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A Blue Dog Night: What It Might Mean for a Green New Deal

The headlines scream Senate shatters record with the longest vote in history as Democrats negotiated the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill. What they don’t tell you is who beyond the usual cast of Republicans the Democrats negotiated until the wee hours of the morning to bring the President’s pandemic relief bill to the Senate floor for a vote and passage along party lines. Your access to Member Features is limited. Please sign in or apply for membership to continue reading this post. Senate Republicans did what they could to stall a vote on the relief act. Ron Johnson (R-WI) went so far as to require the entirety of the bill’s nearly 650 pages read into the record. It took Senate clerks

Senate Democrats vote to provide $300 unemployment benefits into September

Republicans were able to claim the brief victory because Sen. Joe Manchin But a Democratic aide had telegraphed in advance how the drama would play out. There was a roughly hour delay between the Portman and Wyden votes because Democrats were still waiting to find out the cost of their proposal.  We expect Senator Portman to offer his UI [unemployment insurance] amendment and for it to pass. However, it will be superseded by Senate Democrats’ new UI agreement, which will be offered and passed as an amendment tonight, the Democratic aide said ahead of the votes.  Both of the proposals are a change from the House-passed bill that would have provided a $400-per-week payment through late August. 

Senate GOP gets short-lived win on unemployment fight

Ohio slows down coronavirus death reporting: Capitol Letter

Ohio slows down coronavirus death reporting: Capitol Letter Updated Mar 03, 2021; Posted Mar 03, 2021 Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center personnel administer a dose of the Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine to Barbara Schmalenberger Tuesday March 2 at the Schottenstein Center in Columbus. OSU was among the first to give the J&J shots in the U.S. after the federal government provided emergency use authorization for them on Saturday. (Logan Wallace/The Ohio State University)The Ohio State University/Logan Wallace Facebook Share Rotunda Rumblings ODH opts for slower death reporting: The Ohio Department of Health has given up reporting coronavirus deaths as quickly as possible. Beginning Tuesday, it is now opting for a new system that will delay reporting of some deaths by up to months, but should prove to be more accurate, Rich Exner reports. ODH will now depend solely on CDC case confirmations after death certificates are received, rather than earlier reports from hospita

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