court to order production of the records and impose the remedies authorized by Wisconsin law.” DPI’s teacher licensure process has been under scrutiny after a Capital Times series last year showing how the department kept records of sexual misconduct from teachers under wraps and out of the public eye. The series led to legislative hearings and a response from DPI claiming that the outlets’ headline was ‘completely false’ without elaborating on any errors in the story. The Capital Times’ editor stood behind the outlet’s reporting. WILL is just the latest to challenge DPI’s handling of public records and open meetings. Dairyland Sentinel has fought for records related to the department’s handling of a 2024 Forward Exam standards-setting conference in the Wisconsin Dells while the Institute for Reforming Government has filed a complaint that DPI violated open meetings law at the same conference. DPI has claimed that the work of the 88-member committee during the conference was not subject to open meetings or open records disclosure because it was setup by vendor Data Recognition Corp.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Another Wisconsin group has filed a lawsuit against the state’s Department of Public Instruction, this time over a $34,000 price tag to receive records related to educator license denials since 2018. The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty requested records of those denials for applicants that failed to complete an approved program on Aug. 13, 2025 and received a response that DPI would charge $17,007 to review the 1,381 denied applications by hand. WILL then attempted to narrow the request and DPI doubled the cost estimate to $34,014. “An informed electorate is essential to representative government, which is why Wisconsin law strongly favors public access to government records,” WILL Associate Counsel Lauren Greuel said in a statement. “After months of delay, DPI is attempting to price the public out of that access by imposing tens of thousands of dollars in unlawful fees. Government transparency cannot depend on whether citizens can afford to pay for it.” WILL filed the lawsuit asking the court to direct DPI to release the records without the fees, which the group calls “unlawful,” stating that state open records law allows only limited fees for producing records that may not exceed an agency’s actual, necessary, and direct costs. “Manually reviewing by hand and screenshotting each denied application are not actual, necessary, and direct costs the DPI may impose,” WILL argued. “Even if the DPI could charge for those tasks, DPIs unreasonable delay in responding to the request, coupled with its excessive $34,014 fee, amounts to an unlawful denial of access to public records. WILL is asking the court to order production of the records and impose the remedies authorized by Wisconsin law.” DPI’s teacher licensure process has been under scrutiny after a Capital Times series last year showing how the department kept records of sexual misconduct from teachers under wraps and out of the public eye. The series led to legislative hearings and a response from DPI claiming that the outlets’ headline was ‘completely false’ without elaborating on any errors in the story. The Capital Times’ editor stood behind the outlet’s reporting. WILL is just the latest to challenge DPI’s handling of public records and open meetings. Dairyland Sentinel has fought for records related to the department’s handling of a 2024 Forward Exam standards-setting conference in the Wisconsin Dells while the Institute for Reforming Government has filed a complaint that DPI violated open meetings law at the same conference. DPI has claimed that the work of the 88-member committee during the conference was not subject to open meetings or open records disclosure because it was setup by vendor Data Recognition Corp.

KAXE's weekly list of concerts near you features Sam Miltich & Friends, Michael Gulezian, Kitchi Boogie, Corey Medina & Brothers, and Squid City Slingers.

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KAXE
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KAXE's weekly list of concerts near you features Sam Miltich & Friends, Michael Gulezian, Kitchi Boogie, Corey Medina & Brothers, and Squid City Slingers.

During the week of June 30, 2026, we enjoy reports of House Wrens, yellow irises, and red raspberries. Staff phenologist John Latimer responds.

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KAXE
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During the week of June 30, 2026, we enjoy reports of House Wrens, yellow irises, and red raspberries. Staff phenologist John Latimer responds.

8 minutes

Times of San Diego
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California’s voters are overwhelmingly Democrats, but they're increasingly voting against new taxes in a state with an ever-increasing cost of living.

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Times of San Diego
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California’s voters are overwhelmingly Democrats, but they're increasingly voting against new taxes in a state with an ever-increasing cost of living.

Os Estados Unidos assinaram nesta quarta-feira (1º) um acordo para a construção de sua embaixada permanente em Jerusalém. Para Israel, a iniciativa representa mais uma demonstração da “aliança inabalável” entre os dois países.

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Radio France Internationale
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Os Estados Unidos assinaram nesta quarta-feira (1º) um acordo para a construção de sua embaixada permanente em Jerusalém. Para Israel, a iniciativa representa mais uma demonstração da “aliança inabalável” entre os dois países.

