8 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Reporters covering protests in the United States have been shot with crowd-control munitions, sprayed with tear gas, hit with cars, and physically attacked by both law enforcement and demonstrators.So it makes sense that many journalists wear personal protective equipment like helmets, goggles, and gas masks at demonstrations, and that organizations like Reporters Without Borders offer grants to buy PPE that can reduce reporters’ chances of being hurt or even killed while doing their jobs.What doesn’t make sense is when the government tries to stop reporters from taking those basic safety precautions.Yet across the country, jurisdictions are banning safety gear at public protests. Officials often justify these policies in the name of public safety, for example by arguing that masks make it difficult to identify people who commit crimes at demonstrations. But many make no exceptions for members of the press, who pose no threat and face severe risk simply for doing their jobs.In Newark, New Jersey, journalists covering the protests outside of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center at Delaney Hall have recently reported being turned away by police for carrying gas masks or bags that they need to hold PPE.Other places bar protective equipment at protests by law, such as Modesto, California, where an ordinance that prohibits a wide range of PPE, including goggles, helmets, and gas masks, is currently being challenged in court.These bans are dangerous, most importantly to journalists’ physical safety. But they also harm the public’s right to know. When reporters can’t safely remain at a protest, the public loses access to independent documentation about what happened there.PPE is ‘the only reason I’m alive’Journalist and writer Linda Tirado lost her left eye and suffered a traumatic brain injury after being shot by a foam round while covering a protest in Minneapolis in 2020. The city later paid $600,000 to settle a lawsuit she brought over excessive use of force.Tirado credits the protective equipment she wore that day with saving her life. “The only reason I am alive is that I was wearing goggles that I had sourced, I was wearing a respirator that I had sourced,” Tirado told me when we spoke recently.Half a decade later, journalists covering demonstrations continue to face similar risks. While covering a protest in Los Angeles in 2025, filmmaker and photojournalist Michael Nigro was shot in the head with a crowd-control munition, leaving a mark on his protective helmet, which was labeled on both sides with the word “PRESS.”“These less-lethal munitions are sometimes lethal,” he said. “You can get hit in the eye; I could lose eyesight.”Reporter and photojournalist Wali Khan expressed similar concerns about an incident last September when he was shot with crowd-control munitions by federal officers while covering protests outside an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois. Khan was wearing impact goggles, a ventilator set, and a helmet when he was hit. Without his PPE, he said, he believes he could have been “partially blinded.”Helmets and goggles aren’t the only equipment journalists rely on. Respirators and gas masks can also be critical when law enforcement deploys chemical agents at protests. Lexis-Olivier Ray, a reporter for L.A. Taco, has covered multiple protests around California. He often wears a full-face gas mask to mitigate the impacts of chemical irritants.