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Taylor Nichols

East Coast United States, Washington, D.C., United States

Articles

  • Dec 12, 2024 | cnsmaryland.org | Taylor Nichols

    Patients seeking abortion care travel hours, often crossing state lines, to reach Board-Certified Family Nurse Practitioner Rachel Kashy and her colleagues at the Women's Health Center of Maryland. "Why are we forcing people to flee their homes to get essential health care?" Kashy asked Capital News Service in an interview. "I can't answer that."The Western Maryland clinic provides sexual and reproductive health care services. It's also the only abortion provider for 70 miles. Since Roe. v.

  • Nov 13, 2024 | cnsmaryland.org | Jack Bowman |Taylor Nichols

    Jack Bowman is a politics reporter for Capital News Service. He has written stories about President Biden and Governor Wes Moore while also serving as the lead reporter for the U.S. Senate race between Angela Alsobrooks and former governor Larry Hogan. His stories have also been featured in the Baltimore Sun, the Maryland Daily Record, the Maryland Reporter and more.

  • Oct 4, 2024 | moco360.media | Taylor Nichols

    The months since Kamala Harris announced her candidacy have been filled with viral social media moments. Since her campaign began in July, it was as if a spigot turned on, and the internet was awash in memes and TikTok videos about her, often created by and for young people. But is that enthusiasm translating to more engagement on the ground from young voters? That spike, in part, was due to a swell of voters under 30.

  • Oct 3, 2024 | cnsmaryland.org | Taylor Nichols

    The months since Kamala Harris announced her candidacy have been filled with viral social media moments. Since her campaign began in July, it was as if a spigot turned on, and the internet was awash in memes and TikTok videos about her, often created by and for young people. But is that enthusiasm translating to more engagement on the ground from young voters? That spike, in part, was due to a swell of voters under 30.

  • 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.

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