State Politics & News

Coverage of state politics, elections, and conservative policy battles across all 50 states shaping America’s future.
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    • Opinion

    Judges Put Election Reforms in Wisconsin on Hold, Except for Voter ID

    On Monday, a three-judge panel of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused without comment to stay a Wisconsin district court opinion in One Wisconsin Institute v. Thomsen that threw out changes the state legislature had made in early voting rules as well as other changes such as the residency requirement for new voters….
    Hans von Spakovsky
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    • Opinion

    North Carolina School District’s Anti-Bullying Policy Promotes Transgender Agenda

    North Carolina has become ground zero for pushing the transgender envelope. In March, North Carolina’s General Assembly and Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican, passed the Bathroom Privacy Act (HB2) to establish uniform policies for intimate facilities in public schools and public spaces and to overrule a radical Charlotte ordinance requiring local businesses to allow men…
    Tami Fitzgerald
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    • News

    Texas Judge’s Ruling Undermines Obama Administration’s Transgender Bathroom Policy

    Restrooms, locker rooms, and showers in public schools nationwide are allowed to remain separated by biological sex for the foreseeable future, a federal judge in Texas has ruled. U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor blocked President Barack Obama’s administration’s bathroom mandate on Sunday evening, hours before students in the state woke up for their first day…
    Kelsey Bolar
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    • Opinion

    I’m From Louisiana. Here’s the Flooding Story the Media Should Cover.

    As a south Louisiana native who lived through Hurricane Katrina, I have every right to be aggravated with the national news coverage of the state’s latest natural disaster. Due to massive flooding over the last week, one-third of the state’s parishes (called counties everywhere else) are official federal disaster areas. The population for those parishes…
    Norbert Michel
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    • News

    Texas Judge Victorious Over Atheist Group in Prayer Dispute

    Judge Wayne Mack, a justice of the peace in Montgomery County, Texas, recalls several people  telling him they were initially worried about coming before his court, but after the chaplain’s prayer opened the proceedings, they felt better. “It was clear it would be a solemn event and they knew I would be fair,” Mack told…
    Fred Lucas
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    • Opinion

    Alaska Court’s Ruling on Abortion and Parental Notification Hurts Teens

    Hillary Kieft grew worried when her daughter didn’t arrive from school on the bus as usual. After she called the school to find out what was wrong, a school nurse pulled into her driveway with the daughter (let’s call her “Kelly”) in tow. The nurse explained that she had taken Kelly for counseling after school,…
    Jana Minich
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    • News

    51 Illinois Families Ask Court to Suspend School’s Bathroom, Locker Room Policy

    Adding to the handful of lawsuits involving transgender students across the country, lawyers representing a group of 51 families in a Chicago suburb asked a federal judge to temporarily suspend a school policy that grants a transgender student access to the girls’ restrooms and locker rooms. “Every parent sends their kids to school expecting that…
    Kelsey Bolar
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    • News

    What Conservatives Did to Pull Off Religious Liberty Win in California

    California conservatives won a surprise victory this week, changing a state assembly bill that would have curtailed the freedom of private religious colleges. “We literally were able to see tens of thousands of people mobilize to make calls and to write their legislators, and to participate in the political process,” William Jessup University President John…
    Andrew Egger
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    • News

    Voter Fraud Battles Heat Up in Sudden Swing State of Georgia

    Two complaints of vote buying, four complaints of felons voting or registering to vote, and a voter registration under the name of a dead person are among the matters Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp’s office is reviewing. Many of the 18 complaints filed in 2016 came through the office’s “Stop Voter Fraud” website and…
    Fred Lucas
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    • News

    University of Texas Professors Sue Over Concealed Guns Allowed in Their Classrooms

    Three professors are fighting a Texas law that allows students to carry concealed handguns in their college classrooms. Senate Bill 11, allowing concealed handgun license holders 21 and older (or 18 if active military) to carry in campus buildings, was signed by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, in June 2015. The law went into…
    Leah Jessen
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    • Opinion

