the migrant surge in democratic run city spurring a blue city backlash. president biden is no stranger to republicans criticizing the border and now democratic mayors are piling on. welcome to a new hour of america s newsroom, i m dana perino. bill: i m bill hemmer. good morning. a fraction of what s coming across the border every day. enough to make sanctuary cities sound the alarm, plead for more help, beg for help from the federal government and the white house. the chaos becoming impossible to ignore. even thousands of miles away from the border as the crisis makes its way into big cities. now the mayors from democratic strongholds say the white house has left them to fend for themselves. the federal government must take responsibility and lead on this humanitarian crisis. cities have reached a point where we are either close to capacity or nearly out of room. it will cramp city budgets around the country. $160 million of cost in next year s budget. 10% of our e
russian probe. they said his campaign was colluding with moscow. you would think they would turn in their pulitzer prizes and apologize to the american people. nope. not a chance. the former president predicted that durham s probe would uncover, quote, the crime of the century. doesn t look like it actually did that. the whole thing is predicated on a rabbit hole conspiracy. the conspiracy theory is walking through the fevered swamps of trumpism we well, probably a career ending career reputational damage. a whole lot of nothing. four years, i don t know how many millions of dollars, how many of his friends he hired in his office to do what? the issue of basically the report. durham s report also finding the fbi gave markedly different treatment to the clinton and trump campaigns and ignored hillary s plan to tie trump to putin order to distract from her email scandal. the special counsel uncovering that both barack obama and joe biden knew about hillary s dirty d
(PUEBLO, Colo.) — Team Up to Clean Up is offering the Pueblo community the opportunity to dispose of household items and yard debris at no cost on Saturday, May 18. Accepted items will include furniture, mattresses, excess carpet, yard waste, and up to five tires without rims per person. This is limited to people living […]
(PUEBLO, Colo.) — On Tuesday, April 30, dozens of students at Colorado State University, Pueblo gathered in front of the fountain courtyard to protest the ongoing war in Gaza. According to FOX21’s crew on scene, students are calling for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza, along with calls for the CSU Pueblo administration to separate from […]
A recently published survey of CSU Pueblo faculty gauged their thoughts on income, housing and other issues of economic well-being. Here's what to know.