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Gov. Mikie Sherrill dispatched the New Jersey State Police outside the Delaney Hall migrant detention center after federal officials said they would flood the area with armed agents. Not everyone approved.
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The president has not yet endorsed Representative Mike Collins or Derek Dooley, a former football coach, in the race to challenge the Democratic senator, Jon Ossoff.
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The Texas attorney general has mounted an all-out effort to prove Democratic Hispanic groups have been corrupting elections. Now he could be the beneficiary of his own attacks.
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(Second column, 9th story, link)
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Two senior Republicans urged the Trump administration to prepare for the possible expiration of a contentious intelligence-gathering authority.
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(First column, 14th story, link)
Related stories: Palestinian baby shot dead by Israeli troops in occupied West Bank...
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An unorthodox Republican, he helped shape tax policy and women's rights legislation before resigning in 1995 amid accusations by more than 20 women of sexual misconduct.
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The state is an outlier in taking days to count most votes, but supporters of the system say it is designed to enfranchise more people while protecting against fraud.
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(First column, 5th story, link)
Related stories: Female Navy officers fear career cap after women cut from promotions list...
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The police response to the murder of Henry Nowak has triggered a heated transatlantic debate.
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Cmdr. Job Price's death was ruled a suicide. But irregularities raised suspicions among his loved ones and others.
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Stephen Buyer, a former Republican representative from Indiana, was convicted of trading stock related to two deals before they were made public.
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(First column, 1st story, link)
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The Los Angeles U.S. attorney's office said it has launched an investigation into election fraud in California's elections.
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The Democrat from Georgia on what he sees as the moral issues of our time.
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The presumptive Democratic Senate nominee in Maine said the state would have his back in the face of accusations he has denied.
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(First column, 10th story, link)
Related stories: Senate Passes $70 Billion Border Bill WITHOUT Killing 'Slush Fund'... Ballroom donors won $50 BILLION in contracts after giving to project... White House Explodes Over Viral Video of Dozy Don... President Nods Off in Front of Reporters... DOGE planned to mark 2.7 million living people as DEAD!
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Tuesday's Senate primary features two candidates with compelling personal stories. Both have stressed their independence.
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President Trump's record of ousting those he sees as disloyal continued apace with Senator John Cornyn's defeat. Whether his relationship with Senate Republicans can be repaired is another question.
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"I could hear screaming the whole time." Our guests Alex Colston and Haitham Arafat spent days in Israeli custody after being abducted from a humanitarian mission sailing to Gaza. They share accounts of violence, abuse and torture at the hands of Israeli soldiers. "The process that they have there in the jail was designed to break you as a human," says Arafat, a Palestinian American activist born in Gaza who has taken part in multiple missions attempting to break Israel's long-standing siege. Over 100 members of his family have been killed in Gaza since October 7. While incarcerated, the activists were visited by Israel's minister of national security, Itamar Ben-Gvir, who was recently banned from France after publicly ridiculing flotilla members. "They call us provocateurs, or they say we're terrorists … and yet, whenever Ben-Gvir shows up to these things, he's the one provoking us," says Colston, a journalist who was previously detained by Israel while sailing with the Global Sumud Flotilla last year.
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"The country's most important civil rights law no longer effectively exists, and that's going to have ramifications on American democracy for a very long time." Mother Jones correspondent Ari Berman reacts to the Supreme Court's recent 6-3 decision rejecting key principles of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Since the court issued its ruling last week, Republican-controlled states have begun to redraw their voting maps in a "gerrymandering arms race" that "could lead to the largest drop in Black representation since the Jim Crow era," explains Berman. "We're returning to the days of literacy tests and poll taxes — not through those devices, but through specifically trying to eliminate Black office holders. And Southern legislators are very clear they are going to do this. They feel unshackled by the Supreme Court ruling. They are being pressured by President Trump to do it, and they feel like all the guardrails are off right now."
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