[ad_1] For more than 30 years, I’ve covered politicians in both parties and at every level of government. And given all the manure that I’ve seen shoveled, it’s a wonder I still vote. As the saying goes: When you spend all your time in sewers, pretty soon everything begins to look like a rat. Yet,
Month: June 2022
[ad_1] Former Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords tells Congress ‘be bold’ on gun reform WASHINGTON (AP) — Eleven years after her own life was massively altered by gun violence, former Arizona Congresswoman Gabby Giffords stood in front of the Washington Monument Tuesday and lobbied anew for stricter gun laws after yet another string of mass shootings
[ad_1] I have been watching the National Basketball Association playoffs these past weeks. When I turned on the television on May 24 to watch Golden State Warriors play the Dallas Mavericks, Golden State Warriors’ basketball coach, Steve Kerr, was having a pre-game-press-conference. Despite the Warriors being just one win away from their first NBA Finals
[ad_1] SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — Incumbent Governor Kristi Noem has seized the Republican Primary spot in the November general election. Results are still rolling in, but the Associated Press has called the gubernatorial primary race with Noem surpassing challenger Steven Haugaard. She hosted an election night watch party with Rep. Dusty Johnson at the
[ad_1] TALLAHASSEE — On the same day Democrats began pushing for a special session on gun violence, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill adding to the state’s long list of school safety reforms enacted since the Valentine’s Day mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. DeSantis put out a news release Tuesday announcing he
[ad_1] Today, the Delaware Senate voted 13-7 to pass an amended version of Senate Bill 6, the so-called “Delaware Large Capacity Magazine Prohibition Act.” It bans possessing magazines with a capacity greater than seventeen rounds of ammunition, including those that may “readily be converted” over that capacity. This vague and broad definition could be interpreted
[ad_1] If it’s up to some likely new members of Congress in Georgia after Jan. 1, any new effort to change gun laws is pretty much one that has already been decided: no change, no matter the circumstances. The May 24 massacre of 19 schoolchildren and two teachers inside a classroom in Uvalde, Texas, and the
[ad_1] I am a different kind of gun dealer. Though I share the same interest and passion for firearms, I often find myself at odds with the politics of some of my more vocal fellow enthusiasts and industry colleagues. I’ll start by saying that my colleagues and I share many values and core beliefs. We
[ad_1] PROVIDENCE — Out of the gun tragedies of recent weeks has come an apparent agreement in the leadership ranks of the Rhode Island legislature to pass three high profile gun bills,including a ban on large capacity magazines. The three bills the House Judiciary Committee has posted for votes on Thursday include measures to: It is
[ad_1] Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Jackson was captured on video applauding remarks made by New Zealand’s prime minister on the country’s “assault rifle ban” during Harvard’s commencement ceremony May 26. Jackson can be seen sitting directly behind Prime Minister Jacinda Arden as she discusses her government’s gun control laws. Jackson begins clapping once Arden mentions
[ad_1] Placeholder while article actions load Senators buckled down Tuesday for days of additional negotiations on a response to recent high-profile mass shootings, retreating from earlier calls for quick action even as they expressed optimism that a long-elusive deal to address gun violence might eventually be possible. The calls for patience came as a small
[ad_1] WASHINGTON (AP) — The son of Ruth Whitfield, an 86-year old woman killed when a gunman opened fire in a racist attack on Black shoppers in Buffalo, New York, challenged Congress Tuesday to act against the “cancer of white supremacy” and the nation’s epidemic of gun violence. Garnell Whitfield Jr’s emotional testimony comes as
[ad_1] NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! EXCLUSIVE: House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik is introducing legislation aimed at promoting gun training and safety in the wake of several mass shootings across the United States. Stefanik is joined by Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., and Rep. Carol Miller, R-W.Va., in introducing the “Firearm Proficiency
[ad_1] Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) speaks with Wakefield High School students about gun violence (staff photo by Matt Blitz) Only days before graduation, Wakefield High School students questioned Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine (D) about what can be done to pass gun legislation in Congress Kaine paid a visit to Wakefield on Monday afternoon, in the
