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Council Speaker Menin backs ban on NYC horse carriages ahead of hearing
City Council Speaker Julie Menin announced her support late Tuesday for a bill that would end the New York City carriage horse industry — with the Council set to hold a hearing on the legislative effort Wednesday morning.
The legislative effort — nicknamed Romanch’s Law, after the teenager killed by a bolting horse last month — would ...Read more
R. Kelly asks Trump to commute 30-year sentence for sex abuse of minors
As the long-shot motion for a new trial remains pending, imprisoned Chicago R&B superstar R. Kelly has formally asked President Donald Trump to commute his 30-year sentence for an array of sexual misconduct convictions.
The request for clemency was made public this week by the Office of the Pardon Attorney, the Department of Justice agency that...Read more
Philly schools will get $157 million more in this year's state budget. Gov. Josh Shapiro came to South Philly to tout the plan
PHILADELPHIA – Gov. Josh Shapiro on Tuesday visited Vare-Washington Elementary School in South Philadelphia to tout the $678 million in new education funding included in the state budget deal finalized over the weekend.
The new education funding — including $565 million in “adequacy funding” to aid poorer districts — represented one ...Read more
ICE halts vehicle stops after second fatal shooting in days
The Department of Homeland Security has ordered immigration agents to temporarily halt most vehicle stops during deportation operations, according to a department official, after a fatal shooting of a man in Maine reignited concerns about the agency’s tactics.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents will suspend vehicle stops except ...Read more
Johnson appeases holdouts and unfreezes House floor
Speaker Mike Johnson narrowly freed the floor from another standstill Tuesday — but it’s not clear how long the good feeling will last.
The House adopted a rule for floor debate in a 215-211 vote after GOP leaders won over key holdouts by promising a markup of border security legislation before the August recess and taking steps to graft a ...Read more
Darline Graham, SC's first female US Senator, sworn in at nation's capital
Darline Graham was sworn in to the U.S. Senate on Tuesday afternoon, a role she will hold for about six months.
She was chosen to fill in for her older brother U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham by South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster. The appointment of Darline Graham after Lindsey Graham’s sudden death Saturday saw sweeping support from lawmakers in ...Read more
Minneapolis city leaders reckon with projected $33 million budget gap
Minneapolis city leaders are grappling with a projected shortfall of up to $33 million as they put together the 2027 budget — putting them in a financial squeeze that could force some tough choices.
City Council President Elliott Payne has called the estimated gap in the general fund, the city’s operating account, “kind of alarming.”
...Read more
After lawsuit, ICE pauses construction of Bay Area detention facility
LOS ANGELES — The federal government agreed to temporarily hold off on construction of a planned Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Northern California.
The voluntary pause until Sept. 9 comes after the California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and Santa Clara County officials sued the Trump administration last month to block the facility ...Read more
CDC sees parasite cases rising all summer as it hunts for source
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expects cases of severe diarrhea caused by the Cyclospora parasite to keep rising, possibly until the end of August, as it searches for the source of the outbreak that’s already sickened thousands.
At least 1,645 cases across 34 U.S. states have been confirmed by lab tests, the CDC said, ...Read more
Family pulls $1M scholarship fund from NC university, citing anti-DEI policy
A prominent Black family is pulling a $1 million scholarship fund from University of North Carolina Wilmington after the school said it could no longer gear their money toward African American students.
The change stems from the UNC System’s Equality Policy, which bans diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives at public universities.
The ...Read more
Delaware is appointing its first surgeon general
Delaware became the seventh state to name a surgeon general with the appointment Monday of a physician to serve as the state’s “principal public health communicator” and advise Gov. Matt Meyer on health matters.
Neil Hockstein, an otolaryngologist who chairs Delaware’s Health Care Commission, will helm public health measures.
Meyer, a ...Read more
Capt. 'Sully' Sullenberger, Miracle on the Hudson pilot, has Alzheimer's
NEW YORK — Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger, the pilot who successfully landed a plane on the Hudson River in New York City in 2009, saving more than 100 lives, is opening up about his Alzheimer’s diagnosis.
“It is early stage. For now, this means a name may not come easily to me, I forget a story I have recently told, or I don’t ...Read more
Trump shelves 20% fee for Hormuz cargo after Gulf pressure
President Donald Trump backed away from his plan to impose a 20% charge on cargo shipments through the Strait of Hormuz after U.S. allies in the Gulf urged him to drop it.
Trump announced the decision on Tuesday, just one day after rolling out the fee, saying that the expected revenue would be replaced by forthcoming direct investments in the U...Read more
Seminole leaders warn of drastic cut in services if voters approve tax referendum
Seminole County would see a potential loss of up to $119 million in annual revenues by 2028 if Florida voters choose to slash property taxes in November, according to a county budget analysis.
That’s more than the total amount of money Seminole spends to fund its parks, libraries, natural lands, trails, community services, Lynx, SunRail and ...Read more
Trump shelves 20% fee for Hormuz cargo after Gulf pressure
President Donald Trump backed away from his plan to impose a 20% charge on cargo shipments through the Strait of Hormuz after U.S. allies in the Gulf urged him to drop it.
Trump announced the decision on Tuesday, just one day after rolling out the fee, saying that the expected revenue would be replaced by forthcoming direct investments in the U...Read more
How Lindsey Graham’s keen ability to read the moment propelled him to political relevance for 3 decades
Since South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham’s death on June 11, 2026, much of the commentary has focused on his evolution from Donald Trump critic to Trump ally.
But focusing on that transformation misses the broader pattern that defined his political career. For more than three decades, Graham repeatedly positioned himself where ...Read more
Idahoans won't get to vote on legalizing medical cannabis this fall. Here's why
Idaho voters will not get to choose this year if they want to make medical cannabis legal across the state.
The Secretary of State’s Office said Tuesday that an initiative that would have put the question before voters did not garner enough signatures to make it on the November ballot. To make the ballot, initiatives must get signatures from ...Read more
Protesters demand change in North Texas jail system following 4 deaths
FORT WORTH, Texas — A crowd of 60 people peacefully demanded change in the Tarrant County Jail in downtown Fort Worth on Tuesday morning. Rally leaders argued that voting Democrats into office is needed to fix the system.
A speaker from the group read the names of 80 people who have died either in custody or shortly after being released since...Read more
Missouri Governor signs anti-abortion law. Will it survive a court challenge?
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Gov. Mike Kehoe signed the “Born Alive Abortion Survivor Protection Act,” an anti-abortion bill that critics say is meant to intimidate health care providers.
The bill is the most consequential piece of legislation passed in Missouri this year and was fiercely debated in the final days of the legislative session. The ...Read more
Pennsylvania says it will not hand over voter rolls to federal government in reply to DOJ letter
PHILADELPHIA – Pennsylvania Secretary of State Al Schmidt stressed that the state was not in violation of any voting regulations in a response letter to a Department of Justice inquiry that threatened criminal charges over suspicions of noncitizen voting.
The letter, sent Monday, pushed back against the Trump administration’s insistence ...Read more
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