“There’s a big question mark” about the side effects of tear gas, Ray said. Even with a mask, he still has concerns about the impact on his health from tear gas that seeps through the mask or touches his skin.Threats beyond law enforcementProtective equipment can also help reporters defend themselves against threats that don’t come from law enforcement.Documentarian Rocky Romano learned that firsthand while covering a protest in California in 2022. Romano was wearing a helmet when he was violently struck on the head by a man wielding what he described as a “tire checker” baton.“He just doesn’t hit me. He hits me as hard as you can hit somebody with that weapon, like he must have played baseball or something,” Romano said.Romano believes that his helmet saved him from more serious injuries, including death or mental impairment. “I can’t imagine taking that hit without a protective helmet between my head and the weapon. It would have been devastating,” he said.PPE allows journalists to continue reportingBut protective equipment does more than prevent or mitigate injuries to journalists; it also allows the press to continue reporting when demonstrations become dangerous. Without gas masks, helmets, goggles, and other equipment, some reporters say they may miss out on documenting newsworthy events for the public.For Nigro, protective equipment has made it possible to go places that he may otherwise be forced to avoid. Wearing a respirator and gas mask, for instance, allowed him to “go into the scrum” to document what was happening during the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Protective equipment is also essential because members of the press may be specifically targeted by law enforcement. “Sometimes the press badge is also a bull’s-eye,” Nigro explained. “They still come out on horseback with batons, with gas, and pepper balls and less-lethal munitions, and they’re firing directly and teeing up on us,” he added. That’s despite court orders prohibiting officers from attacking the press at protests.“I’m just trying to mitigate any kind of bodily harm and make sure that the story is told,” Nigro said. “We need to be protected to be able to make sure that we document history, for now, and for the future.”Ray also credited protective equipment for helping him do his job while covering a protest outside of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles earlier this year. Federal agents, he said, used large amounts of chemical irritants on the crowd. “I was able to stay and report on all that, and if I didn’t have a gas mask, it would have been impossible,” Ray explained.Similarly, Khan said that his gas mask is essential. “My pictures are so much better because of it,” he said. “That’s like the most important part of my kit.” Khan, however, was among the journalists recently barred by officers from bringing a gas mask to cover protests at Delaney Hall.‘A ticking time bomb’Restricting PPE at protests, then, makes it harder for journalists to keep the public informed and makes an already dangerous job even riskier.“It just seems like a ticking time bomb, where eventually something bad is going to happen,” said Ray. “Someone’s going to get shot in the eye, or shot in the head, or something like that.”“I think it’s incredibly dangerous to expect that journalists would put themselves in these situations without being able to protect themselves,” he added.For Tirado, the concern extends beyond journalists. She noted that many protesters also suffered severe injuries at the same Minneapolis demonstration where she was injured in 2020. “The First Amendment,” Tirado said, “does not distinguish between a citizen and a journalist.”“I managed to survive,” Tirado said. “But that is down specifically to the PPE. If I hadn’t had it, I’d be dead right now.”

