9 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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中國國安部這個周一表示,“躺平”思潮與境外反華勢力有關,微博話題#境外組織大力資助網紅煽動躺平#登上熱搜,網絡炸鍋了 !

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法國國際廣播電台
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中國國安部這個周一表示,“躺平”思潮與境外反華勢力有關,微博話題#境外組織大力資助網紅煽動躺平#登上熱搜,網絡炸鍋了 !

11 minutes

Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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As other states expand access to methadone treatment under relaxed federal rules, Wisconsin has been slow to follow. The post ‘Golden handcuffs’: Wisconsin methadone rules limit access to opioid treatment appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

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Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
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As other states expand access to methadone treatment under relaxed federal rules, Wisconsin has been slow to follow. The post ‘Golden handcuffs’: Wisconsin methadone rules limit access to opioid treatment appeared first on Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Arizona’s free newsletter here.A federal judge has dismissed the U.S. Department of Justice’s lawsuit against Arizona over the state’s refusal to turn over an unredacted version of its voter roll, finding that the state isn’t required by federal law to provide it.U.S. District Judge Susan Brnovich’s ruling comes after President Donald Trump’s administration sued Arizona last year, alleging that the state was interfering with the federal government’s ability to exercise oversight and enforce federal election laws. It sought to compel the state to hand over its full, unredacted voter list, which includes sensitive information such as voters’ full birthdates and Social Security numbers. The DOJ has requested similar data from virtually every state, part of what it says is an effort to make sure states are maintaining their voter rolls and removing ineligible voters in compliance with federal law. At least 12 states have voluntarily shared the data, but most have declined, citing state and federal laws that officials argued precluded doing so.In response, the Justice Department has so far sued 30 states and the District of Columbia, but its arguments have been repeatedly rejected by federal courts. Five of the lawsuits — not counting the one against Arizona — had previously been dismissed, and the Justice Department has yet to secure a favorable ruling in any of the cases. Brnovich, like other federal judges in Michigan, Oregon, California, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, said that none of the three laws that federal prosecutors used to justify their request — the Civil Rights Act of 1960, the National Voter Registration Act, and the Help America Vote Act — required the disclosure of the data.Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes and Attorney General Kris Mayes, both Democrats, applauded Brnovich’s decision in a statement. They said she “rightfully dismissed” the lawsuit.The pair previously urged local election officials not to give full voter files to the federal government, writing in a letter to county recorders, who control voter registration data, that disclosure of such materials to the DOJ would “violate both federal and state law” and they must “fulfill [their] oath by declining any such illegal demands.”“Arizona acted correctly in refusing this request, and today’s ruling vindicates that decision,” their statement on the ruling read. “Our offices will continue to defend the privacy of Arizona voters against federal overreach.”It’s unknown whether the Justice Department will appeal the decision. A spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It has so far appealed the dismissals in Michigan, Oregon, and California.Read more Votebeat coverage of the DOJ’s lawsuits and requests seeking state voter rolls:Voting rights groups sue Trump administration to stop collection of voter data (April 21, 2026)Texas counties receive subpoenas for voters’ records from Department of Homeland Security (April 10, 2026)In fight with DOJ over voting roll access, Michigan may be poised to go the distance (March 14, 2026)Top Arizona officials urge counties to withhold voter data as FBI, DHS relitigate state’s elections (March 11, 2026)Judge dismisses Trump administration lawsuit over Michigan’s voter rolls (Feb. 10, 2026)Texas shares entire voter registration list with the Trump administration (Jan. 9, 2026)U.S. Justice Department sues Arizona, Connecticut for access to unredacted state voter rolls (Jan. 6, 2026)U.S. Justice Department sues WEC for not providing unredacted voter list (Dec. 18, 2025)U.S. sues Michigan, Pennsylvania and four other states over request for voter rolls (Sept. 25, 2025)A guide to understanding the debate over keeping voter rolls ‘clean’ (Sept. 4, 2025)Sasha Hupka is a reporter for Votebeat based in Arizona. Contact Sasha at shupka@votebeat.org.

