July 2021 - Page 14

A group joins a rally to support voter rights on the steps of the Texas Capitol, Thursday, July 8, 2021, in Austin, Texas. The Texas Legislature began a special session Thursday. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Texas House Democrats leave state to block Republicans from passing voting restrictions

By Eric Bradner, Dianne Gallagher and Paul LeBlanc Texas state House Democrats left the state Monday in an effort to block Republicans from passing a restrictive new voting law in the remaining 27 days of the special legislative session called by Gov. Greg Abbott. Two chartered planes carrying the majority of the Democrats who left Texas

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Biden to make ‘moral case’ for voting rights in major speech Tuesday

By Paul LeBlanc President Joe Biden will make “the moral case” for voting rights in a highly anticipated speech on Tuesday centered around protecting ballot access in the face of “authoritarian and anti-American” restrictions, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday. Biden will use his remarks in Philadelphia “to make the case to the American

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WEST HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 05: Cedric the Entertainer attends the 60th Anniversary Party For The Monte-Carlo TV Festival at Sunset Tower Hotel on February 05, 2020 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Gregg DeGuire/Getty Images)

Cedric the Entertainer to host the Emmys

By Sandra Gonzalez This year’s Emmy Awards will be hosted by a first-timer. CBS and the TV Academy on Monday announced that Cedric the Entertainer will make his Emmys hosting debut in September as the big show returns to a live, in-person format. A “limited audience of nominees and their guests” will also be present,

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The statue of Meriwether Lewis, William Clark and Sacagawea is removed from Charlottesville, Virginia on July 10, 2021. - The southern US city of Charlottesvill took down two statues honoring Civil War generals for the pro-slavery Confederacy which had become the focus of protests, including a deadly 2017 rally of white supremacists. Tensions over the fate of the Lee statue led to violence in August 2017, when a white nationalist drove his car into a crowd of demonstrators in Charlottesville, killing a woman. (Photo by Ryan M. Kelly / AFP) (Photo by RYAN M. KELLY/AFP via Getty Images)

Charlottesville removes Lewis and Clark statue featuring Sacagawea along with Confederate statues

By Amir Vera, Artemis Moshtaghian and Elizabeth Joseph A Lewis and Clark statue featuring Sacagawea (also spelled Sacajawea), a famous Native American woman, was taken down in Charlottesville, Virginia, making it the third statue to be taken down in the city. The statue was of two White men — Meriwether Lewis and William Clark —

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Community and church leaders gather in Minneapolis on July 11 after a 3-year-old was shot while playing outside two days earlier.

With 5 kids shot in 2 months, community begs for halt to gun violence

By Marielle Mohs North Minneapolis community and church leaders gathered Sunday afternoon along Emerson and 33rd avenues — just one block from where a 3-year-old child was shot playing outside Friday night — to demand and beg for the gun violence to end. The child is hospitalized in serious condition but is expected to survive.

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US President Joe Biden speaks about crime prevention, in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC on June 23, 2021. - President Biden unveiled new measures Wednesday to tackle gun violence against a backdrop of surging crime that his Republican rivals have seized on for weeks. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Biden administration urging state and local governments to use Covid relief funding to address uptick in violent crime

By Betsy Klein The White House is encouraging state and local governments to use funding from the Covid relief package passed earlier this year to address a summer rise in violent crime as pandemic restrictions loosen nationwide. The administration’s strategy to combat crime, a White House memo obtained by CNN said, “uses the American Rescue Plan’s $350 billion in financial

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THE 2021 ESPYS PRESENTED BY CAPITAL ONE - Some of the world's best athletes and biggest stars join host Anthony Mackie for "The 2021 ESPYS Presented by Capital One." The star-studded event airs live on ABC Saturday, July 10 from 8:00-11:00 p.m. EDT from The Rooftop at Pier 17 at the Seaport in New York City. (Lorenzo Bevilaqua/ABC via Getty Images)PAIGE BUECKERS

Star UConn guard Paige Bueckers uses ESPYS speech to honor Black women

By Wayne Sterling Paige Bueckers, the star point guard for the University of Connecticut women’s basketball team, was named the best college athlete in women’s sports at the 2021 ESPYS on Saturday night and used her acceptance speech to celebrate and honor Black women. “With the light that I have now as a White woman

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This picture taken on May 2, 2021 shows an aerial view of the Negrohead Lake in Baytown, Texas. - Lakes, streams, peaks or valleys still bear pejorative names for ethnic minorities, marks of a dark past that this southern state of the United States would like to leave behind. A vote by a federal panel that is set for next month could finally officially rebaptize 16 Texas places whose names include the word "negro", a once common description that many now see as outdated and offensive. (Photo by Francois PICARD / AFP) (Photo by FRANCOIS PICARD/AFP via Getty Images)

Why so many geographic sites in the US still have racist names

By Leah Asmelash Around the country, school, county and even bird names are being reconsidered and changed, as greater attention is paid to their origins and the racism the names may invoke. In this same tradition, multiple areas have reconsidered geographical names containing the word “negro” — a term once considered socially acceptable, but now viewed as outdated and offensive

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Rep. Bennie Thompson, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, listens as Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announces her appointments to a new select committee to investigate the violent Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, July 1, 2021. Thompson will lead the probe to examine what went wrong around the Capitol when hundreds of supporters of then-President Donald Trump broke into the building, hunted for lawmakers and interrupted the congressional certification of Democrat Joe Biden's election victory. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

‘We’ll do this work as long as it takes’: Thompson readies for political fight leading Jan. 6 investigation

By Lauren Fox, Jeremy Herb, Annie Grayer and Ryan Nobles House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson avoids making too many promises when it comes to his new select committee to investigate the deadly insurrection at the US Capitol. But the Mississippi Democrat is sure on one thing: He isn’t going to let the pressure of

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