ចំនួន​ប្រជាជន​វៀតណាម មានប្រមាណ​​​១០២​លាននាក់ គិតត្រឹមថ្ងៃទី​១កក្កដា​ឆ្នាំ​២០២៦។ តែទន្ទឹមនឹងនេះ ចំនួន​ប្រជាជនវ័យចំណាស់ កាន់តែកើនឡើងច្រើន ដែលអាចធ្វើ​ឲ្យ​ប៉ះពាល់ដល់តុល្យភាព​ប្រជាសាស្ត្រ​។ កាលពីឆ្នាំទៅម៉ិញ រដ្ឋវៀតណាម​បានលុបចោល​ការដាក់កំហិត​ហាមឃាត់ មិន​ឲ្យ​ប្រជាជនមានកូន​លើស​ពី​២នាក់។ មិនត្រឹមប៉ុណ្ណោះទេ ថ្ងៃ​ពុធទី១​​កក្កដា២០២៦​ វៀតណាម​បានចេញច្បាប់ផ្តល់​អត្ថប្រយោជន៍មួយចំនួន​ ដល់​ក្រុមគ្រួសារដែលមានកូន​២នាក់។ តើវិធានការលើកទឹកចិត្តនេះ អាចជំរុញ​ឲ្យ​ប្រជាជន​វៀតណាម យកកូនច្រើនដែរឬទេ ក្នុងបរិបទដែល​តម្លៃជីវភាពប្រចាំថ្ងៃកាន់តែ​ចំណាយ​ច្រើន?

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វិទ្យុបារាំង​អន្តរជាតិ
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ចំនួន​ប្រជាជន​វៀតណាម មានប្រមាណ​​​១០២​លាននាក់ គិតត្រឹមថ្ងៃទី​១កក្កដា​ឆ្នាំ​២០២៦។ តែទន្ទឹមនឹងនេះ ចំនួន​ប្រជាជនវ័យចំណាស់ កាន់តែកើនឡើងច្រើន ដែលអាចធ្វើ​ឲ្យ​ប៉ះពាល់ដល់តុល្យភាព​ប្រជាសាស្ត្រ​។ កាលពីឆ្នាំទៅម៉ិញ រដ្ឋវៀតណាម​បានលុបចោល​ការដាក់កំហិត​ហាមឃាត់ មិន​ឲ្យ​ប្រជាជនមានកូន​លើស​ពី​២នាក់។ មិនត្រឹមប៉ុណ្ណោះទេ ថ្ងៃ​ពុធទី១​​កក្កដា២០២៦​ វៀតណាម​បានចេញច្បាប់ផ្តល់​អត្ថប្រយោជន៍មួយចំនួន​ ដល់​ក្រុមគ្រួសារដែលមានកូន​២នាក់។ តើវិធានការលើកទឹកចិត្តនេះ អាចជំរុញ​ឲ្យ​ប្រជាជន​វៀតណាម យកកូនច្រើនដែរឬទេ ក្នុងបរិបទដែល​តម្លៃជីវភាពប្រចាំថ្ងៃកាន់តែ​ចំណាយ​ច្រើន?

Palm Park renovations call for naming park features after donors. Park advocates call it erasure of the Mexican Americans who kept the park alive. The post Who gets remembered? East Austin fights Palm Park donor naming plan appeared first on Austin Current.

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Austin Current
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Palm Park renovations call for naming park features after donors. Park advocates call it erasure of the Mexican Americans who kept the park alive. The post Who gets remembered? East Austin fights Palm Park donor naming plan appeared first on Austin Current.

I moved to New York City in the early 1990s. My original commitment was for only one year, but I quickly fell in love with the place. Part of the appeal was the city’s Jewishness. Everywhere you looked, there were signs of Jewish influence. This was an era where people repeated jokes from Seinfeld by... The post My city and party are changing. The implications for liberal Jewish New Yorkers could be enormous. appeared first on The Forward.

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The Forward
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I moved to New York City in the early 1990s. My original commitment was for only one year, but I quickly fell in love with the place. Part of the appeal was the city’s Jewishness. Everywhere you looked, there were signs of Jewish influence. This was an era where people repeated jokes from Seinfeld by... The post My city and party are changing. The implications for liberal Jewish New Yorkers could be enormous. appeared first on The Forward.