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Votebeat
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Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Arizona’s free newsletter here.A federal judge has dismissed the U.S. Department of Justice’s lawsuit against Arizona over the state’s refusal to turn over an unredacted version of its voter roll, finding that the state isn’t required by federal law to provide it.U.S. District Judge Susan Brnovich’s ruling comes after President Donald Trump’s administration sued Arizona last year, alleging that the state was interfering with the federal government’s ability to exercise oversight and enforce federal election laws. It sought to compel the state to hand over its full, unredacted voter list, which includes sensitive information such as voters’ full birthdates and Social Security numbers. The DOJ has requested similar data from virtually every state, part of what it says is an effort to make sure states are maintaining their voter rolls and removing ineligible voters in compliance with federal law. At least 12 states have voluntarily shared the data, but most have declined, citing state and federal laws that officials argued precluded doing so.In response, the Justice Department has so far sued 30 states and the District of Columbia, but its arguments have been repeatedly rejected by federal courts. Five of the lawsuits — not counting the one against Arizona — had previously been dismissed, and the Justice Department has yet to secure a favorable ruling in any of the cases. Brnovich, like other federal judges in Michigan, Oregon, California, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, said that none of the three laws that federal prosecutors used to justify their request — the Civil Rights Act of 1960, the National Voter Registration Act, and the Help America Vote Act — required the disclosure of the data.Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes and Attorney General Kris Mayes, both Democrats, applauded Brnovich’s decision in a statement. They said she “rightfully dismissed” the lawsuit.The pair previously urged local election officials not to give full voter files to the federal government, writing in a letter to county recorders, who control voter registration data, that disclosure of such materials to the DOJ would “violate both federal and state law” and they must “fulfill [their] oath by declining any such illegal demands.”“Arizona acted correctly in refusing this request, and today’s ruling vindicates that decision,” their statement on the ruling read. “Our offices will continue to defend the privacy of Arizona voters against federal overreach.”It’s unknown whether the Justice Department will appeal the decision. A spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It has so far appealed the dismissals in Michigan, Oregon, and California.Read more Votebeat coverage of the DOJ’s lawsuits and requests seeking state voter rolls:Voting rights groups sue Trump administration to stop collection of voter data (April 21, 2026)Texas counties receive subpoenas for voters’ records from Department of Homeland Security (April 10, 2026)In fight with DOJ over voting roll access, Michigan may be poised to go the distance (March 14, 2026)Top Arizona officials urge counties to withhold voter data as FBI, DHS relitigate state’s elections (March 11, 2026)Judge dismisses Trump administration lawsuit over Michigan’s voter rolls (Feb. 10, 2026)Texas shares entire voter registration list with the Trump administration (Jan. 9, 2026)U.S. Justice Department sues Arizona, Connecticut for access to unredacted state voter rolls (Jan. 6, 2026)U.S. Justice Department sues WEC for not providing unredacted voter list (Dec. 18, 2025)U.S. sues Michigan, Pennsylvania and four other states over request for voter rolls (Sept. 25, 2025)A guide to understanding the debate over keeping voter rolls ‘clean’ (Sept. 4, 2025)Sasha Hupka is a reporter for Votebeat based in Arizona. Contact Sasha at shupka@votebeat.org.

North Carolina’s average teacher pay in 2024-25 ranked 43rd in the nation for the second year in a row, according to new data from the National Education Association (NEA). That ranking is projected to drop to 46th for the 2025-26... The post North Carolina ranks 43rd for teacher pay in 2024-25, projected to drop in 2025-26 appeared first on EdNC.

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North Carolina’s average teacher pay in 2024-25 ranked 43rd in the nation for the second year in a row, according to new data from the National Education Association (NEA). That ranking is projected to drop to 46th for the 2025-26... The post North Carolina ranks 43rd for teacher pay in 2024-25, projected to drop in 2025-26 appeared first on EdNC.

