Articles

  • Dec 27, 2024 | baltimoresun.com | Shaun Chornonroff |James Matheson

    WASHINGTON - NASA described a plan to launch a multi-billion dollar spacecraft in 2026 as "overly optimistic and not credible" in a September letter to Maryland lawmakers that Capital News Service obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests. On Sept. 4, NASA informed Congress it was ending the $2 billion OSAM-1 project, which was expected to service existing satellites and expand their lifespans in space, among other capabilities.

  • Dec 24, 2024 | baltimoresun.com | Shaun Chornonroff |Mennatalla Ibrahim

    WASHINGTON - Throughout his campaign for a second term, President-elect Donald Trump promised his administration would carry out the largest mass deportation operation in American history. If successful, Trump's move would put the estimated more than a quarter-million Maryland residents without legal status at risk of deportation, which experts say could damage the state's economy long-term.

  • Dec 3, 2024 | cnsmaryland.org | Mennatalla Ibrahim |Shaun Chornonroff

    WASHINGTON - Throughout his campaign for a second term, President-elect Donald Trump promised his administration would carry out the largest mass deportation operation in American history. If successful, Trump's move would put the estimated more than a quarter-million Maryland residents without legal status at risk of deportation, which experts say could damage the state's economy long-term.

  • Nov 11, 2024 | southernmarylandchronicle.com | Mennatalla Ibrahim |Shaun Chornonroff |Marijke Friedman |James Matheson |David Higgins

    WASHINGTON – After Tuesday’s defeat of Vice President Kamala Harris and a flip of the majority in the United States Senate to the Republicans, Democratic lawmakers in Maryland say they are still optimistic about the prospects of several key state projects that would require congressional and presidential support to move forward.

  • Nov 7, 2024 | cnsmaryland.org | Mennatalla Ibrahim |Shaun Chornonroff |Marijke Friedman |James Matheson

    WASHINGTON - After Tuesday's defeat of Vice President Kamala Harris and a flip of the majority in the United States Senate to the Republicans, Democratic lawmakers in Maryland say they are still optimistic about the prospects of several key state projects that would require congressional and presidential support to move forward.

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