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Jun 13 2023
News
Georgia voting software will not be updated until after 2024 despite vulnerabilities
Georgia election officials will not be updating the state's voting software until after the 2024 elections despite known vulnerabilities existing in the software, according to a report that was unsealed on Wednesday.
A lawyer for Georgia GOP Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger recently told a federal court that officials would not install security patches on Dominion Voting machines
Washington ExaminerAug 08 2023
News
Niger Junta Refused To Allow US Diplomat Victoria Nuland To Meet With Bazoum
Niger military leaders, who have recently overthrown the elected government of President Mohamed Bazoum, have denied U.S. Acting Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland a meeting with the ousted leader.
"We asked before we arrived and throughout the day for an opportunity to meet with President Bazoum to get his perspective directly – we've talked to him on the phone, but we haven't
International Business TimesJun 27 2023
News
Supreme Court upholds state courts authority
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that state courts can curtail the actions of their legislatures when it comes to federal redistricting and elections, rejecting arguments by North Carolina Republicans that could have dramatically altered races for Congress and president in that state and beyond. The justices by a 6-3 vote upheld a decision by North Carolina’s top court that struck
Mankato Free PressJun 20 2023
News
This Is The Richest Person In Pennsylvania, New Analysis Says
Nearly all states have at least one billionaire, according to The Richest Person In Every State list put together by Forbes. The only ones that don’t are Alaska, Delaware and West Virginia. Yass, a trading and investments titan with an estimated net worth of $28.5 billion (as of June 12), is 64 and lives in Haverford. His net worth increased from $12 billion in 2021 and 2022, the Forbes report
Patch.comAug 03 2023
Analysis
America is heavily reliant on Russia for nuclear fuel. Congress might change that.
Nearly a year-and-a-half after Russia launched a brutal invasion of Ukraine, Congress appears poised to reduce America’s reliance on Moscow for uranium, the main fuel used by nuclear power plants.
Lawmakers took swift action to ban Russian oil and gas imports a month after the February 2022 invasion. But stemming the flow of Russian uranium imports has taken much longer, in part because
Washington PostJun 26 2023
News
Pope Francis Names Bishop Coyne as New Coadjutor Archbishop of Hartford
Pope Francis appointed Bishop Christopher Coyne as a coadjutor archbishop of Hartford on Monday. As coadjutor, Coyne will assist Archbishop Leonard Blair in the administration of the Hartford archdiocese and should succeed him as archbishop upon his retirement, expected once Blair turns 75 next year. Bishop Coyne has led the Diocese of Burlington, Vermont since 2015. The 65-year-old bishop
National Catholic RegisterAug 02 2023
News
This Adviser Is Likely the Trump Indictment’s Mystery Sixth Co-Conspirator
While Donald Trump’s latest indictment for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election doesn’t name his six alleged co-conspirators, it wasn’t too hard to pin down the first five: Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Sidney Powell, Jeffrey Clark, and Kenneth Chesebro. But co-conspirator 6, a political consultant whose description in the indictment could fit a number of people, remained a mystery. Now, a
Daily BeastJul 28 2023
News
More on McConnell and signs of a terrible September
FROM MCCONNELL’S DESK: Burgess has a definitive look at how the Senate GOP is reacting to the minority leader’s health scare — by cautiously planning an eventual leadership transition. In a statement to POLITICO, Mitch McConnell’s office said he “appreciates the continued support of his colleagues, and plans to serve his full term in the job they overwhelmingly elected him to do.” More on that
PoliticoJun 23 2023
News
One year after Roe v. Wade's reversal, warnings about abortion become reality
Washington — In the months leading up to the Supreme Court's 2022 decision overturning Roe v. Wade, abortion-rights supporters were sounding the alarm about the consequences of ending the constitutional right to abortion: clinics shuttering in states where abortion is outlawed, longer wait times at facilities in states where it remains legal, women unable to terminate pregnancies prematurely
CBS News (Online)Jun 23 2023
News
The Dobbs Decision Unleashed An Unapologetic Abortion Rights Movement
In a historic first, an abortion rights activist described in front of Congress, on national television, how to self-manage an abortion using pills. Democrats embraced abortion rights like never before, winning big in the 2022 midterms and reshaping how abortion politics have played out for decades. Abortion funds have experienced an increase in visibility and an influx in donations. Voters
HuffPost