15 minutes

South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — South Carolina can send voter information to the U.S. Department of Justice under an agreement the State Election Commission approved Tuesday. The commission’s 4-1 vote ended months of deliberation over how South Carolina should respond to the Trump administration’s request to review voter data in an effort to remove those ineligible to participate, […]

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South Carolina Daily Gazette
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COLUMBIA — South Carolina can send voter information to the U.S. Department of Justice under an agreement the State Election Commission approved Tuesday. The commission’s 4-1 vote ended months of deliberation over how South Carolina should respond to the Trump administration’s request to review voter data in an effort to remove those ineligible to participate, […]

16 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – A bill to protect immigrant workers from being threatened by their employers passed during a legislative committee hearing on Tuesday morning. Assembly Bill 2495 would make it illegal for employers to threaten an immigrant employee to prevent or discourage that employee from reporting a workplace violation. Current law already protects immigrant workers who report such a violation, but only after a violation has occurred and the employee has reported it. No such protection exists for immigrant employees before they report that something is wrong at work, according to a legislative analysis of the bill. “Anti-immigrant national rhetoric has emboldened bad faith employers to increasingly deter immigrant workers from complaining about violations of their workplace rights by making veiled threats, chilling statements or implicit warnings about immigration consequences,” Assemblymember Ash Kalra, D-San Jose and author of the bill, testified on Tuesday morning. “When such employer coercion succeeds, unlawful conduct goes unreported, workplace standards erode, and law-abiding employers are undercut.” Those who testified in support of the bill said in the Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing that immigrant communities are fearful of immigration enforcement after increased enforcement efforts in the last year. “Over the past year, immigration enforcement actions have become more aggressive and more public as authorities target immigrant communities in their homes, in hospitals, on their way to school and at work,” Hailey McAllister, senior staff attorney for Legal Aid at Work, testified in support of the bill. “In this political climate, undocumented workers must take real and significant risk to step forward to actively assert their workplace rights, and as a result, we’re seeing many workers who are afraid to speak up.” Wage theft, unsafe working conditions and discrimination arise from such situations, McAllister testified. “That fear doesn’t just harm immigrant workers. It undermines enforcement of California’s workplace protections for everybody,” McAllister continued. No one testified in opposition to the bill on Tuesday, and no groups have registered their opposition to the bill, according to the legislative analysis. According to research from the American Immigration Council, 27.3% of California’s population was born in a foreign country, and 19.8% of the state’s residents born in the U.S. live with at least one immigrant parent. Approximately 32.7% of the Golden State’s labor force consists of immigrants, that study shows. Another 2024 study from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy found that in 2022, illegal immigrants in the United States contributed $96.7 billion in taxes. In California, illegal immigrants paid $8.5 billion in taxes, making the state one of six that generated more than $1 billion in tax revenue that year from taxes paid by illegal immigrants. California was followed by Texas, at $4.9 billion; New York, at $3.1 billion; Florida, at $1.8 billion; Illinois, at $1.5 billion, and New Jersey, at $1.3 billion.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – A bill to protect immigrant workers from being threatened by their employers passed during a legislative committee hearing on Tuesday morning. Assembly Bill 2495 would make it illegal for employers to threaten an immigrant employee to prevent or discourage that employee from reporting a workplace violation. Current law already protects immigrant workers who report such a violation, but only after a violation has occurred and the employee has reported it. No such protection exists for immigrant employees before they report that something is wrong at work, according to a legislative analysis of the bill. “Anti-immigrant national rhetoric has emboldened bad faith employers to increasingly deter immigrant workers from complaining about violations of their workplace rights by making veiled threats, chilling statements or implicit warnings about immigration consequences,” Assemblymember Ash Kalra, D-San Jose and author of the bill, testified on Tuesday morning. “When such employer coercion succeeds, unlawful conduct goes unreported, workplace standards erode, and law-abiding employers are undercut.” Those who testified in support of the bill said in the Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing that immigrant communities are fearful of immigration enforcement after increased enforcement efforts in the last year. “Over the past year, immigration enforcement actions have become more aggressive and more public as authorities target immigrant communities in their homes, in hospitals, on their way to school and at work,” Hailey McAllister, senior staff attorney for Legal Aid at Work, testified in support of the bill. “In this political climate, undocumented workers must take real and significant risk to step forward to actively assert their workplace rights, and as a result, we’re seeing many workers who are afraid to speak up.” Wage theft, unsafe working conditions and discrimination arise from such situations, McAllister testified. “That fear doesn’t just harm immigrant workers. It undermines enforcement of California’s workplace protections for everybody,” McAllister continued. No one testified in opposition to the bill on Tuesday, and no groups have registered their opposition to the bill, according to the legislative analysis. According to research from the American Immigration Council, 27.3% of California’s population was born in a foreign country, and 19.8% of the state’s residents born in the U.S. live with at least one immigrant parent. Approximately 32.7% of the Golden State’s labor force consists of immigrants, that study shows. Another 2024 study from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy found that in 2022, illegal immigrants in the United States contributed $96.7 billion in taxes. In California, illegal immigrants paid $8.5 billion in taxes, making the state one of six that generated more than $1 billion in tax revenue that year from taxes paid by illegal immigrants. California was followed by Texas, at $4.9 billion; New York, at $3.1 billion; Florida, at $1.8 billion; Illinois, at $1.5 billion, and New Jersey, at $1.3 billion.

