Tras reunirse en privado con Sánchez, León XIV recibió al líder de la oposición y a la presidenta de la Comunidad de Madrid, dos encuentros que Génova ha convertido en una demostración de sintonía con un discurso papal que ha removido los grandes debates.

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Mundiario
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Tras reunirse en privado con Sánchez, León XIV recibió al líder de la oposición y a la presidenta de la Comunidad de Madrid, dos encuentros que Génova ha convertido en una demostración de sintonía con un discurso papal que ha removido los grandes debates.

Since Idaho’s abortion bans took effect almost four years ago, an Idaho doctor says he’s had to send patients out of state for medically necessary abortions for a range of pregnancy complications under which he used to be able to provide abortions. Dr. Stacy Seyb, who treats high-risk pregnancies as a maternal fetal medicine specialist, […]

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Idaho Capital Sun
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Since Idaho’s abortion bans took effect almost four years ago, an Idaho doctor says he’s had to send patients out of state for medically necessary abortions for a range of pregnancy complications under which he used to be able to provide abortions. Dr. Stacy Seyb, who treats high-risk pregnancies as a maternal fetal medicine specialist, […]

Pela primeira vez, a sociedade civil terá um mecanismo permanente para participar na política externa brasileira. O Conpeb, Conselho Nacional de Política Externa, será lançado no dia 2 de julho, disse nesta segunda-feira (8) Fabrício Araújo Prado, chefe da Assessoria Especial de Assuntos Internacionais da Secretaria-Geral da Presidência da República. O anúncio foi feito durante […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Pela primeira vez, a sociedade civil terá um mecanismo permanente para participar na política externa brasileira. O Conpeb, Conselho Nacional de Política Externa, será lançado no dia 2 de julho, disse nesta segunda-feira (8) Fabrício Araújo Prado, chefe da Assessoria Especial de Assuntos Internacionais da Secretaria-Geral da Presidência da República. O anúncio foi feito durante […] Fonte

Zutabe bakoitzak izanen dituen pankartak eta pregoilariak aurkeztu dituzte Iruñean. Runa Parketik, Antoniuttitik eta Askatasunaren plazatik irtengo dira, Gazteluko plazan biltzeko. Aldarrikapena eta harrotasuna uztartuko ditu martxak, euskaraz bizi ahal izateko behar den dena eskatzeko.

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ARGIA
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Zutabe bakoitzak izanen dituen pankartak eta pregoilariak aurkeztu dituzte Iruñean. Runa Parketik, Antoniuttitik eta Askatasunaren plazatik irtengo dira, Gazteluko plazan biltzeko. Aldarrikapena eta harrotasuna uztartuko ditu martxak, euskaraz bizi ahal izateko behar den dena eskatzeko.

10 minutes

ARGIA
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ARGIA
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Langileek eurek adostu dute azken eskaintza onartzea eta, ondorioz, eskualdean egon den grebarik luzeena amaituko da. Hurrengo egunetan eskainiko dituzte akordioari buruzko xehetasunak.

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ARGIA
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Langileek eurek adostu dute azken eskaintza onartzea eta, ondorioz, eskualdean egon den grebarik luzeena amaituko da. Hurrengo egunetan eskainiko dituzte akordioari buruzko xehetasunak.

“Pape Niang. Hasiera berri bat” liburua irakurri dute aurten Orioko Zaragueta herri eskolako DBH4ko ikasleek, eta ikasturte amaieran, Pape Niang bera izan dute ikastetxean. DBH3koak ere batu dira solasaldira. Senegaldarraren migrazio prozesutik harago, Afrikak bizi duen egoeraren kausez, ondorioez eta etorkizunaz eztabaida sakona eragin dute gazteen galderek.

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ARGIA
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“Pape Niang. Hasiera berri bat” liburua irakurri dute aurten Orioko Zaragueta herri eskolako DBH4ko ikasleek, eta ikasturte amaieran, Pape Niang bera izan dute ikastetxean. DBH3koak ere batu dira solasaldira. Senegaldarraren migrazio prozesutik harago, Afrikak bizi duen egoeraren kausez, ondorioez eta etorkizunaz eztabaida sakona eragin dute gazteen galderek.

