Tom Vilsack, World Food Prize and Iowa
Joe Biden leaves office with his most bonkers idea yet. Thank God he's gone. Of all Joe Biden's recent statements, the most idiotic has to be last week's declaration that 1972's Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution has passed and is now the "law of the land."
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A federal appeals court on Friday sided with the Biden administration's Department of Justice and kept a temporary block on an Iowa law that makes it a state crime for a person to be in Iowa if they are in the U.S. illegally.
The World Food Prize Foundation announced Tuesday that former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack will serve as the organization’s chief executive officer, beginning March 1.
New legislation Hinson introduced, called the Swamp Act, would move federal agency headquarters out of Washington, D.C. She said she's happy to speak to Congress members about where different agencies make sense. Hinson co-sponsored the legislation with Democratic Rep. Jared Golden from Maine.
On Thursday, State Rep. Brent Money (HD-2) filed House Bill 2197 meant to provide equal protection under the law to pre-born babies in Texas. More than a dozen House colleagues co-authored the bill within the first hour of filing.
A federal appeals court kept blocked an Iowa law that would allow the arrest and deportation of immigrants in Iowa if they had previously been denied entry into the country.
A U.S. federal appeals court has upheld the injunction blocking enforcement of an Iowa law that makes illegal immigration a state crime. The Friday decision denied an appeal from Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird,
A state law that would allow the arrest and deportation of immigrants in Iowa if they had previously been denied entry into the country will remain blocked a federal appeals
In Iowa, 10 people who were charged with Jan. 6-related offenses are receiving reprieves from Trump. Nine Iowans were pardoned after facing convictions, and a tenth, who was not yet convicted, will have his case permanently dismissed.
Iowa can't enforce its own immigration law, U.S. appeals court says. But with Justice Department in new hands, future of statute unclear