This Week in Connecticut: Developer seeks $100 million from state for Bridgeport soccer stadium
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3 hours ago
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Where is my Dothan polling place?
DOTHAN, Ala (WDHN) –Polls in Dothan open on Tuesday, August 5, from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. See where your polling place is below: District 1: 1A-Andrew Belle Community Center – 1270 Lake Street 1B-Walton Park Recreation Center – 122 Walton Park Drive 1C-Vaughn-Blumberg Center – 2715 Flynn Road District 2: 2A-Roy Driggers Building (Civic Center) – 126 N. St. Andrews Street 2B-Wiregrass Recreation Center – 620 Sixth Avenue District 3: 3A-Houston County Farm Center – 1701 E. Cottonwood Road District 4: 4A-Dothan Utilities Complex – 200 Kilgore Drive 4B-Ridgecrest Baptist Church – 1231 Fortner Street District 5: 5A-Westgate Recreation Center – 501 Recreation Road District 6 6A-Wiregrass Commons Mall Community Room – 900 Commons Drive Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
10 hours ago
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Texas House committee advances GOP-friendly map
A Texas state House panel on Saturday advanced proposed congressional maps that aim to make the Lone Star State's district lines even friendlier to Republicans. The Texas House Select Committee on Congressional Redistricting voted to advance a set of maps that would give Republicans five more pick-up opportunities ahead of 2026 and would impact lawmakers in the Dallas-Forth, Austin, Houston and Rio Grande Valley areas. The move tees up a floor vote in the House, where the map will be considered by all members. With an 88-62 GOP majority in the state House, the maps are expected to pass the lower chamber easily. President Trump is looking to pick up five seats in Texas as Republicans brace for an unfavorable political environment in the midterms next year. Republicans are considering pick-up opportunities in Missouri, Indiana and Florida as well. Texas Democrats have limited options to respond, given Republicans enjoy a decisive majority in the state legislature and in the governor's office, though the map is expected to draw litigation. Democrats could try to break quorum — the number of lawmakers needed in order to conduct business — as they did in 2003 when Texas Republicans engaged in mid-cycle redistricting, yet it would do little to thwart eventually passing a new map. Democrats are also weighing their options for mid-cycle redistricting in blue states as a response. California is seriously considering several options – either through a ballot initiative or through the state legislature – to redraw its maps. Democratic governors in New York, New Jersey and Illinois are leaving the door open to considering redrawing their maps. The redistricting tit-for-tat is paving the way for a tumultuous election year that could upend multiple maps, setting off a scramble over which districts candidates run in and potentially impacting when primaries happen depending on whether those issues can be resolved quickly. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
10 hours ago
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Pritzker says Texas Democrats who fled state will be protected amid arrest threats
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) said Sunday that his state would protect Texas Democrats who fled to the Prairie State over GOP efforts to redraw the Lone Star State's congressional maps. 'They're here in Illinois. We're going to do everything we can to protect every single one of them and make sure that — 'cause we know they're doing the right thing, we know that they're following the law,' Pritzker told reporters at a press conference Sunday night held alongside the Texas state lawmakers. 'It's Ken Paxton who doesn't follow the law. It's the leaders of Texas who are attempting not to follow the law,' he continued, calling out Texas's Republican attorney general by name. 'They're the ones that need to be held accountable.' The Illinois governor's comments came after Texas Democrats left their state to deny their GOP counterparts a quorum — the minimum number of lawmakers needed to conduct business — during their special session. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) called the special session in part to push forward a new congressional map that would give Republicans five more pickup opportunities, something President Trump has been pushing for as the GOP braces for a potentially challenging midterm election next year. A Texas House panel advanced the set of maps Saturday, teeing them up for a vote on the House floor. Because Republicans enjoy majorities in both chambers and hold the governor's mansion, the maps are all but assured to pass. In a bid to stop those maps from passing, Texas Democrats fled the state, mainly traveling to Illinois, New York and Massachusetts — all blue strongholds. Breaking quorum, however, means each lawmaker incurs a daily penalty of $500 and the possibility of being arrested. Paxton argued in a post on the social platform X earlier Sunday that 'Democrats in the Texas House who try and run away like cowards should be found, arrested, and brought back to the Capitol immediately.' Texas Democrats' decision to leave the state — following a similar tactic they took in 2003 when Republicans engaged in midcycle redistricting — underscores how the party is looking to use all tools at its disposal to thwart Republicans from changing the election maps. 'This is wrong, this is un-American and this is undemocratic,' state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer (D) said. 'And America, we need to wake up. Republicans are stealing our democracy right before our very eyes.' The redistricting battle is opening the possibility to a larger redistricting arms race as blue and red states alike leave the door open to changing their own congressional maps, which would sow uncertainty into next year's midterms. But the issue is also placing a spotlight on several potential 2028 hopefuls, including Pritzker, California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), who have all weighed in on the redistricting tit for tat. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.