10 minutes

Virginia Mercury
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A Dinwiddie County man accused of sending a politically motivated death threat to former Virginia Del. Kim Taylor last year has reached a plea agreement that reduces the felony charge originally filed against him. Michael Ray Strawmyer, 33, agreed to plead guilty or no contest to an amended charge of “threat in writing” after prosecutors […]

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Virginia Mercury
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A Dinwiddie County man accused of sending a politically motivated death threat to former Virginia Del. Kim Taylor last year has reached a plea agreement that reduces the felony charge originally filed against him. Michael Ray Strawmyer, 33, agreed to plead guilty or no contest to an amended charge of “threat in writing” after prosecutors […]

10 minutes

OtherWords
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As the Trump regime attacks the foundations of our democracy, Americans are fighting back. The post At 250, American Democracy is Under Siege appeared first on OtherWords.

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OtherWords
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As the Trump regime attacks the foundations of our democracy, Americans are fighting back. The post At 250, American Democracy is Under Siege appeared first on OtherWords.

12 minutes

Radio France Internationale
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África esteve no centro das prioridades destacadas pelo Presidente português, António José Seguro, após o encontro com o Presidente francês, Emmanuel Macron, em Paris. O Chefe de Estado português afirmou que os dois países partilham uma visão comum sobre a estabilidade no continente, anunciou uma deslocação a Cabo Verde ainda este mês e a recepção do Presidente de Moçambique em Lisboa, defendendo o reforço da cooperação com os países africanos de língua portuguesa.

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Radio France Internationale
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África esteve no centro das prioridades destacadas pelo Presidente português, António José Seguro, após o encontro com o Presidente francês, Emmanuel Macron, em Paris. O Chefe de Estado português afirmou que os dois países partilham uma visão comum sobre a estabilidade no continente, anunciou uma deslocação a Cabo Verde ainda este mês e a recepção do Presidente de Moçambique em Lisboa, defendendo o reforço da cooperação com os países africanos de língua portuguesa.

میدان: اگرچه سوشا مکانی، ورزشکار پادشاهی‌خواه، خود زمانی دروازه‌بان تیم ملی فوتبال ایران بوده است اما معتقد است تیم فوتبال یک تیم تروریستی است

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صدای آمریکا
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میدان: اگرچه سوشا مکانی، ورزشکار پادشاهی‌خواه، خود زمانی دروازه‌بان تیم ملی فوتبال ایران بوده است اما معتقد است تیم فوتبال یک تیم تروریستی است