    Texas Gets the Best Deal It Could With DOJ on Voter ID for the Election

    It looks as if Texas, the Justice Department, and all of the other parties, including the NAACP, involved in the challenge to the state’s voter ID law have worked out an interim settlement—and the district court judge approved the deal today after a telephonic hearing Wednesday morning. That deal is probably about the best deal…
    Hans von Spakovsky
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    • Opinion

    Here Are 7 Ways Free Trade Has Helped Michigan

    In 2010, the Michigan economy was on the rocks—715,000 people were out of work, and the Great Lakes State’s gross domestic product had contracted by 7.6 percent by the time the recession ended. Today, Michigan is the comeback state, and international trade plays a vital role in its growth. Here are seven facts about the…
    Tori K. Smith
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    • Opinion

    New Massachusetts Law Banning Employers From Asking Salary History Could Hurt Employees

    Transparency in pay is a rallying point of “fair pay” advocates. Why then would a recent law passed in Massachusetts prohibit questions about pay? Ironically, what has been deemed the most robust equal pay law in the country simultaneously mandates the free flow of salary discussions amongst employees while prohibiting employers from asking potential hires…
    Rachel Greszler
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    • News

    It Takes 4 Times Longer to Become a Hair Braider Than an EMT in Oklahoma

    For aspiring hair braiders in more than half of the United States, obtaining the license needed to work this job can take as few as six hours and as many as 2,100 hours, or about 262 eight-hour days. But in 10 places that require hair braiders to get approval from local and state governments, a new report…
    Melissa Quinn
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    • Opinion

    Don’t Bring Empty Bottles Into Michigan, You Might Go to Jail

    Founding Father James Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers that “It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood.” The phenomenon of overcriminalization puts all…
    John-Michael Seibler
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    • Opinion

    Anti-Catholic Blaine Amendment Could Damage Nevada School Choice Reform

    A lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union is threatening education choice in Nevada. The lawsuit revolves around a century-old law with a “shameful pedigree” that the U.S. Supreme Court has said arose during “a time of pervasive hostility to the Catholic Church and to Catholics in general.” That law, known as a Blaine…
    Lindsey Burke
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    • News

    Parents Beat Back Obama’s Transgender Bathroom Mandate in Texas Schools

    Administrators of a Texas school district changed guidelines for transgender students to involve parents and work with families on a case-by-case basis, after an uproar among parents. The Fort Worth Independent School District announced the two new pages of guidelines dated July 19 after parents and others had a chance to speak at school board…
    Leah Jessen
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    • News

    These 2 Ohio Counties Are Political Opposites but Have Something in Common About Obama

    CLEVELAND—About 90 miles from the Quicken Loans Arena here, two Ohio communities are celebrating an annual tradition this week: the county fair. Residents and vacationers in Lake Erie gathered at the Ottawa County Fair Grounds in Oak Harbor. Further south, but about the same distance from Cleveland, a similar scene played out in the rural…
    Robert B. Bluey
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    • News

    Amid Complaints From Parents, Virginia School Board Pauses New Transgender Policy

    After facing significant resistance from parents, a school board in Northern Virginia has decided to temporarily suspend the implementation of new regulations for accommodating transgender and gender nonconforming students. “Fairfax County Public Schools will keep handling transgender student matters with privacy and dignity in the way they always have…case-by-case, which is exactly what we wanted…
    Kelsey Bolar
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    • Opinion

    ‘Blueprint for Reform’ Gives Desperately Needed Guidance to Washington

    The barbaric attack in Nice, the slaughter of police officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, and Hillary Clinton’s umpteenth legal cakewalk leave many Americans feeling angry and powerless—and understandably so. The social contract seems to have been shredded by the mayhem that envelops us. But the upcoming election and change of administration offer Americans an…
    Diane Katz
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