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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Reporters covering protests in the United States have been shot with crowd-control munitions, sprayed with tear gas, hit with cars, and physically attacked by both law enforcement and demonstrators.So it makes sense that many journalists wear personal protective equipment like helmets, goggles, and gas masks at demonstrations, and that organizations like Reporters Without Borders offer grants to buy PPE that can reduce reporters’ chances of being hurt or even killed while doing their jobs.What doesn’t make sense is when the government tries to stop reporters from taking those basic safety precautions.Yet across the country, jurisdictions are banning safety gear at public protests. Officials often justify these policies in the name of public safety, for example by arguing that masks make it difficult to identify people who commit crimes at demonstrations. But many make no exceptions for members of the press, who pose no threat and face severe risk simply for doing their jobs.In Newark, New Jersey, journalists covering the protests outside of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center at Delaney Hall have recently reported being turned away by police for carrying gas masks or bags that they need to hold PPE.Other places bar protective equipment at protests by law, such as Modesto, California, where an ordinance that prohibits a wide range of PPE, including goggles, helmets, and gas masks, is currently being challenged in court.These bans are dangerous, most importantly to journalists’ physical safety. But they also harm the public’s right to know. When reporters can’t safely remain at a protest, the public loses access to independent documentation about what happened there.PPE is ‘the only reason I’m alive’Journalist and writer Linda Tirado lost her left eye and suffered a traumatic brain injury after being shot by a foam round while covering a protest in Minneapolis in 2020. The city later paid $600,000 to settle a lawsuit she brought over excessive use of force.Tirado credits the protective equipment she wore that day with saving her life. “The only reason I am alive is that I was wearing goggles that I had sourced, I was wearing a respirator that I had sourced,” Tirado told me when we spoke recently.Half a decade later, journalists covering demonstrations continue to face similar risks. While covering a protest in Los Angeles in 2025, filmmaker and photojournalist Michael Nigro was shot in the head with a crowd-control munition, leaving a mark on his protective helmet, which was labeled on both sides with the word “PRESS.”“These less-lethal munitions are sometimes lethal,” he said. “You can get hit in the eye; I could lose eyesight.”Reporter and photojournalist Wali Khan expressed similar concerns about an incident last September when he was shot with crowd-control munitions by federal officers while covering protests outside an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois. Khan was wearing impact goggles, a ventilator set, and a helmet when he was hit. Without his PPE, he said, he believes he could have been “partially blinded.”Helmets and goggles aren’t the only equipment journalists rely on. Respirators and gas masks can also be critical when law enforcement deploys chemical agents at protests. Lexis-Olivier Ray, a reporter for L.A. Taco, has covered multiple protests around California. He often wears a full-face gas mask to mitigate the impacts of chemical irritants.“There’s a big question mark” about the side effects of tear gas, Ray said. Even with a mask, he still has concerns about the impact on his health from tear gas that seeps through the mask or touches his skin.Threats beyond law enforcementProtective equipment can also help reporters defend themselves against threats that don’t come from law enforcement.Documentarian Rocky Romano learned that firsthand while covering a protest in California in 2022. Romano was wearing a helmet when he was violently struck on the head by a man wielding what he described as a “tire checker” baton.“He just doesn’t hit me. He hits me as hard as you can hit somebody with that weapon, like he must have played baseball or something,” Romano said.Romano believes that his helmet saved him from more serious injuries, including death or mental impairment. “I can’t imagine taking that hit without a protective helmet between my head and the weapon. It would have been devastating,” he said.PPE allows journalists to continue reportingBut protective equipment does more than prevent or mitigate injuries to journalists; it also allows the press to continue reporting when demonstrations become dangerous. Without gas masks, helmets, goggles, and other equipment, some reporters say they may miss out on documenting newsworthy events for the public.For Nigro, protective equipment has made it possible to go places that he may otherwise be forced to avoid. Wearing a respirator and gas mask, for instance, allowed him to “go into the scrum” to document what was happening during the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Protective equipment is also essential because members of the press may be specifically targeted by law enforcement. “Sometimes the press badge is also a bull’s-eye,” Nigro explained. “They still come out on horseback with batons, with gas, and pepper balls and less-lethal munitions, and they’re firing directly and teeing up on us,” he added. That’s despite court orders prohibiting officers from attacking the press at protests.“I’m just trying to mitigate any kind of bodily harm and make sure that the story is told,” Nigro said. “We need to be protected to be able to make sure that we document history, for now, and for the future.”Ray also credited protective equipment for helping him do his job while covering a protest outside of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles earlier this year. Federal agents, he said, used large amounts of chemical irritants on the crowd. “I was able to stay and report on all that, and if I didn’t have a gas mask, it would have been impossible,” Ray explained.Similarly, Khan said that his gas mask is essential. “My pictures are so much better because of it,” he said. “That’s like the most important part of my kit.” Khan, however, was among the journalists recently barred by officers from bringing a gas mask to cover protests at Delaney Hall.‘A ticking time bomb’Restricting PPE at protests, then, makes it harder for journalists to keep the public informed and makes an already dangerous job even riskier.“It just seems like a ticking time bomb, where eventually something bad is going to happen,” said Ray. “Someone’s going to get shot in the eye, or shot in the head, or something like that.”“I think it’s incredibly dangerous to expect that journalists would put themselves in these situations without being able to protect themselves,” he added.For Tirado, the concern extends beyond journalists. She noted that many protesters also suffered severe injuries at the same Minneapolis demonstration where she was injured in 2020. “The First Amendment,” Tirado said, “does not distinguish between a citizen and a journalist.”“I managed to survive,” Tirado said. “But that is down specifically to the PPE. If I hadn’t had it, I’d be dead right now.”

