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    After election defeat, Ohio gov. says it's 'time to pause' anti-union efforts

    David Edwards
    November 09, 2011

    Republican Ohio Gov. John Kasich said on Tuesday that it was "time to pause" anti-union efforts after voters rejected his plan to strip public workers of most collective bargaining rights.


    "You know, when you get beat, you have to admit it," the governor told reporters. "It's clear that the people of spoken and you know, my view is when people speak in a campaign like this, a referendum, you have to listen when you are a public servant. There isn't any question about that. .... It requires me to take a deep breath."

    Over 63 percent of voters in Ohio rejected Issue 2, repealing Senate Bill 5, which would have prevented police officers, firefighters, teachers, and other state employees from collectively negotiating for better wages.

    Kasich said he hadn't decided on whether he would try again to limit union rights.

    "I don't think this is a time to make a lot of decisions," he explained. "When I say it is a time to pause, it is right now on this issue. And the people have spoken clearly. You don't ignore the public."

    But the former Fox News guest host wouldn't go so far as to admit he had overreached.

    "It's like asking an athlete, 'Should you have not taken this shot?'" he remarked. "Voters were saying, I think here, Joe -- they might have said it was too much, too soon. Maybe that was it. I don't really know."

    Watch this video from WLWT and Ohio State House, broadcast Nov. 8, 2011.

    For customer support issues contact support@rawstory.com. Report typos and corrections to corrections@rawstory.com.

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    John Fetterman to return to U.S. Senate by April 17

    Kim Lyons, Pennsylvania Capital-Star
    March 29, 2023

    PITTSBURGH — U.S. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., will return to the Senate on April 17, after spending several weeks in the hospital for treatment of clinical depression, a source close to the senator confirmed to the Capital-Star on Wednesday.

    Fetterman checked himself into Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Washington, D.C. in mid-February. His chief of staff, Adam Jentleson, said at the time that Fetterman had experienced depression “on and off throughout his life,” but that it had grown severe in the weeks before he entered the hospital.

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    Sen. Tom Carper just violated this federal transparency and conflicts-of-interest law

    Dave Levinthal, Editor-in-Chief
    March 29, 2023

    Democratic Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware violated a transparency and conflicts-of-interest law by disclosing one of his wife's stock trades more than a year after a federal deadline, according to a Raw Story review of congressional financial disclosure records.

    Carper on Tuesday disclosed that Martha Ann Stacy sold $2,991.98 worth of stock in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Ltd., although the trade took place on Jan. 19, 2022.

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    Rand Paul warns the US will 'emulate China' by banning apps like TikTok

    Brandon Gage, Alternet
    March 29, 2023

    United States Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) published an editorial in the Louisville Courier-Journal on Wednesday in which he voiced opposition to a ban on the popular app TikTok that passed the House of Representatives last year and is currently being debated in the Senate.

    Paul, a libertarian conservative, attacked the proposal as a surefire way to alienate young voters and assailed it as an affront to Republicans' supposed aversion to censorship.

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