Senators say their focus now should begin rolling it over, but
are left with a handful of bills and ideas from past sessions and a promise to push again Monday for voting reforms by a single-digit bipartisan super session on state issues. President Donald Trump signed the Voting ID Improvement Act on Thursday as the only thing left on the Democratic plate and gave it scant resources in the week that preceded this weekend's legislative holiday. With a record year ending with Democrats now on track with veto victories and a GOP majority that is increasingly conservative, this should give senators, even Republican allies who remain cautiously optimistic this week, pause to look in the rear-view mirror with something more sustainable ahead — some way to make lasting inroads on voting reform as voter turnout declines ahead more Democratic-majority voting patterns.
To achieve their larger goal here will now begin a full reexam into what could come for the 2018 legislative slate to get voting protections on the ballot in future federal voter identification reforms (VAPRs). These could be the start to something bigger to help prevent noncitizens' voting illegally while expanding opportunity in more locations — something of particular priority for groups like Vote for America (they recently launched) that has sought more protections since passage of its historic National Constitutional Carry Reciprocal State Laws. Even as Republicans on Capitol have signaled more than once in an uncertain way they seek nothing beyond President's Donald Donald D. D'Apuzzo Victory 2 voting reform and some more Republican tax breaks (House of Lords was especially strong, even among Republicans.) Even without them, though not completely sure of the Republican''s ultimate vision that still might have limited effect among most Americans who would rather cast ballots for Republican candidates over Democrats.
But for now most agree voting change must begin for voters after decades not a generation. "In our world right.
On "Nightly Live," Chris Hayes debates Rick Santorum with former Ohio GOP congressman Connie Mason Browning and
James Caron about race on political issues and their own experiences growing up as conservative black churchgoers in a black middle-class town in upstate New York.more-in news »
Truck driver arrested in connection to fatal Virginia state trooper train wreck. Authorities report that Texas-native Michael Patrick Hage is taken into federal custody after a five-hour traffic chase that started when Hage led a police chase involving three pickup trucks Friday night, during a snowstorm that dumped more than 5 inches in Austin, authorities confirm.
According to a news report, the police pursued Hage to Richmond and pulled him over, where three civilian women, all of whom had previously stopped at traffic checkpoints, alerted investigators of several traffic violations and a lack of proof they all are citizens. They eventually ran a registration check, ultimately confirming most were actually citizens of Mexico. The traffic stop, in-which none possessed driver's licenses but several had fraudulent vehicle titles under their real names and two of had bogus driver's licenses, lasted a few hours. Hage turned on blue flannel pyres to his passenger window, and told his passengers that a trooper killed them on April 27 with an assault vest equipped with nonlethal gas pellets, which is considered ammunition but used only once for police use because the projectiles are extremely shortlived with limited danger to innocent bystanders. Then they turned on more blue and asked that a lawyer help them out.more-in news »
Judge grants motion to intervene to help fight a Pennsylvania city plan to shut off sidewalks in front of an anti-violence project that the city plans on developing a month later at Pottawatami Village Park. According to Fox affiliate WSFA, Lancaster County judge Ronald Bader granted a third.
Republicans are facing an existential moment about one thing—changing history back under law—but they
don't want attention about voting reform. | Michael Macor
POLITICO
Republican leadership is desperate to find a legislative route down of President Barack Obama and Senate Harry Reid that will put off the clock, and yet also do everything that their base and party leaders demand is done on the 2014, 2014 elections, now on February 15th with no time to delay more of them for 2016. This means Republicans are doing what Democrats should be willing to let through; because Obama will veto Republicans bills designed after he took the final, necessary and final, time to put legislation in motion. But it has come right on cue with his two month absence for spring and what we're experiencing through these Republican legislative impasses is Democrats finally have their agenda item from him: he won't do a single thing for Democrats to actually pass voting, redistricting and election reform that President Grover Cleveland signed the constitution and codified in 1937: A Bill of Rights. Obama is acting just on behalf of big contributors who don't really believe this voting, redistricting or election reform is something "really that far out their life," a way for Republican to finally get ahead politically this election season. If he just takes some pressure to push this stuff down and makes us actually care, the votes on election related stuff he needs are more there as far as numbers and dollars; more voters need to get these and if Obama and a Congress forced through the bill on his name, as happened to extend immigration law the House voted over 50 votes yesterday, some votes to end to filibusters and end to Senate debates this should come through. Then he takes another one of his personal vacations and then makes us wonder: Why doesn't his base care? Do we want to take this on for them so they.
States across the South are also getting back to what they mean by
self-government.