[ad_1] Alex Wong/Getty Images (NEW YORK) — After a string of mass shootings, including a school shooting that left 19 children and two teachers dead in Texas, Americans across the country are calling for action. On both sides of the aisle, lawmakers are debating on which measures are needed to reform gun laws in the
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[ad_1] Good morning. It’s Tuesday. We’ll look at why gun restrictions in New York could be loosened if the Supreme Court strikes down a state law that gives officials discretion over permits for handguns. We’ll also look at tonight’s debate in the Democratic race for governor. Yesterday we looked at a state gun law that
[ad_1] Presidents are relatively powerless to enact gun control reforms, thanks to a split Congress and Senate Biden urged action to prevent gun violence in an emotional message to the nation from the White House, blaming gun manufacturers and their backers for obstructing legislation in Washington. Sign up to our NationalWorld Today newsletter He said:
[ad_1] If I could go before the United States Senate today, where gun safety laws will soon be debated but are not expected to pass, I would ask the Republican Senators the question that Attorney Joseph Welch asked Republican Senator Joe McCarthy in 1954, “Have you no sense of decency?” This question kept reverberating in
[ad_1] During Monday’s The 11th Hour on MSNBC, Stephanie Ruhle proved once again why she isn’t a journalist. Instead of simply reporting the facts on the gun control debate and asking questions of her guests, she took sides and fretted over whether Democrats are compromising too much with Republicans. “I want to start by talking
[ad_1] With each slaughter of innocents, the gun industry offers its sympathy, argues that even more weapons will make America safer, and gives thanks for a two-decade-old law shielding the firearms makers from legal action by the victims. Mike Fifer, the chief executive of one of the US’s leading handgun manufacturers, Sturm Ruger, once described
[ad_1] Former Texas GOP Rep. Will Hurd, who represented Uvalde until last year, tore into both Republicans and Democrats for offering too much lip service and not enough action on gun control. ‘We are not helpless, and if the people we elect to address our country’s tough challenges think nothing can or should be done
[ad_1] As Americans debate gun control measures following the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, some politicians are using the tragedy to advance their agenda against firearms. One day after the shooting, Democrats began using the tragedy as a vehicle to push for the types of policies they were already wanting. That effort was evident when
[ad_1] New York Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul signed a 10-bill package of gun laws on Monday that included raising the age to legally purchase a semiautomatic rifle from 18 to 21 following several recent mass shootings nationwide. Hochul signed the package to immediately strengthen the state’s gun laws and close “critical loopholes” as lawmakers seek
[ad_1] Placeholder while article actions load Ari Pearlstein was in elementary school the year a gunman killed 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary in 2012. Now here he was, a high school senior, sitting before a U.S. senator weeks after another deadly school shooting, with a question that had been gnawing at
[ad_1] Submit your letter to the editor via this form. Read more Letters to the Editor. Free mental health carecould stop future deaths With the Uvalde school shooting on my heart, I heard Donald Trump say at the Houston NRA meeting that we needed to “drastically change our approach to mental health.” Yes. I have
[ad_1] Placeholder while article actions load Tiffany Lognion went from being scared of guns to “almost a gun enthusiast” in less than two years. After moving to her childhood home in Little Rock with her two children in 2016, the single mother was unsettled by changes in the neighborhood, she said. By 2020, alarmed by
[ad_1] BLACK CREEK, Ga. For 10 years after 9/11, James Strickland fought for the United States Army, slogging, rifle on shoulder, from battlefield to battlefield. He took and returned fire, he says, for not just a country, but an idea – that America had God’s special blessing. “I used a gun for a living to
[ad_1] New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed sweeping gun reform bills to ban anyone under the age of 21 from buying or possessing a semi-automatic rifle and criminalizing those who make mass threats. The package, signed on Monday, was passed by the New York Assembly on June 2 after the May 14 shooting at a
[ad_1] In the aftermath of last week’s mass shootings, we are all heartsick and yearning for some kind of meaningful solution. A white supremacist killed 10 Black people at a supermarket in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo, New York, on May 14. Ten days later, an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, was attacked by
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