SCOWIS to hear Evers-GOP lawsuit over new reading law; $50 million for schools still held up The Wisconsin Supreme Court decided Friday it will hear arguments in a lawsuit pitting Republican lawmakers against Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and the Department of Public Instruction ... 01/24/2025 - 12:18 pm | View Link
Republicans call for Evers to rethink policy, consider Wisconsin tax cuts Republican and conservative leaders in Wisconsin are calling again for tax cuts after Gov. Tony Evers touted his fiscal policy in Wednesday’s State of the State ... 01/23/2025 - 6:01 am | View Link
State of the State: Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers urges gun control measures, bipartisan approach to immigration Gov. Tony Evers used his State of the State to urge the Legislature to enact proposals that Republicans have rejected in the past. 01/23/2025 - 3:28 am | View Link
Sen. LeMahieu says GOP will gut 'policy issues' from Evers' budget Tony Evers introduces his budget plan ... which was part of an Assembly GOP plan last session. "I think there are members of our caucus who are supportive of medical marijuana," he said. "The ... 01/12/2025 - 2:45 am | View Link
Evers’ plan to let Wisconsin voters repeal and create state laws meets GOP resistance Lawmakers have said they are hopeful the slimmer GOP majorities will lead to more compromise, but on this issue they don't appear to be willing to go along with what Evers wants. Wisconsin is one of ... 01/6/2025 - 4:29 am | View Link
By LISA MASCARO, MARY CLARE JALONICK and FARNOUSH AMIRI
WASHINGTON — The Senate confirmed Pete Hegseth as the nation’s defense secretary Friday in a dramatic late-night vote, swatting back questions about his qualifications to lead the Pentagon amid allegations of heavy drinking and aggressive behavior toward women.
Rarely has a Cabinet nominee faced such wide-ranging concerns about his experience and behavior as Hegseth, particularly for such a high-profile role atop the U.
By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER and CHRISTINE FERNANDO, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s new Justice Department leadership issued an order Friday to curtail prosecutions against people accused of blocking reproductive rights facilities, calling the cases an example of the “weaponization” of law enforcement.
Justice Department chief of staff Chad Mizelle said in a memo obtained by The Associated Press that prosecutions and civil actions under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act or “FACE Act” will now be permitted only in “extraordinary circumstances” or in cases presenting ”significant aggravating factors.”
Mizelle also ordered the immediate dismissal of three FACE Act cases related to 2021 blockades of clinics in Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Ohio.
A Denver judge ordered the closure of a neglected apartment building in the Uptown neighborhood Thursday night, sending tenants to a hotel and temporarily shuttering a long-troubled property that lacked heat, hot water and working fire alarms.
The William Penn apartments at 1644 Pennsylvania St. are controlled by CBZ Management, the owner of several infamous and rundown complexes in Denver and Aurora.
President Donald Trump made clear during his campaign that he wanted little to do with Project 2025, the sweeping and controversial conservative policy blueprint created by the Heritage Foundation. But just days into his second term, many of Trump’s early actions align with the Project 2025 agenda.
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An analysis by TIME found that nearly two-thirds of the executive actions Trump has issued so far mirror or partially mirror proposals from the 900-page document, ranging from sweeping deregulation measures to aggressive immigration reform.
By ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON, Associated Press
President Donald Trump is poised to sign the first bill of his new administration, and it is named after a slain Georgia nursing student whose name became a rallying cry during his White House campaign.
If signed into law, the Laken Riley Act would require the detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes.
SEATTLE — President Donald Trump’s executive order denying U. S. citizenship to the children of parents living in the country illegally has faced the first of what will be many legal tests. It didn’t fare well.
A Justice Department lawyer had barely started making his arguments in a Seattle courtroom Thursday when U.