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After 2020, we long for former things to pass away in 2021, by Clint Cooper

After 2020, we long for former things to pass away in 2021, by Clint Cooper
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Dallas s Leading Local News: Weather, Traffic, Sports and more | Dallas, Texas | WFAA com

Y’all. It’s almost 2021. So, it must be time to pen the obligatory 2020 year-in-review article, because who doesn’t want to relive the longest, strangest, most depressing year in recent memory? A Presidential election that stretched on for weeks, possible proof of aliens, and the death of Kobe Bryant. Those are just a few things that happened amidst the fog of a global pandemic that disrupted everyone s lives.  And killed hundreds of thousands in the U.S. It feels like 10 years worth of stuff happened in the last 12 months. Are you ready for this? Buckle up. January: The first red flags

Speeches, Crowds Discouraged at Small D C Council Swearing-In

Get our free newsletter Success! You re on the list. Whoops! There was an error and we couldn t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again. Processing… I already get the newsletter Every two years, a formal swearing-in is held for newly elected or re-elected D.C. Councilmembers. It is usually a big deal. And by law, it has to take place on Jan. 2. Normally it’s held at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, where an oversized hall overflows with officials, family, friends, campaign workers, big wig contributors, and irritating wannabes desperately hanging around power. It’s a chance for newly electeds to give aspirational speeches (or jokingly acknowledge that some people think you’re irritating, as At-Large Councilmember

Massachusetts House and Senate Consider Overriding Baker s Abortion Bill Veto

By Matt Murphy, State House News Service | December 28, 2020 Gov. Charlie Baker. (Photograph by Chris Van Buskirk/SHNS.) The Massachusetts House and Senate are back in session today with legislators pondering whether to override Gov. Charlie Baker’s veto last week of a bill codifying the right to an abortion in state law expanding access for women after 24 weeks of pregnancy. Known as the ROE Act, the bill would also lower the age of consent for an abortion to 16, which the Republican governor said he “cannot support.” The Christmas Eve action by the governor kicks the issue back to the legislature, where Baker said he hopes Democrats will reconsider his compromise proposal. After rejecting his proposed amendments, leadership in both the House and Senate are more likely to seek to override the governor within the next two weeks and appear to have the votes, even if by just a narrow margin.

Look back at 2020 with Bill Ritter on Eyewitness to History streaming on our connected TV apps

NEW YORK (WABC) When the clock struck midnight on January 1st and the year 2020 was ushered in this was a different New York, a different America. Not just because people were packed together like sardines and the only masks anyone wore were to keep warm. Fast forward just a few weeks. Times Square went from the biggest party on the planet to a pandemic-stricken ghost town. The year started with the Senate hearings on the Impeachment of President Trump. Yes, that was this year. On January 22, President Trump asked about coronavirus said, We have it totally under control. It s one person coming in from China, and we have it under control.

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