5 things you need to know now 5 things you need to know now
Indianapolis FedEx shooter was former employee, previously investigated by FBI
Biden administration reverses on pledge to increase refugee cap from historic low
1st Capitol riot defendant pleads guilty and will cooperate fully
Russia will expel U.S. diplomats in response to sanctions
Helen McCrory,
The man suspected of fatally shooting eight people at a FedEx facility on the grounds of the Indianapolis International Airport late Thursday was formerly an employee at the location, a FedEx spokesperson said Friday. The suspected mass shooter, identified as 19-year-old Brandon Scott Hole, was also reportedly known to federal and local authorities prior to the attack. CNN reports that before the gunman allegedly opened fire at the facility, a family member reached out to authorities to warn about his potential for violence. The FBI reportedly launched a preliminary investigation, but dropped it after concluding there
5 things you need to know now 5 things you need to know now
Indianapolis FedEx shooter was former employee, previously investigated by FBI
Biden administration reverses on pledge to increase refugee cap from historic low
1st Capitol riot defendant pleads guilty and will cooperate fully
Russia will expel U.S. diplomats in response to sanctions
Helen McCrory,
The man suspected of fatally shooting eight people at a FedEx facility on the grounds of the Indianapolis International Airport late Thursday was formerly an employee at the location, a FedEx spokesperson said Friday. The suspected mass shooter, identified as 19-year-old Brandon Scott Hole, was also reportedly known to federal and local authorities prior to the attack. CNN reports that before the gunman allegedly opened fire at the facility, a family member reached out to authorities to warn about his potential for violence. The FBI reportedly launched a preliminary investigation, but dropped it after concluding there
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The Labor-Rights Legislation That Could Make Medicare for All a Reality
The PRO Act will give workers a stronger hand to organize around a bolder political agenda.
Bill Pugliano/Getty Images
The most monumental pro-labor legislation since the 1930s is a few co-sponsors shy of a majority in the Senate, and it’s tough to overstate what a big deal that is: The Protect the Right to Organize Act promises to largely revert the United States back to the friendlier New Deal era of labor law, before postwar Republican majorities moved to significantly tamp down organized labor with the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act. If passed, the law will make more workers eligible for collective bargaining, make unions easier to organize, limit the power of management to sabotage the process and punish those who do more harshly, deliver speedier contracts, and lend existing unions more muscle. The bill’s ultimate outlook is still a toss-up: While President Biden has affirmed his strong support of the bill, a
The Fight for the Right to Organize jewishcurrents.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jewishcurrents.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.