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We asked every member of Congress about child care policy. Only 5 Republicans answered.

This article was originally published by The 19th. Sign up for The 19th's daily newsletter.

In September, when billions of dollars in child care funding were about to expire, a Senate subcommittee convened to discuss solutions. It was there that Sen. John Kennedy laid out the partisan tension at the heart of what’s billed as a bipartisan issue.

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Laundry! Basketball! 29 GOP senators explain why they’re not watching tonight’s debate

WASHINGTON — What would you rather do than watch tonight’s third GOP presidential debate?

Dinner with friends? Laundry? Sleep? Play with your kids?

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Revealed: Bomb-loving neo-Nazi is now menacing children

SANFORD, N.C. — A former U.S. soldier-turned-neo-Nazi, who recently served a federal prison sentence for distributing bomb-making instructions for killing former presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke, protested outside a children’s story hour led by drag performers last month, Raw Story has confirmed.

Jarrett William Smith, 28, wore a skull mask and a shirt inscribed with the chilling words, “Support your local Einsatz-Kommando” to protest a drag show at a yoga studio in Sanford, N.C.

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Far-right Texas congressman's ex-staffer paid back nearly $40K in ‘unauthorized charges'

The campaign committee of Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) is refusing to explain in detail why his former deputy chief of staff, Margaret A. (Maggie) Harrell, paid the campaign almost $40,000 for “reimbursement for unauthorized expenses.”

Harrell paid $39,368.63 to Chip Roy for Congress on Feb. 10, according to Federal Election Commission records reviewed by Raw Story.

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In Houston, public school teachers are quitting in droves

Thousands of Houston ISD students have lost a teacher already this school year as the district experiences a spike in educator resignations.

About twice as many teachers left HISD in the first six weeks of school this year than has been typical in recent years, according to data obtained by the Houston Landing through a public records request.

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One-third of homeless veterans live in California. Gavin Newsom is backing a new plan.

This story was originally published by CalMatters, nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

California has poured billions of dollars into finding homes for unhoused veterans, but the number of former military service members living on the street has held steady for almost a decade. Today, a third of the nation’s unhoused veterans are in California.

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Sudden sunlight: GOP House hopeful reveals personal finances after Raw Story investigation

A Republican congressional candidate in one of the nation's most competitive 2024 House races has publicly disclosed his personal finances, as required by federal law, after a Raw Story investigation revealed he had failed to do so.

Tom Barrett, a former Michigan state senator and representative who is running for the House seat in Michigan’s 7th District, filed his candidate financial disclosure report on Nov. 2, a day after Raw Story reported he was nearly three months late in filing his disclosure.

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Raw Story named 'best news/political blog' of 2023 by Editor & Publisher magazine

Editor & Publisher magazine has awarded Raw Story a 2023 EPPY Award as the "best news / political blog" among all news sites with 1 million or more unique monthly visitors.

Raw Story was judged on its "overall content regarding news and politics — with focus on analysis and insight as well as wit and wisdom" as well as a submitted portfolio of published articles.

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Why aren't corrupt lawmakers denied their pensions? Blame Congress.

Wire fraud. Tax evasion. Money laundering. Sexual abuse. Child pornography. Since 1980, more than two dozen members of Congress have been indicted for such crimes, some spending years in prison.

But because of a series of legal loopholes, not a single former federal lawmaker who has applied for retirement benefits has ever lost their taxpayer-funded congressional pension, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management told Raw Story.

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Kentucky’s Democratic governor would rather not talk about climate change

This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here.

Kentucky’s Democratic governor, Andy Beshear, has been called the state’s “consoler-in-chief.” He’s presided over a period of extreme weather in the state, from tornadoes that leveled entire towns in the farmlands of western Kentucky, to record flooding that washed out thousands of homes in its mountainous Appalachian east. Through it all, voters have taken note that the governor has made a habit of personally visiting disaster sites and committing to funding their recovery.

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IRS free tax filing rollout faces hurdles after multimillion-dollar lobbying campaign

This article originally appeared in OpenSecrets. Sign up for their weekly newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

New legislation could throw a wrench in IRS plans to launch a free government-run tax filing program after millions of dollars in lobbying by for-profit tax prep service providers.

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Trump election denier Kris Kobach pays federal fine for election violation

Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, an election denier with ties to former President Donald Trump, has paid a fine for violating federal election laws during his losing 2020 run in Kansas for the U.S. Senate.

Kobach's political committee paid fines of $5,060 and $405.75, according to documents released by the Federal Election Commission and exclusively reviewed by Raw Story. The fines stem from the committee knowingly renting an email list well below market value from We Build The Wall Inc., an organization that was later revealed to be a criminal enterprise.

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Accused felon Rudy Giuliani praises The Citadel for letting him keep honorary degree

Not much is going right for Rudy Giuliani.

His recent indignities include 13 felony charges related to his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election in Georgia, status as “co-conspirator 1” in one of former President Donald Trump’s federal indictments and the pending loss of his law license in Washington, D.C.

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