Originalmente publicado en Global Voices en EspañolEste artículo de Muy Waso fue publicado originalmente el 7 de abril de 2026, bajo el programa Get Ready for the COP. Una versión...

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Global Voices
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Originalmente publicado en Global Voices en EspañolEste artículo de Muy Waso fue publicado originalmente el 7 de abril de 2026, bajo el programa Get Ready for the COP. Una versión...

New York Attorney General Letitia James decided not to pursue criminal charges against NYPD officers for their actions regarding the death of a dirt-bike rider who died when a cop in an unmarked vehicle veered in front of the rider, an incident previously reported by The City Reporter. In a statement, James noted, “the law […] The post State AG Declines to Prosecute NYPD Officers Involved in Fatal Motorbike Crash appeared first on The City Reporter.

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The City
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New York Attorney General Letitia James decided not to pursue criminal charges against NYPD officers for their actions regarding the death of a dirt-bike rider who died when a cop in an unmarked vehicle veered in front of the rider, an incident previously reported by The City Reporter. In a statement, James noted, “the law […] The post State AG Declines to Prosecute NYPD Officers Involved in Fatal Motorbike Crash appeared first on The City Reporter.

دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا،‌ روز دوشنبه تاد بلانچ را برای تصدی سمت دادستان کل آمریکا معرفی کرد.

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صدای آمریکا
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دونالد ترامپ، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا،‌ روز دوشنبه تاد بلانچ را برای تصدی سمت دادستان کل آمریکا معرفی کرد.

OMAHA — With a national spotlight and economic impact set to hit Omaha this week with the start of the men’s College World Series, a lineup of Nebraska officials met Monday at the baseball stadium to underscore the underbelly of such crowd-drawing events: human trafficking. Leaders, including Gov. Jim Pillen, Omaha Mayor John Ewing Jr. […]

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Nebraska Examiner
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OMAHA — With a national spotlight and economic impact set to hit Omaha this week with the start of the men’s College World Series, a lineup of Nebraska officials met Monday at the baseball stadium to underscore the underbelly of such crowd-drawing events: human trafficking. Leaders, including Gov. Jim Pillen, Omaha Mayor John Ewing Jr. […]

San Diego Police and Crimestoppers are offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of suspected Patrick High School vandal.

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Times of San Diego
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San Diego Police and Crimestoppers are offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of suspected Patrick High School vandal.

