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Arizona legislators and activists from the Working Families Party met Tuesday at the Capitol to urge Sen. Kyrsten Sinema to take action on President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better agenda. ....
House Republicans pushed through the plan to sharply cut taxes on the rich Thursday but only after changing the rules to limit debate and objections by ....
Capitol Media Services PHOENIX House Republicans pushed through the plan to sharply cut taxes on the rich Thursday and a $12.8 billion spending plan but only after changing the rules to limit debate and objections by Democrats.
The approval, on a party-line vote, came after the 31 Republicans all present for the first time in days lined up the votes to limit discussion to no more than 30 minutes. And the rule was crafted in a way to cut off comments at that point, even if all the amendments to any bill had not even been explained.
With the new rules in place, House Republicans enacted the plan. With the Senate already having approved, that sent it to Gov. Doug Ducey. ....
And is it different when you’re not feeling well? All that could mean a call from state or county investigators and possibly a criminal probe. Legislation being pushed by Rep. John Kavanagh, R-Fountain Hills, would alter state laws on early ballots. Those statutes now say that when a ballot comes in by mail, election workers compare the signature on the envelope with what they have on file, whether from prior elections or other records. If they appear to match, that’s the end of it and the ballot is tallied. If they don’t, election workers attempt to contact voters to find out if they actually cast the ballot and any reasons why the signature has changed. The most common reasons include age or illness. ....
All that could mean a call from state or county investigators and possibly a criminal probe. Legislation being pushed by Rep. John Kavanagh (R-Fountain Hills) would alter state laws on early ballots. Those statutes now say that when a ballot comes in by mail, election workers compare the signature on the envelope with what they have on file, whether from prior elections or other records. If they appear to match, that s the end of it and the ballot is tallied. If they don t, election workers attempt to contact voters to find out if they actually cast the ballot and any reasons why the signature has changed, with the most common reasons include age or illness. An affirmative response from the voter cure the ballot and ends the process. Otherwise the ballot is not counted. ....