La tentativa de homicidio atribuida a un refugiado ha desencadenado protestas antimigración y un nuevo episodio de tensión política en Irlanda del Norte, mientras el Gobierno británico intenta contener una creciente ola de malestar social.

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Mundiario
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La tentativa de homicidio atribuida a un refugiado ha desencadenado protestas antimigración y un nuevo episodio de tensión política en Irlanda del Norte, mientras el Gobierno británico intenta contener una creciente ola de malestar social.

Desplácese hacia abajo en la tabla superior para ver los resultados más recientes de las elecciones primarias del condado de San Diego. A continuación se presenta un resumen de las contiendas clave, con un estimado del 95.3% de las boletas contadas en el condado de San Diego — aproximadamente 11,000 boletas aún faltan por contabilizar […]

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Times of San Diego
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Desplácese hacia abajo en la tabla superior para ver los resultados más recientes de las elecciones primarias del condado de San Diego. A continuación se presenta un resumen de las contiendas clave, con un estimado del 95.3% de las boletas contadas en el condado de San Diego — aproximadamente 11,000 boletas aún faltan por contabilizar […]

27 minutes

South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — South Carolina’s top prosecutor and lieutenant governor are headed to a June 23 runoff in the GOP bid for the Governor’s Mansion, while a state representative from the Midlands won the Democratic nomination. The winner of the Republican runoff will go up against state Rep. Jermaine Johnson in November. Lt. Gov. Pam Evette […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — South Carolina’s top prosecutor and lieutenant governor are headed to a June 23 runoff in the GOP bid for the Governor’s Mansion, while a state representative from the Midlands won the Democratic nomination. The winner of the Republican runoff will go up against state Rep. Jermaine Johnson in November. Lt. Gov. Pam Evette […]

27 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Fort Worth ISD has fewer students but a budget built for a bigger district. State-appointed takeover leaders say that must change.

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Fort Worth Report
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Fort Worth ISD has fewer students but a budget built for a bigger district. State-appointed takeover leaders say that must change.

فەرماندەیی ناوەندیی ئەمەریکا،سێنتکۆم ڕایگەیاند هێزەکانی بە فەرمانی سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا کۆتاییان بە ئۆپەراسیۆنە سەربازییەکان هێناوە لە دژی ئامانجەکان لە ئێران کە لە کاردانەوە بە خستنەخوارەوەی هەلیکۆپتەری ئاپاچی ئەمەریکا ئەنجامدراوە. سێنتکۆم لە بەیاننامەیەکدا کە لە تۆڕی کۆمەڵایەتی ئێکس بڵاوکراوەتەوە، ئاماژەی بەوەکردووە هێزەکانی ئەمەریکا لەو ئۆپەراسیۆنەدا لە فڕۆکە جەنگییەکانی هێزی ئاسمانی و هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا بۆ بە ئامانجگرتنی سیستەمی بەرگری ئاسمانی ئێران و وێستگەکانی کۆنتڕۆڵی زەمینی و...

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ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
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فەرماندەیی ناوەندیی ئەمەریکا،سێنتکۆم ڕایگەیاند هێزەکانی بە فەرمانی سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا کۆتاییان بە ئۆپەراسیۆنە سەربازییەکان هێناوە لە دژی ئامانجەکان لە ئێران کە لە کاردانەوە بە خستنەخوارەوەی هەلیکۆپتەری ئاپاچی ئەمەریکا ئەنجامدراوە. سێنتکۆم لە بەیاننامەیەکدا کە لە تۆڕی کۆمەڵایەتی ئێکس بڵاوکراوەتەوە، ئاماژەی بەوەکردووە هێزەکانی ئەمەریکا لەو ئۆپەراسیۆنەدا لە فڕۆکە جەنگییەکانی هێزی ئاسمانی و هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا بۆ بە ئامانجگرتنی سیستەمی بەرگری ئاسمانی ئێران و وێستگەکانی کۆنتڕۆڵی زەمینی و...

The $100 million development will include 250 apartments and ground-floor retail.

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Fort Worth Report
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The $100 million development will include 250 apartments and ground-floor retail.

TOPEKA — Attorney General Kris Kobach on Tuesday urged the governor to deny clemency to Kansas inmates who have been sentenced to death. Eight of nine people sentenced to death in Kansas formally filed clemency requests in May, according to a press release from the Attorney General’s Office. Kobach urged Gov. Laura Kelly to reject […]

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Kansas Reflector
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TOPEKA — Attorney General Kris Kobach on Tuesday urged the governor to deny clemency to Kansas inmates who have been sentenced to death. Eight of nine people sentenced to death in Kansas formally filed clemency requests in May, according to a press release from the Attorney General’s Office. Kobach urged Gov. Laura Kelly to reject […]

"An enraged Filipino people can also come full circle in their ability to oust this kleptocratic clique from power." The post Rights groups slam dismissal of ill-gotten wealth case vs Marcos family appeared first on Bulatlat.

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Bulatlat
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"An enraged Filipino people can also come full circle in their ability to oust this kleptocratic clique from power." The post Rights groups slam dismissal of ill-gotten wealth case vs Marcos family appeared first on Bulatlat.