25 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Assemblymember James Gallagher, R-East Nicolaus, gave his final remarks on the Assembly floor Monday afternoon before he leaves the California Legislature to begin his term as a congressman. Gallagher won the June 2 special election to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa, a Republican who died suddenly in January. Gallagher, a Northern California native, will now represent California’s 1st District in the U.S. House of Representatives and will be sworn into office later this week to serve the rest of LaMalfa's term, which will end Jan. 3. Gallagher also advanced in the June 2 primary for the new term starting Jan. 3 against California Sen. Mike McGuire with 47.2% of the vote against McGuire’s 37.5%. So far, it appears Gallagher will square off against McGuire in the Nov. 3 election, according to previous reporting by The Center Square. For now, getting to work in Congress is on Gallagher's mind. “When I am sworn in this week, it will be the first time ever that I’ve been in the majority,” Gallagher said during remarks on the Assembly floor. “I think that’s been really good for me, actually," he said about being in the Republican minority in the Legislature. "I think it has really honed my skills and helped me to understand how minority voices are heard.” Gallagher was first elected to the Assembly in 2014. In 2025, he was the Assembly minority leader. In his time representing the Assembly 3rd District, Gallagher introduced a bill that would limit the governor’s emergency powers and supported awarding more recovery money to California communities affected by wildfires. In 2025, Gallagher also advanced a proposal that would split California into two states, with counties in Northern California seceding from the state to form a new one. That proposal did not advance in the Assembly. He also opposed congressional redistricting during debates last summer on the Assembly floor. “It is not lost on me as I stand here today that I was elected overwhelmingly by the people of my district,” Gallagher said. “If things go to plan, my district won’t be able to elect a person of their choice, and that’s a frustrating thing. I think we need to change that.” Mid-decade congressional redistricting, which California voters passed in November 2025, gave Democrats a chance to pick up five new seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in the midterm elections this November. Gallagher and other Republican lawmakers opposed the redistricting effort, which Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom supported in response to Texas’ own mid-decade redistricting in summer 2025 to add five Republican seats. Other prominent Republican lawmakers on the Assembly floor spoke out in support of Gallagher during the floor session on Monday afternoon. “It’s when James became [assembly minority] leader that he became the conscience of the caucus,” Assemblymember Tom Lackey, R-Lancaster, said. “He also decided it was time for us to make our mark instead of just existing.” Assembly Minority Leader Heath Flora, R-Ripon, who succeeded Gallagher in that role, said on the Assembly floor that the caucus turned around under Gallagher’s leadership. “It has been an example for all of us and all those coming after you to be a strong, courageous leader that’s also respectful,” Flora said. Gallagher will be sworn in later this week in Washington, D.C. and will have a ceremonial oath of office ceremony on June 16 in Oroville, according to his Facebook page.

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(The Center Square) – Assemblymember James Gallagher, R-East Nicolaus, gave his final remarks on the Assembly floor Monday afternoon before he leaves the California Legislature to begin his term as a congressman. Gallagher won the June 2 special election to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa, a Republican who died suddenly in January. Gallagher, a Northern California native, will now represent California’s 1st District in the U.S. House of Representatives and will be sworn into office later this week to serve the rest of LaMalfa's term, which will end Jan. 3. Gallagher also advanced in the June 2 primary for the new term starting Jan. 3 against California Sen. Mike McGuire with 47.2% of the vote against McGuire’s 37.5%. So far, it appears Gallagher will square off against McGuire in the Nov. 3 election, according to previous reporting by The Center Square. For now, getting to work in Congress is on Gallagher's mind. “When I am sworn in this week, it will be the first time ever that I’ve been in the majority,” Gallagher said during remarks on the Assembly floor. “I think that’s been really good for me, actually," he said about being in the Republican minority in the Legislature. "I think it has really honed my skills and helped me to understand how minority voices are heard.” Gallagher was first elected to the Assembly in 2014. In 2025, he was the Assembly minority leader. In his time representing the Assembly 3rd District, Gallagher introduced a bill that would limit the governor’s emergency powers and supported awarding more recovery money to California communities affected by wildfires. In 2025, Gallagher also advanced a proposal that would split California into two states, with counties in Northern California seceding from the state to form a new one. That proposal did not advance in the Assembly. He also opposed congressional redistricting during debates last summer on the Assembly floor. “It is not lost on me as I stand here today that I was elected overwhelmingly by the people of my district,” Gallagher said. “If things go to plan, my district won’t be able to elect a person of their choice, and that’s a frustrating thing. I think we need to change that.” Mid-decade congressional redistricting, which California voters passed in November 2025, gave Democrats a chance to pick up five new seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in the midterm elections this November. Gallagher and other Republican lawmakers opposed the redistricting effort, which Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom supported in response to Texas’ own mid-decade redistricting in summer 2025 to add five Republican seats. Other prominent Republican lawmakers on the Assembly floor spoke out in support of Gallagher during the floor session on Monday afternoon. “It’s when James became [assembly minority] leader that he became the conscience of the caucus,” Assemblymember Tom Lackey, R-Lancaster, said. “He also decided it was time for us to make our mark instead of just existing.” Assembly Minority Leader Heath Flora, R-Ripon, who succeeded Gallagher in that role, said on the Assembly floor that the caucus turned around under Gallagher’s leadership. “It has been an example for all of us and all those coming after you to be a strong, courageous leader that’s also respectful,” Flora said. Gallagher will be sworn in later this week in Washington, D.C. and will have a ceremonial oath of office ceremony on June 16 in Oroville, according to his Facebook page.