Du stress jusqu'au burn-out, de l'épuisement, du harcèlement moral au bureau ou dans l'atelier. Les risques psychosociaux au travail représentent de vrais dangers pour la santé des salariés. L'OIT – Organisation mondiale du travail – vient de publier un rapport édifiant : plusieurs centaines de milliers de personnes meurent chaque année à cause des risques psychosociaux.

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Radio France Internationale
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Du stress jusqu'au burn-out, de l'épuisement, du harcèlement moral au bureau ou dans l'atelier. Les risques psychosociaux au travail représentent de vrais dangers pour la santé des salariés. L'OIT – Organisation mondiale du travail – vient de publier un rapport édifiant : plusieurs centaines de milliers de personnes meurent chaque année à cause des risques psychosociaux.

17 minutes

Revista Crisis
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Revista Crisis
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17 minutes

Outras Palavras
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Ao final de 2025, após uma arrancada surpreendente, o quarto mandato parecia ao alcance da mão. Um velho cacoete – a busca eterna de conciliação entre desiguais – pode pôr tudo a perder. Análise de uma eleição decisiva, a cinco meses das urnas The post Lula, sua última eleição e seus demônios appeared first on Outras Palavras.

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Outras Palavras
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Ao final de 2025, após uma arrancada surpreendente, o quarto mandato parecia ao alcance da mão. Um velho cacoete – a busca eterna de conciliação entre desiguais – pode pôr tudo a perder. Análise de uma eleição decisiva, a cinco meses das urnas The post Lula, sua última eleição e seus demônios appeared first on Outras Palavras.

Distopía para realistas
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18 minutes

Revista Crisis
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Revista Crisis
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Boiling oil spilled onto a street outside an oil refinery in Tuapse, Krasnodar Krai, after a storage tank boiled over during a fire there on April 28. Alexei Klushin, head of the regional Emergency Situations Ministry office, described the incident to Governor Veniamin Kondratyev in a conversation posted to the governor’s Telegram channel.

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Meduza
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Boiling oil spilled onto a street outside an oil refinery in Tuapse, Krasnodar Krai, after a storage tank boiled over during a fire there on April 28. Alexei Klushin, head of the regional Emergency Situations Ministry office, described the incident to Governor Veniamin Kondratyev in a conversation posted to the governor’s Telegram channel.

El empresario Iván Martínez, de la funeraria homónima, se refirió a su vínculo con la automotora allanada en Puente Alto...

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BioBioChile
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El empresario Iván Martínez, de la funeraria homónima, se refirió a su vínculo con la automotora allanada en Puente Alto...