36 minutes

Maine Morning Star
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This is a breaking story and will be updated. Graham Platner claimed victory Tuesday in the Democratic primary election to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins after the Bangor Daily News and Decision Desk HQ called the race with 11% of votes counted. AP has not called the race yet. According to Decision Desk, Platner […]

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Maine Morning Star
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This is a breaking story and will be updated. Graham Platner claimed victory Tuesday in the Democratic primary election to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins after the Bangor Daily News and Decision Desk HQ called the race with 11% of votes counted. AP has not called the race yet. According to Decision Desk, Platner […]

36 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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Republican U.S. Rep. Julie Fedorchak will defend her seat in the general election, with The Associated Press projecting her as the winner over NDGOP-endorsed challenger Alex Balazs in the statewide primary. The AP called the race for Fedorchak at 8:18 p.m. local time. She will take on Democratic-NPL U.S. House candidate Trygve Hammer in November, […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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Republican U.S. Rep. Julie Fedorchak will defend her seat in the general election, with The Associated Press projecting her as the winner over NDGOP-endorsed challenger Alex Balazs in the statewide primary. The AP called the race for Fedorchak at 8:18 p.m. local time. She will take on Democratic-NPL U.S. House candidate Trygve Hammer in November, […]

Pamalakaya said there are several reclamation projects that continue to move forward despite the government’s announced suspension on reclamation activities in 2023. The post On World Oceans Day fishers renew call to halt Manila Bay reclamation appeared first on Bulatlat.

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Bulatlat
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Pamalakaya said there are several reclamation projects that continue to move forward despite the government’s announced suspension on reclamation activities in 2023. The post On World Oceans Day fishers renew call to halt Manila Bay reclamation appeared first on Bulatlat.

Randy Villegas, who earned endorsements from Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, defied political odds by winning a traditionally conservative district as a progressive Democrat. He defeats Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains, the hand-picked choice of Democratic leadership.

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CalMatters
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Randy Villegas, who earned endorsements from Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, defied political odds by winning a traditionally conservative district as a progressive Democrat. He defeats Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains, the hand-picked choice of Democratic leadership.

ستاد فرماندهی مرکزی آمریکا،‌ سنتکام، در بیانیه‌ای که سه‌شنبه شب به وقت واشنگتن صادر کرد گفت نیروهای آمریکایی حملاتی را به جمهوری اسلامی در تاریخ ۹ ژوئن، به دستور فرمانده کل قوا و در پاسخ به سرنگونی روز دوشنبه یک هلیکوپتر آپاچی ارتش ایالات متحده آغاز کرده‌ بودند، تکمیل کردند.

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صدای آمریکا
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ستاد فرماندهی مرکزی آمریکا،‌ سنتکام، در بیانیه‌ای که سه‌شنبه شب به وقت واشنگتن صادر کرد گفت نیروهای آمریکایی حملاتی را به جمهوری اسلامی در تاریخ ۹ ژوئن، به دستور فرمانده کل قوا و در پاسخ به سرنگونی روز دوشنبه یک هلیکوپتر آپاچی ارتش ایالات متحده آغاز کرده‌ بودند، تکمیل کردند.

OMAHA — A year has passed since roughly 80 federal and local agents plus a canine unit converged on Omaha’s Glenn Valley Foods and in buses hauled away roughly 75 undocumented workers. It was the biggest immigration raid in Nebraska since 2018. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which invited a national TV crew to film, […]

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Nebraska Examiner
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OMAHA — A year has passed since roughly 80 federal and local agents plus a canine unit converged on Omaha’s Glenn Valley Foods and in buses hauled away roughly 75 undocumented workers. It was the biggest immigration raid in Nebraska since 2018. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which invited a national TV crew to film, […]

Democrats’ hopes of winning back the U.S. Senate most likely run through Maine.   And they’re pinned on Graham Platner, a U.S. military veteran and oyster farmer who will take on GOP Sen. Susan Collins.  Collins has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997 and is seeking a sixth term. She has long bucked prevailing political […]

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The 19th News
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Democrats’ hopes of winning back the U.S. Senate most likely run through Maine.   And they’re pinned on Graham Platner, a U.S. military veteran and oyster farmer who will take on GOP Sen. Susan Collins.  Collins has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997 and is seeking a sixth term. She has long bucked prevailing political […]

Commissioner Alisa Simmons requested the briefing on a task force created in 2023.

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Fort Worth Report
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Commissioner Alisa Simmons requested the briefing on a task force created in 2023.