The Fort Worth nonprofit partnered with MyFriendBen, an electronic tool allowing users to determine eligibility for services and benefits.

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Fort Worth Report
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The Fort Worth nonprofit partnered with MyFriendBen, an electronic tool allowing users to determine eligibility for services and benefits.

Las prisas, la hiperconexión digital, el estrés cotidiano y una creciente dificultad para escuchar y prestar atención parecen estar transformando la convivencia y el trato entre las personas.

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Mundiario
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Las prisas, la hiperconexión digital, el estrés cotidiano y una creciente dificultad para escuchar y prestar atención parecen estar transformando la convivencia y el trato entre las personas.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.The U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights announced Monday that it is investigating the Cherry Creek district over allegations that the district considers race in a variety of programs in violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. In a press release announcing the investigation, the department alleged that the district sponsors clubs that exclude students based on race and that the district requires teachers to consider race when assigning students to classes or deciding what level of academic support to provide. The release gave no examples of student clubs that exclude members based on race or of incidents where teachers used race in making class assignments or academic support decisions. The investigation into Cherry Creek, a 52,000-student district in the Denver suburbs, is part of a broader Trump administration effort to root out policies that support students of color or LGBTQ students. Many of these investigations have focused on school districts in blue cities, including New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. Over the past 18 months, the administration also investigated the Denver district for converting a girls restroom into an all-gender restroom and the Jeffco district for policies on sleeping arrangements for transgender students on overnight field trips. A Cherry Creek district spokesperson said by email Monday, “We strongly disagree with the characterization of District programming. The District has not yet received a copy of the complaint. Without the complaint, we are not in a position to respond further.”When asked for more information about the complaints that prompted the investigation, U.S. Department of Education officials said they don’t comment on open investigations.But Kimberly Richey, assistant secretary for education, did comment in the press release. “Federal law prohibits racial discrimination, which means that race cannot be a factor in how the school educates its students or trains its teachers. Despite this, the District seems to be basing decisions about how to support students, teachers and parents solely on race,” she said.In addition to alleging race-based discrimination in student clubs and class assignments, the Office of Civil Rights press release said the department is also investigating a district committee and a multi-day training for educators. The district’s Voices of Color Committee “reportedly grants preferential access and participation based solely on race,” the release said. The district’s website describes the committee’s goal as fostering an “inclusive and safe environment to support the success of students of color.“ It says the committee is composed of parents, district staff, and community members and links to a registration form for people who want to join the committee’s contact list. The form doesn’t ask for the potential participant’s race or ethnicity. About 56% of Cherry Creek students are students of color.The press release said the district promotes a training called “Transformational Equity Experience: To Be Seen. To Belong. To Be Whole,” which teaches that the United States was founded on “white supremacy” and categorizes individuals as “oppressors” and “oppressed.”A webpage from a 2024 Cherry Creek conference with that name features a list of sessions offered over four days, including “School Leadership — Approaching All Systems with Equity,” “All Are Welcome: Creating LGBTQ+ Affirming Spaces in our Schools,” and “What Happened to Denver’s Chinatown & How to Incorporate Local History to Teach ‘Ethnic Studies’ in the Classroom.”The three emcees of the event were a current Cherry Creek student and two recent graduates. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.The U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights announced Monday that it is investigating the Cherry Creek district over allegations that the district considers race in a variety of programs in violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. In a press release announcing the investigation, the department alleged that the district sponsors clubs that exclude students based on race and that the district requires teachers to consider race when assigning students to classes or deciding what level of academic support to provide. The release gave no examples of student clubs that exclude members based on race or of incidents where teachers used race in making class assignments or academic support decisions. The investigation into Cherry Creek, a 52,000-student district in the Denver suburbs, is part of a broader Trump administration effort to root out policies that support students of color or LGBTQ students. Many of these investigations have focused on school districts in blue cities, including New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. Over the past 18 months, the administration also investigated the Denver district for converting a girls restroom into an all-gender restroom and the Jeffco district for policies on sleeping arrangements for transgender students on overnight field trips. A Cherry Creek district spokesperson said by email Monday, “We strongly disagree with the characterization of District programming. The District has not yet received a copy of the complaint. Without the complaint, we are not in a position to respond further.”When asked for more information about the complaints that prompted the investigation, U.S. Department of Education officials said they don’t comment on open investigations.But Kimberly Richey, assistant secretary for education, did comment in the press release. “Federal law prohibits racial discrimination, which means that race cannot be a factor in how the school educates its students or trains its teachers. Despite this, the District seems to be basing decisions about how to support students, teachers and parents solely on race,” she said.In addition to alleging race-based discrimination in student clubs and class assignments, the Office of Civil Rights press release said the department is also investigating a district committee and a multi-day training for educators. The district’s Voices of Color Committee “reportedly grants preferential access and participation based solely on race,” the release said. The district’s website describes the committee’s goal as fostering an “inclusive and safe environment to support the success of students of color.“ It says the committee is composed of parents, district staff, and community members and links to a registration form for people who want to join the committee’s contact list. The form doesn’t ask for the potential participant’s race or ethnicity. About 56% of Cherry Creek students are students of color.The press release said the district promotes a training called “Transformational Equity Experience: To Be Seen. To Belong. To Be Whole,” which teaches that the United States was founded on “white supremacy” and categorizes individuals as “oppressors” and “oppressed.”A webpage from a 2024 Cherry Creek conference with that name features a list of sessions offered over four days, including “School Leadership — Approaching All Systems with Equity,” “All Are Welcome: Creating LGBTQ+ Affirming Spaces in our Schools,” and “What Happened to Denver’s Chinatown & How to Incorporate Local History to Teach ‘Ethnic Studies’ in the Classroom.”The three emcees of the event were a current Cherry Creek student and two recent graduates. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

