Republican State Rep Steve Toth appeared on CNN on Tuesday to discuss a bill he introduced last month that would limit discussions of critical race theory in Texas public schools.
photo courtesy PennDOT
The Associated Press reports the Republican-controlled House voted on party lines June 8 to put a halt to the disaster declaration.
It goes to the Senate, also controlled by Republicans, where passage would be the last word. Democratic Governor Tom Wolf has no role in the future of the resolution.
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State regulations that have been suspended or waived will be put back into effect, although that process in some cases may take months.
AP says the resolution may affect Pennsylvanians’ ability to get additional food subsidies.
By Mark Scolforo •
Updated 1 hour ago
What to Know
A vote by the Pennsylvania House of Representatives makes the governor s pandemic disaster emergency closer to ending.
The Republican-controlled House voted on party lines Tuesday to put a halt to the disaster declaration. It goes to the Senate, where passage would be the last word.
State regulations that have been suspended or waived will be put back into effect, although that process in some cases may take months. The resolution may affect Pennsylvanians’ ability to get additional food subsidies.
Pennsylvania s House of Representatives voted on party lines Tuesday to put an end to the governor s pandemic disaster emergency declaration, less than a month after voters dramatically expanded lawmakers powers to control such declarations.
Former White House counsel Donald McGahn will appear before the House Judiciary Committee on Friday as part of a deal that averts a Supreme Court showdown over congressional subpoenas, leaving unanswered questions about what happens in future separation-of-power disputes.