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Home » Political News

Political News

Nebraska 6-Week Abortion Ban On Doorstep Of Becoming Law, Tally Shows

Published by jason@omahadail... on Mon, 02/20/2023 - 1:04pm
Based on interviews, public comments, endorsements and previous votes, at least 31 Nebraska state senators are likely to support a proposal to ban abortions after cardiac activity is detected (roughly six weeks). It would need 33 votes to overcome a filibuster, clearing the way for its passage. 
(Justin Wan / Lincoln Journal Star via AP Photo)

The Nebraska Legislature stands at the precipice of passing a six-week abortion ban.

Based on interviews and a tally by the Flatwater Free Press, the bill appears to need just two Republican votes to have enough support to become law.

  • Read more about Nebraska 6-Week Abortion Ban On Doorstep Of Becoming Law, Tally Shows

The Pandemic Missing: The Kids Who Didn’t Go Back To School

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/13/2023 - 5:00am

She’d be a senior right now, preparing for graduation in a few months, probably leading her school’s modern dance troupe and taking art classes.

  • Read more about The Pandemic Missing: The Kids Who Didn’t Go Back To School

Proposed Gender-Alteration Ban For Minors Draws Hundreds To Nebraska Capitol

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/13/2023 - 3:00am
State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of Omaha introduces her bill to restrict gender-altering care to those older than 19. She appeared at a hearing on Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023, in Lincoln, Neb. 
(Zach Wendling / Nebraska Examiner)

LINCOLN — Supporters and opponents testified for about seven hours Wednesday on State Sen. Kathleen Kauth’s proposal to ban gender-altering care for minors in Nebraska.

  • Read more about Proposed Gender-Alteration Ban For Minors Draws Hundreds To Nebraska Capitol

New Legislation Takes Aim At Hidden Foster Care

Published by jason@omahadail... on Fri, 02/10/2023 - 5:00am
A ProPublica-New York Times Magazine story exposed a system with few legal protections for families. A first-of-its-kind bill aims to provide parents with free counsel when child protection workers try to move their kids without going to court.
(Shutterstock)

Last month, Washington state Rep. Lillian Ortiz-Self, a Democrat, introduced a first-of-its-kind bill aimed at providing attorneys for parents who are facing hidden foster care, the subject of a ProPublica-New York Times Magazine investigation in December 2021. The story documented how, across the country, caseworkers who have not petitioned a court persuade parents to send their children to live in another home, often by threatening a foster placement if they refuse.

  • Read more about New Legislation Takes Aim At Hidden Foster Care

A 1993 Family And Medical Leave Law Was Supposed To Be Just The Start. Thirty Years Later, Not Much Has Changed.

Published by jason@omahadail... on Fri, 02/10/2023 - 3:00am

Sunday marked 30 years since Congress passed the United States’ first comprehensive federal family and sick leave program. The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) was intended to pave the way for more expansive paid leave laws — but the law’s core promises, and the hopes of the advocates who fought for it, remain unfulfilled.

  • Read more about A 1993 Family And Medical Leave Law Was Supposed To Be Just The Start. Thirty Years Later, Not Much Has Changed.

Year-Round Daylight Saving Time Has A Chance This Year In Nebraska

Published by jason@omahadail... on Fri, 02/10/2023 - 1:00am

LINCOLN — After years of trying, the Nebraska Legislature appears poised to pass a first step toward ending the twice-a-year tyranny of changing the clock.

State Sen. Tom Briese of Albion again proposed keeping Nebraska on daylight saving time, if Congress and a third neighboring state join Nebraska in passing such a law.

  • Read more about Year-Round Daylight Saving Time Has A Chance This Year In Nebraska

Omaha Streetcar Plan In Jeopardy Under Proposed Legislation, Omaha Mayoral Aide Says

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/06/2023 - 5:00am
The Nebraska State Capitol is photographed by a drone on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022, in downtown Lincoln, Neb. A tax-increment financing bill spurred lively discussion in the legislature.  (Kenneth Ferriera / Lincoln Journal Star via AP)

LINCOLN — A bill before the Nebraska Legislature could kill Omaha’s modern-day streetcar, as it would curb future tax-increment financing revenue that city leaders are counting on to pay off the project.

That’s according to Steve Jensen, a City of Omaha economic development aide, who spoke Tuesday at a legislative committee hearing on the TIF-related bill introduced by State Sen. Lou Ann Linehan of Elkhorn.

  • Read more about Omaha Streetcar Plan In Jeopardy Under Proposed Legislation, Omaha Mayoral Aide Says

Meet Bayard Rustin, Often-Forgotten Civil Rights Activist, Gay Rights Advocate, Union Organizer, Pacifist And Man Of Compassion For All In Trouble

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/06/2023 - 4:00am

As I began writing “Bayard Rustin: American Dreamer,” my biography of the 20th-century radical leader and activist, one of my colleagues cautioned me not to “fall in love.”

This, of course, is good advice for any biographer, and I tried to follow it.

  • Read more about Meet Bayard Rustin, Often-Forgotten Civil Rights Activist, Gay Rights Advocate, Union Organizer, Pacifist And Man Of Compassion For All In Trouble

Time For New Presidential Candidates In 2024

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/06/2023 - 3:00am

Sherlock Holmes’ statement that “It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data,” in Arthur Conan Doyle’s “A Study in Scarlet,” is a pearl of wisdom to use when thinking about America’s political future.

The following data applies to the Nov. 5, 2024, presidential election notion that Donald Trump and Joe Biden are too old to be president.

  • Read more about Time For New Presidential Candidates In 2024

Nebraska Lawmakers Put Off Vote On 'Heartbeat' Abortion Ban

Published by Nikki Palmer on Mon, 02/06/2023 - 2:00am
Hundreds of people crowded the Nebraska State Capitol Rotunda on Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2023, in Lincoln. Neb., to protest a so-called heartbeat bill that would outlaw abortion at a point before many women even know they’re pregnant. The bill, which was before the Legislature’s Health and Human Services Committee on Wednesday, would ban abortions once cardiac activity can be detected in a embryo, which is generally around the sixth week of pregnancy. (Margery A. Beck / AP Photo)

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Legislature's Health and Human Services Committee took nearly eight hours of testimony Wednesday before adjourning without a vote on whether to advance a bill that would outlaw abortion at a point before many women know they're pregnant.

Hundreds of people crowded the halls of the state Capitol for a committee hearing on a so-called heartbeat bill.

  • Read more about Nebraska Lawmakers Put Off Vote On 'Heartbeat' Abortion Ban
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