El Lago de Arcos volvió a convertirse en el gran escenario de la velocidad sobre el agua con la celebración de la segunda prueba del Campeonato de España y del Campeonato de Andalucía de Motos Acuáticas 2026.

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Mundiario
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El Lago de Arcos volvió a convertirse en el gran escenario de la velocidad sobre el agua con la celebración de la segunda prueba del Campeonato de España y del Campeonato de Andalucía de Motos Acuáticas 2026.

More than four months after its introduction, the Rhode Island House’s version of a bill to impose a three-year moratorium on new charter schools passed the chamber’s Committee on Education in an 8-3 vote Monday. The education panel passed an amended version of H7415 — sponsored by Rep. Mary Messier, a Pawtucket Democrat — alongside […]

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Rhode Island Current
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More than four months after its introduction, the Rhode Island House’s version of a bill to impose a three-year moratorium on new charter schools passed the chamber’s Committee on Education in an 8-3 vote Monday. The education panel passed an amended version of H7415 — sponsored by Rep. Mary Messier, a Pawtucket Democrat — alongside […]

The EPA and state are investing $10 million to clean up toxic sediment in the Detroit River.

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Planet Detroit
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The EPA and state are investing $10 million to clean up toxic sediment in the Detroit River.

35 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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Nearly 50,000 North Dakotans have submitted their ballots before polls open on Election Day. There have been 17,287 votes cast at polling locations in seven counties that have allowed citizens to show up to the polls in the week prior to Election Day, as of Monday evening. That exceeds the 2024 primary election, when 12,208 […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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Nearly 50,000 North Dakotans have submitted their ballots before polls open on Election Day. There have been 17,287 votes cast at polling locations in seven counties that have allowed citizens to show up to the polls in the week prior to Election Day, as of Monday evening. That exceeds the 2024 primary election, when 12,208 […]