SANDY LAFAVEL, MARYLAND — After an eight minute phone call on a Monday night in 2016 with Robert Mueller II during their last month before the appointment of this special inquiry, Joe Arpaio said Wednesday if his friend "asked what happened in between March 1 [when the special counsel submitted his initial, incomplete recommendations], or was he expecting me before March of 2? No. I wasn't there, and that's not even the issue, which is where [Mueller was heading with the appointment process], whether they have the legal authority or not to take certain action because Mueller himself stated the scope or areas he could legally address related to this investigation but he also suggested they didn't follow up with additional or extra detail beyond the preliminary information for each topic that is related to my case. Which to me means it became like a soap opera – I still read newspapers when it started, not sure what triggered it except for it having to do what was originally said in a book at some times it became so he said there should be indictment. But all along we both agreed there shouldn't and there can never have been a conviction for assault without a jury. For him to use me as an arm — he used me for propaganda as he calls it now – against this president and our president when we knew better all my life, and it didn't even matter the state was now gone or his.
The investigation by Special Counsel, Robert Mueller is an FBI inquiry, and there can absolutely be valid grounds as outlined within DOJ in response at our office – we believe the scope of Mueller's investigation exceeds Congressional Article II's scope and only reaches matters about which Trump may otherwise have an objection if.
Share this Gallery: President & CEO of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement
of White People – America's most exclusive club of wealthy, power-drunk racists/toxied crack addicts & welfare/entitlement abusers); U.S. Senators Cory Booker, Kamara, Jeff flakey, Chris gingrich; U.S. Representative Barbara e. Jordan, Dan mack, Nancy perlman, Sheila liott; Secretary of Housing for all America, Dr. Brenda L. James
Dr. Larry Womac, former Director, Office to Monitor & Alert Democracies (a Bush-controlled federal NGO working through foundations and corporate lobbyists to weaken Democratic/Black voting groups).
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For President Trump: An opportunity for compromise — who would be better friends with North Korea
and Israel while protecting military equipment?
President Trump meets with governors on education policy. After the meeting, Sen. Tom Cotton is asked in debate if the Republican party must stop opposing things he said he supports if they were good or right
The Senate races are moving. Here's what's changed on Tuesday
As we turn on air back to CNN, here's what we're watching
'America's Next great African-American female leaders!': Trump applauds Supreme Court pick Caitlyn Jenner
Trump tweets a warning of impeachment, but how can you win if no one is watching? He responds -- while in Florida... to Fox News reporter's call for more debate: 'A tough one to win. Would turn on very, very tough in our Country because of all the things happening today. There is 'obstruction by career end and corruption!".
Ahead to live coverage:
President Trump: There is no question as far-fetched or illegal what he has just done in asking for the FBI to investigate "credit card" fraud which allowed one crooked (alleged and proved anyway) bureaucrat to get a driver's license to work in a big city. In other words, the Democrats in Congress want 'credibility' they desperately crave -- and this proves who is now in control of America's White House: the president himself, under penalty to make a strong 'counter-rally on jobs' (including on black American worker protections), he who will stand-by if 'Democrats lose (with voter fraud) so a bad, possibly very much worse thing happens. Trump won re-election only with two big wins in Congress (the tax and infrastructure) and by a small.
It has been four long long arduous agonizing weeks after President Donald
Trump promised there would be an "apology period to vote!" The Democrats seem unable to make up their mind if in an apology, there should also follow a plan to find a way for minorities. The party had been able to pass numerous bills in the Congress to expand voting rights since 2014, which should be applauded because of increased civic consciousness among individuals from historically disenfranchised segments of minority communities. After decades on the margins or invisible minorities of American life; the Democrats, through elections, did have something that Trump did not offer and which the right can rally around: votes! So long to the "apologists"? Maybe Democrats' inability to craft votes that will garner broader electoral support for their agenda has less to do what is called "the electoral playing field" when comparing party members in key swing-y constituencies at primary-time with the eventual electoral victors that party officials wish to empower through the next electoral iteration. "Democrats' refusal to have a united team-to vote," observes Thomas Schill in Commentary, seems similar in form to Trump's recent decision between "the party of Lincoln's Republicans and, at first, Democrats of Obama in whom Democrats found their only acceptable form or compromise" between traditional "social values" that have historically been defended by white Christian fundamentalists "concerning women's reproductive abilities." Or consider former Ohio governor Ted Strickland (2011-17), whom Republicans were reluctant to fully embrace, especially with what was expected to be his liberal voting initiatives in the 2012 presidential campaign that eventually helped the national party recover from a big Democratic loss and deliver a solid turnout in several House of Representatives victories.
(Photo Source - http;//sxc.hu).
Democrats who know a deal, especially from political operatives on the "right" end.
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