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Trump’s calls to ‘nationalize’ elections have state, local election officials bracing for tumult

FBI agents load boxes of election documents onto trucks at an elections warehouse in Fulton County, Ga. State and local election officials are bracing for the prospect of federal action after President Donald Trump’s call to nationalize elections. (Photo by Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder) President Donald Trump’s calls this week to “nationalize” elections capped a year of efforts by his administration to exercise authority over state-run elections. The demands now have some state and local election officials fearing — and preparing for — a tumultuous year ahead. “I don’t think we can put anything past this administration,” Oregon Democratic Secretary of State Tobias Read told Stateline in an interview. “I think they’re increasingly desperate, increasingly scared about what’s going to happen when they are held accountable by American voters. So we have to be prepared for everything.” Ever since Trump signed an executive order last March that attempted to impose a requirement that vo...
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Minnesota child care providers try to make ends meet as immigrant families keep kids home

A parent readies her child for drop off at Circulo de Amigos Child Care Center on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minn. (Photo by Ellen Schmidt/Minnesota Reformer) Two weeks into January, the director of a St. Paul child care center called a family to ask why their daughter had been absent on-and-off since late last year.  “We reached out to just see, ‘Hey, what’s going on? Is your child sick?’” said Angela Clair, whose child care center serves more than 70 children.  The girl’s mother answered the phone.  “ICE is in our neighborhood every single day, and I don’t want to leave the neighborhood to take her to school, because I’m afraid that myself or my husband will be taken,” Clair recalls the mother saying.  Clair called back a week later to check on them, but the family still didn’t feel safe bringing their child to school. The family relies on the Child Care Assistance Program, a federally-funded, state-managed program that subsidizes child care for ...

What passed in the Alabama Legislature: Feb. 3-5, 2026

Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, hands a paper to Alabama Senate staff on Feb. 5, 2026 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector) Here are the bills that passed the Alabama Legislature this week. Tuesday, Feb. 3 House HB 297 , sponsored by Rep. Thomas Jackson, D-Thomasville, alters, rearranges and extends the boundary and corporate limits in the City of Monroeville in Monroe County. The bill passed 12-0. It moves to the Senate. HB 330 , sponsored by Rep. Mack Butler, R-Rainbow City, repeals a law outlining methods for the Etowah County Commission to fill vacancies in county offices. The bill passed 21-0. It goes to the Senate. HB 331 , sponsored by Rep. David Standridge, R-Hayden, allows Blount County to levy an additional 1% tax on hotels, motels and commercial lodgings. The bill passed 26-0. It goes to the Senate. HB 310 , sponsored by Rep. Danny Crawford, R-Athens, proposes a constitutional amendment for Limestone C...

Alabama schedules March execution for Charles Lee Burton

Gov. Kay Ivey Thursday set the execution for Charles Lee Burton for March 12. He was convicted in 1992 of the capital murder of Doug Battle in 1991. If the execution goes forward, Osgood will be the first person put to death by the state of Alabama this year. (Alabama Department of Corrections) Gov. Kay Ivey Thursday scheduled a March 12 execution of Charles Lee Burton for his role in the death of Doug Battle. The execution of Burton, 75, would be the first of the year. Alabama carried out five executions in 2025, tied for the second-highest next to Florida , which carried out 19 executions. The state plans to carry out the execution by nitrogen gas. According to court documents, Burton and five other people entered an Auto Zone in Talladega in August 1991 with the intention of robbing the store. Battle was shot and killed during the robbery attempt. Burton did not shoot Battle. Derrick DeBruce, the man convicted of shooting Battle, had his sentence reduced to life without parole ...

US Senate Republicans block attempt to sue Trump administration over Epstein files

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer speaks to reporters at the U.S. Capitol on June 17, 2025. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom) WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans blocked a Democratic proposal Thursday to sue the Trump administration over allegations that it did not fully release the Epstein files, as mandated under a law unanimously approved by senators and signed by the president nearly three months ago. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., asked for unanimous consent on a  resolution compelling the Republican-led Senate to challenge President Donald Trump in court to release more records from the government’s investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who died in 2019 awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. Department of Justice Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump’s former personal defense attorney, said Jan. 30 that the department had finished complying with the new law after a final  release of 3 million pages, con...

Alabama Legislature sends bill extending death penalty to child sexual assault to Gov. Kay Ivey

Sen. April Weaver, R-Alabaster, walks to her seat in the Alabama Senate on May 1, 2025 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. The Senate passed HB 41, sponsored by Rep. Matt Simpson, R-Daphne, which Weaver carried in the Senate, that extends the death penalty to those convicted of child sexual assault. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector) The Alabama Senate gave final approval to a bill Thursday that would allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty for those convicted of sexual assault of a child under the age of 12, setting up a possible court battle over its constitutionality.  HB 41 , sponsored by Rep. Matt Simpson, R-Daphne, passed the Senate 33-1 with no changes. It goes to Gov. Kay Ivey.  Sen. April Weaver, R-Hoover, who sponsored the Senate version of the legislation, cited the discovery of a child sex trafficking ring last summer in Bibb County, in her district.  GET THE MORNING HEADLINES. SUBSCRIBE “I believe child sexual abuses like this de...

Alabama plans to spend $203 million federal grant on rural health, workforce

ADECA Director Kenneth Boswell speaking to lawmakers about the Rural Health Transformation Program on Feb. 4, 2026, in the Alabama State House in Montgomery, Alabama. Boswell said that for the federal grant to be "transformational" and sustainable, the state, hospitals and physicians will have to think outside the box. (Anna Barrett/Alabama Reflector) A state official Wednesday briefed lawmakers on the state’s plans to spend just over $200 million in federal grants meant to partially offset Medicaid cuts , mostly on rural health and workforce. Kenneth Boswell, director of the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs (ADECA), told a group of lawmakers that make up the Alabama Rural Health Transformation Advisory Group the distribution of the awarded funds between the 11 initiatives the state submitted in its November application.   The state will receive $203.4 million from the program , part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) that was signed into law...