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Mar 17, 2025 |
insidenova.com | Caley Fox Shannon
First responders from agencies across Northern Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C., were honored by local officials March 12 for their swift, collaborative response to the fatal collision of a passenger
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Dec 4, 2024 |
cnsmaryland.org | Caley Fox Shannon |Marijke Friedman
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday about the constitutionality of Tennessee's 2023 ban on gender-affirming health care for minors. The landmark case, United States v. Skrmetti, could have widespread implications for other restrictions on transgender health care across the country and for a potential national ban on gender-affirming care.
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Nov 19, 2024 |
cnsmaryland.org | Caley Fox Shannon
WASHINGTON - The director of the National Institutes of Health fielded pointed questions from House Republicans in a hearing Tuesday regarding how the agency would rebuild public trust and spend its nearly $50 billion budget. "One of our top priorities is to earn back trust lost during COVID.
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Nov 14, 2024 |
dundalkeagle.com | Caley Fox Shannon |Andrea Duran
WASHINGTON — Thousands of federal jobs in Maryland could be at risk under President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to reclassify scores of civil servants as political appointees starting on day one of his second term. “I will shatter the Deep State, and restore government that is controlled by the People,” Trump said on his campaign’s website, citing corruption, poor performance and leaks as the reasons he wanted to institute changes.
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Nov 11, 2024 |
somdnews.com | Caley Fox Shannon |Andrea Duran
Thousands of federal jobs in Maryland could be at risk under President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to reclassify scores of civil servants as political appointees starting on day one of his second term. “I will shatter the Deep State, and restore government that is controlled by the People,” Trump said on his campaign's website, citing corruption, poor performance and leaks as the reasons he wanted to institute changes.
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Nov 10, 2024 |
times-news.com | Caley Fox Shannon
WASHINGTON — Thousands of federal jobs in Maryland could be at risk under President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to reclassify scores of civil servants as political appointees starting on day one of his second term. “I will shatter the Deep State, and restore government that is controlled by the People,” Trump said on his campaign’s website, citing corruption, poor performance and leaks as the reasons he wanted to institute changes.
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Nov 10, 2024 |
southernmarylandchronicle.com | Caley Fox Shannon |David Higgins
WASHINGTON – Thousands of federal jobs in Maryland could be at risk under President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to reclassify scores of civil servants as political appointees starting on day one of his second term. “I will shatter the Deep State, and restore government that is controlled by the People,” Trump said on his campaign’s website, citing corruption, poor performance and leaks as the reasons he wanted to institute changes.
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Nov 8, 2024 |
cnsmaryland.org | Caley Fox Shannon
WASHINGTON - Thousands of federal jobs in Maryland could be at risk under President-elect Donald Trump's plan to reclassify scores of civil servants as political appointees starting on day one of his second term. "I will shatter the Deep State, and restore government that is controlled by the People," Trump said on his campaign's website, citing corruption, poor performance and leaks as the reasons he wanted to institute changes.
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Oct 24, 2024 |
times-news.com | Caley Fox Shannon
SILVER SPRING — Early voting began Thursday in Maryland, with some voters lining up before sunrise to cast their votes when the polls opened at 7 a.m. for president, Senate, House, ballot initiatives and various local races. Voting was busy in Allegany County throughout the day. In Montgomery County, early birds formed a line at dawn outside the Silver Spring Civic Building. Campaign volunteers set up tables on the plaza and unpacked sheafs of sample ballots to hand out.
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Sep 24, 2024 |
cnsmaryland.org | Adriana Navarro |Caley Fox Shannon |Taylor Nichols
U.S. representatives and their staff have taken at least 17,000 trips since 2012 that were paid for by private parties, many of them nonprofits with deep ties to lobbyists and special interests. Lobbyists and groups that retain them have legally gotten around major reforms meant to severely restrict their involvement in congressional travel by spinning off nonprofits or by sitting on nonprofit boards that pick up the travel tab.