County commissioners voted along party lines not to honor the HELP Center for LGBTQ+ Health.

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Fort Worth Report
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County commissioners voted along party lines not to honor the HELP Center for LGBTQ+ Health.

55 minutes

South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham walloped his GOP challengers Tuesday on the way to fulfilling his pledge to be President Donald Trump’s “best ally” in the U.S. Senate. When The Associated Press called the race about 9 p.m., Graham had more than 58% of the vote to again avoid a primary runoff, continuing an […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham walloped his GOP challengers Tuesday on the way to fulfilling his pledge to be President Donald Trump’s “best ally” in the U.S. Senate. When The Associated Press called the race about 9 p.m., Graham had more than 58% of the vote to again avoid a primary runoff, continuing an […]

(The Center Square) – Five gubernatorial candidates went deep into the night for a final tally and U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham charged into November with a primary Election Day win in South Carolina Republican primaries on Tuesday. Graham, bidding for a fifth term, was leading Mark Lynch 58.5%-27.5% when the race was called with 50% of the votes counted two hours after polls closed. Annie Andrews was a winner in the Democrats’ primary 61.1%-30.7% over Brandon Brown with 58% of the votes counted. The governor’s race, at time of publication, was too close to call. Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, endorsed by second-term Republican President Donald Trump, led early returns ahead of state Attorney General Alan Wilson, U.S. Reps. Ralph Norman and Nancy Mace, and millionaire businessman Rom Reddy. Democratic U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, just over a month away from his 86th birthday, easily defeated Frederick Goodwin in the 6th Congressional District in his bid for an 18th term. The race was called about 45 minutes after polls closed. Other early call winners were among Republicans – Rep. Joe Wilson in the 2nd Congressional District and William Timmons in the 4th Congressional District. Graham, turning 71 five days after America turns 250, has been in the Beltway since first winning election – first of four terms – to the House of Representatives in 1994. He began his tenure in the Senate in 2002. In this 119th Congress, he’s chairman of the Committee on the Budget and has seats on committees for appropriations; environment and public works; and the judiciary. His time in the 116th, from January 2019 to January 2021, included chairmanship of the Committee on the Judiciary. Confirmations sailed through for Supreme Court Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, and more than 200 federal judges appointed by Trump. The South Carolina Election Commission said early voting set a record with 318,600 ballots cast statewide. In the last midterm in 2022, early voting turnout was 100,450. The presidential cycle in 2024 drew 120,178. South Carolina has 3,383,591 registered voters.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Five gubernatorial candidates went deep into the night for a final tally and U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham charged into November with a primary Election Day win in South Carolina Republican primaries on Tuesday. Graham, bidding for a fifth term, was leading Mark Lynch 58.5%-27.5% when the race was called with 50% of the votes counted two hours after polls closed. Annie Andrews was a winner in the Democrats’ primary 61.1%-30.7% over Brandon Brown with 58% of the votes counted. The governor’s race, at time of publication, was too close to call. Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, endorsed by second-term Republican President Donald Trump, led early returns ahead of state Attorney General Alan Wilson, U.S. Reps. Ralph Norman and Nancy Mace, and millionaire businessman Rom Reddy. Democratic U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, just over a month away from his 86th birthday, easily defeated Frederick Goodwin in the 6th Congressional District in his bid for an 18th term. The race was called about 45 minutes after polls closed. Other early call winners were among Republicans – Rep. Joe Wilson in the 2nd Congressional District and William Timmons in the 4th Congressional District. Graham, turning 71 five days after America turns 250, has been in the Beltway since first winning election – first of four terms – to the House of Representatives in 1994. He began his tenure in the Senate in 2002. In this 119th Congress, he’s chairman of the Committee on the Budget and has seats on committees for appropriations; environment and public works; and the judiciary. His time in the 116th, from January 2019 to January 2021, included chairmanship of the Committee on the Judiciary. Confirmations sailed through for Supreme Court Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, and more than 200 federal judges appointed by Trump. The South Carolina Election Commission said early voting set a record with 318,600 ballots cast statewide. In the last midterm in 2022, early voting turnout was 100,450. The presidential cycle in 2024 drew 120,178. South Carolina has 3,383,591 registered voters.