Mocasín de piel con pasados de Zara por 49,95 euros: el zapato que eleva cualquier look sin esfuerzo.

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Mundiario
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Mocasín de piel con pasados de Zara por 49,95 euros: el zapato que eleva cualquier look sin esfuerzo.

La caída del decreto del alquiler no es solo una derrota parlamentaria del Gobierno de Pedro Sánchez: es la constatación de que la geometría variable del Congreso ha mutado y de que la política de vivienda se ha convertido en un campo de batalla donde los bloques se reconfiguran sin reparar en el coste social.

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Mundiario
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La caída del decreto del alquiler no es solo una derrota parlamentaria del Gobierno de Pedro Sánchez: es la constatación de que la geometría variable del Congreso ha mutado y de que la política de vivienda se ha convertido en un campo de batalla donde los bloques se reconfiguran sin reparar en el coste social.

Camisa entredoses manga globo de Zara por 25,95 euros: el básico romántico que eleva cualquier look.

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Mundiario
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Camisa entredoses manga globo de Zara por 25,95 euros: el básico romántico que eleva cualquier look.

23 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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Max Marshall and Cosmo Jones opened Giant Runt Gallery in September 2024 to showcase art they deem outside of the “general Fort Worth norm.”

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Fort Worth Report
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Max Marshall and Cosmo Jones opened Giant Runt Gallery in September 2024 to showcase art they deem outside of the “general Fort Worth norm.”

El más vendido de 12 euros que ilumina tu piel: Florence Bio Cosmesi C, el básico que engancha.

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Mundiario
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El más vendido de 12 euros que ilumina tu piel: Florence Bio Cosmesi C, el básico que engancha.

Programação reúne produções nacionais e internacionais com foco na ocupação do espaço público e acessibilidade urbana Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Programação reúne produções nacionais e internacionais com foco na ocupação do espaço público e acessibilidade urbana Fonte

Washington — Şah Charles ê Brîtanyayê roja Sêşemê gotareke dîrokî li nav avahîya Kongresa Amerîkayê pêşkêş kir. Di gotara xwe ya li pêş herdu civatên Kongresê de wî hewldana kuştinê li dijî Serok Donald Trump roja Şemîyê di Şîva Nûçegihanên Koşka Sipî de li Washington şermezar kir. Di roja duyemîn a serdana çar rojî ya Amerîkayê de, Şahê Brîtanî got ku wê êrîşê "hewl da ziyan bigihîne" serokatîya Amerîkî û "tirs û nakokîyên berfirehtir çêbike." "Kiryarên tundûtûjîyê yên bi vî rengî dê...

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Dengê Amerîka
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Washington — Şah Charles ê Brîtanyayê roja Sêşemê gotareke dîrokî li nav avahîya Kongresa Amerîkayê pêşkêş kir. Di gotara xwe ya li pêş herdu civatên Kongresê de wî hewldana kuştinê li dijî Serok Donald Trump roja Şemîyê di Şîva Nûçegihanên Koşka Sipî de li Washington şermezar kir. Di roja duyemîn a serdana çar rojî ya Amerîkayê de, Şahê Brîtanî got ku wê êrîşê "hewl da ziyan bigihîne" serokatîya Amerîkî û "tirs û nakokîyên berfirehtir çêbike." "Kiryarên tundûtûjîyê yên bi vî rengî dê...

Vladimir Putin broke his silence on Ukrainian drone strikes against oil infrastructure in Tuapse, addressing the issue during a meeting on election security. Pavel Zarubin, host of the program Moskva. Kreml. Putin (“Moscow. Kremlin. Putin”), published a clip of his remarks on his Telegram channel.

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Meduza
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Vladimir Putin broke his silence on Ukrainian drone strikes against oil infrastructure in Tuapse, addressing the issue during a meeting on election security. Pavel Zarubin, host of the program Moskva. Kreml. Putin (“Moscow. Kremlin. Putin”), published a clip of his remarks on his Telegram channel.