Biden Pulls Back On Pledge To Codify Roe V Wade
President Joe Biden Raised Eyebrows Monday Telling Reporters That He Expects No Progress On The Abortion Issue In The Second Half Of His Term.
Read morePresident Joe Biden Raised Eyebrows Monday Telling Reporters That He Expects No Progress On The Abortion Issue In The Second Half Of His Term.
Read moreU.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn, Republican Colleagues And Republican Leader Mitch Mcconnell Have Reintroduced The Saving American History Act To Prohibit The Use Of Federal Funds To Teach The 1619 Project By K-12 Schools Or School Districts.
Read more“I Know What I Just Described Will Not Come Cheaply,” Biden Said. “But Failing To Do So Will Cost Us Dearly – The Consensus Among Leading Economists Is We Simply Cannot Afford Not To Do It.” This won’t be his only spending plan either. He promised that this $1.9 trillion initiative is an opening bid to Congress with more spending to come later.
Read moreTennessee Has Become The First State To Receive Federal Approval For A Medicaid Block Grant Waiver, However, Some Say The Incoming Biden Administration Is Likely To Reverse This Promptly.
Read more“On behalf of my constituents in Tennessee’s 7th District who sent me to Washington to be their voice, I will be supportive of an objection on January 6.” – Tennessee Republican Congressman Mark Green
Read moreThe Call For Change Coincides With Ongoing Investigations Of Over 250 Voter Fraud Claims In Georgia.
Read moreGeorgia House Speaker David Ralston Pushes An Amendment To The Georgia Constitution To Allow The General Assembly To Elect The Secretary Of State Instead Of Georgia Voters. Tennessee, Maine And New Hampshire’s Secretaries of State Are Already Elected By Their State Legislatures.
Read moreA Human Resources Investigation has found evidence of abusive, racist remarks and an inappropriate relationship prior to the resignation of Tennessee Veterans Services Commissioner Courtney Rogers and Deputy Commissioner Tilman Goins.
Read moreU.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy on Tuesday joined a “bipartisan, bicameral coalition” of lawmakers to announce a $908 billion COVID-19 aid package they hope can pass both chambers before the end of the year.
Read moreWhere will a new courthouse go, and what will happen to the old one?
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