(The Center Square) – Federal prosecutors have charged 25 members and associates of two group feds say are Minneapolis-based drug trafficking organizations. The indictments, unsealed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota, allege dozens of suspects fueled violence across south Minneapolis. “Violent drug trafficking will not be tolerated in Minnesota,” said U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen. “When individuals flood our streets with dangerous narcotics and arm themselves to protect their illicit activity, they put everyone at risk.” An early Tuesday morning operation resulted in 12 arrests and the seizure of firearms and illegal drugs, while the overall multi-agency investigation has led to charges for 25 members and associates of the two gangs. This is all according to the DOJ. The defendants face charges ranging from conspiracy to distribute fentanyl and cocaine, firearms offenses, possession with intent to distribute controlled substances and murder in relation to a drug trafficking crime. “Our message to every violent gang member and drug dealer is clear—our streets are not your ‘territory,’ they are a part of our communities,” said FBI Minneapolis Field Office Special Agent in Charge Christopher D. Dotson. “These streets belong to the families and residents that make up our neighborhoods.” Two different criminal operations were targeted by the investigations. One was the Family Mob gang, which prosecutors say has operated in south Minneapolis since the late 1990s or early 2000s. According to the indictment, members maintained an open-air drug market near Lake Street and Park Avenue, distributing large quantities of fentanyl each month along with crack cocaine, methamphetamine and other drugs. Prosecutors also allege the organization used violence to protect its territory, including a fatal shooting in September 2025. Two defendants, Trevon Harris and Deangelo Davenport, are accused of murder during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime. In total, there were 13 alleged members or associates charged from the Family Mob gang. “Over a span of five months, the individuals indicted today attempted to traffic no less than 333,000 deadly doses of fentanyl into our Minneapolis communities,” said DEA Omaha Field Division Special Agent in Charge Dustin Gillespie. “There is no room for this type of behavior in Minnesota and today’s indictments are not the end of the story. Our agents and law enforcement partners will continue working to dismantle this organization, if necessary, one person at a time.” Authorities also charged 12 people connected to a second drug trafficking organization they claim is led by Amani Xavier Hudson Sr. Prosecutors allege the organization operated near 19th Street and Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis, distributing large quantities of fentanyl and cocaine throughout the Twin Cities. Investigators say this drug trafficking contributed to increased shootings and violence in the area. The arrests were the culmination of a joint investigation by the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, Minneapolis Police Department, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, and other local partners. “Drug trafficking organizations and drug dealers bring violence, addiction, and fear into our communities,” said Dawanna Witt, Sheriff of Hennepin County. “By combining our resources and expertise, we are disrupting criminal networks and holding those responsible for causing harm to our community accountable.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Federal prosecutors have charged 25 members and associates of two group feds say are Minneapolis-based drug trafficking organizations. The indictments, unsealed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota, allege dozens of suspects fueled violence across south Minneapolis. “Violent drug trafficking will not be tolerated in Minnesota,” said U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen. “When individuals flood our streets with dangerous narcotics and arm themselves to protect their illicit activity, they put everyone at risk.” An early Tuesday morning operation resulted in 12 arrests and the seizure of firearms and illegal drugs, while the overall multi-agency investigation has led to charges for 25 members and associates of the two gangs. This is all according to the DOJ. The defendants face charges ranging from conspiracy to distribute fentanyl and cocaine, firearms offenses, possession with intent to distribute controlled substances and murder in relation to a drug trafficking crime. “Our message to every violent gang member and drug dealer is clear—our streets are not your ‘territory,’ they are a part of our communities,” said FBI Minneapolis Field Office Special Agent in Charge Christopher D. Dotson. “These streets belong to the families and residents that make up our neighborhoods.” Two different criminal operations were targeted by the investigations. One was the Family Mob gang, which prosecutors say has operated in south Minneapolis since the late 1990s or early 2000s. According to the indictment, members maintained an open-air drug market near Lake Street and Park Avenue, distributing large quantities of fentanyl each month along with crack cocaine, methamphetamine and other drugs. Prosecutors also allege the organization used violence to protect its territory, including a fatal shooting in September 2025. Two defendants, Trevon Harris and Deangelo Davenport, are accused of murder during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime. In total, there were 13 alleged members or associates charged from the Family Mob gang. “Over a span of five months, the individuals indicted today attempted to traffic no less than 333,000 deadly doses of fentanyl into our Minneapolis communities,” said DEA Omaha Field Division Special Agent in Charge Dustin Gillespie. “There is no room for this type of behavior in Minnesota and today’s indictments are not the end of the story. Our agents and law enforcement partners will continue working to dismantle this organization, if necessary, one person at a time.” Authorities also charged 12 people connected to a second drug trafficking organization they claim is led by Amani Xavier Hudson Sr. Prosecutors allege the organization operated near 19th Street and Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis, distributing large quantities of fentanyl and cocaine throughout the Twin Cities. Investigators say this drug trafficking contributed to increased shootings and violence in the area. The arrests were the culmination of a joint investigation by the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, Minneapolis Police Department, the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, and other local partners. “Drug trafficking organizations and drug dealers bring violence, addiction, and fear into our communities,” said Dawanna Witt, Sheriff of Hennepin County. “By combining our resources and expertise, we are disrupting criminal networks and holding those responsible for causing harm to our community accountable.”

委内瑞拉6月24日双地震最新统计遇难人数为1,943人。联合国周二警告称,幸存者严重缺乏食物和住所,可能很快面临疫情暴发。此前公布的死亡人数为1,719人。

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法国国际广播电台
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委内瑞拉6月24日双地震最新统计遇难人数为1,943人。联合国周二警告称,幸存者严重缺乏食物和住所,可能很快面临疫情暴发。此前公布的死亡人数为1,719人。

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs recently vetoed a bill pushed by a data center developer lobbyist that would have significantly reduced the power of citizen initiatives statewide. HB 2873, passed by the state legislature in late April, would have allowed referendum petitions brought forth by Arizona citizens to be withdrawn before they are put to a […] The post Arizona governor vetoes bill that would weaken referendums and empower data centers appeared first on AZ Luminaria.

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Arizona Luminaria
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Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs recently vetoed a bill pushed by a data center developer lobbyist that would have significantly reduced the power of citizen initiatives statewide. HB 2873, passed by the state legislature in late April, would have allowed referendum petitions brought forth by Arizona citizens to be withdrawn before they are put to a […] The post Arizona governor vetoes bill that would weaken referendums and empower data centers appeared first on AZ Luminaria.

Артур Маркарян вел свой блог с 2014 года и получил известность благодаря женоненавистническим высказываниям

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Радио Свобода
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Артур Маркарян вел свой блог с 2014 года и получил известность благодаря женоненавистническим высказываниям

En un contexto del desempleo en máximos de cinco años y una informalidad que no da tregua, el Ejecutivo ha...

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BioBioChile
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En un contexto del desempleo en máximos de cinco años y una informalidad que no da tregua, el Ejecutivo ha...