Tag: Ohio

Abortion Ban Indefinitely Blocked in Ohio Amid Ongoing Suit

Ohio’s abortion ban, which applies after a fetal heartbeat is detected, has been blocked indefinitely amid ongoing litigation brought by abortion providers challenging the state laws. Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Christian Jenkins previously issued a temporary injunction on Sept. 14, which blocked the abortion ban for 14 days, before granting the preliminary injunction on…


Voter ID Ballot Proposals in Nebraska, Arizona Top 2022 Election Integrity Measures

Nebraskans will be asked to make their state the 22nd to require valid photo identification to vote when they go to the polls on Nov. 8, one of four election integrity measures on ballots nationwide this fall. Nebraska’s Initiative 432 and Arizona’s Proposition 309 seek to incorporate more stringent ID requirements into state election laws….


Convictions in FBI Sting of Politician Should Be Thrown Out, Legal Scholar Says

An Ohio politician who was ensnared in an FBI “sting” wants his two corruption-related convictions thrown out—a challenge that ought to prevail, says a legal scholar who has followed the case closely. Lawyers for Alexander “P.G.” Sittenfeld, a former Cincinnati city councilman who was convicted of bribery and attempted extortion this summer, filed motions for…


Cincinnati Ex-Councilman’s Convictions Should Be Thrown Out, Legal Scholar Says

A former Ohio politician is seeking to have his two federal corruption-related convictions thrown out—a challenge that ought to prevail, according to a legal scholar who has followed the case closely. Lawyers for Alexander “P.G.” Sittenfeld, a former Cincinnati city council member who was convicted in July of bribery and attempted extortion, filed motions for…


LIVE NOW: Biden Admin Makes Reversal on Student Loan Forgiveness; Hurricane Ian Leaves Trail of Destruction | NTD News Today

In other news, The Biden administration quietly issues an update to its student loan forgiveness plan. It’s scaling back eligibility, as six states say the program is illegal. The FDA, withholding autopsy results of people who died after getting COVID-19 vaccines. The agency says they can’t give it out, but not everyone agrees. The Biden…


Biden Admin Makes Reversal on Student Loan Forgiveness; Hurricane Ian Leaves Trail of Destruction | NTD News Today

In other news, The Biden administration quietly issues an update to its student loan forgiveness plan. It’s scaling back eligibility, as six states say the program is illegal. The FDA, withholding autopsy results of people who died after getting COVID-19 vaccines. The agency says they can’t give it out, but not everyone agrees. The Biden…


Study Says Cutting Off Breasts Beneficial to Trans-Identifying Youth, But Critic Calls It ‘Terrifying’

Controversy is swirling over a new study on the impacts of surgically removing breasts from biologically female patients as young as 13 who have been struggling with gender-related distress. The Chicago study, published on Sept. 26 in the distinguished peer-reviewed medical journal JAMA (The Journal of the American Medical Association) Pediatrics, reported that such surgeries have…


GM to Invest $760 Million to Shift Ohio Plant to EV-part Production

TOLEDO, Ohio/WASHINGTON—General Motors Co. said on Friday it will invest $760 million at its Toledo, Ohio factory to build drive units for electric trucks, the automaker’s first U.S. powertrain facility repurposed for EV-related production. Th largest U.S. automaker currently builds GM’s six-speed, eight-speed, and 10-speed rear-wheel drive and nine-speed front-wheel drive transmissions in a variety…


Young Mother Reveals US Education ‘Lies’ in New Film Aimed at Parents

April Few once led a life that made her seem like “a poster child” for liberal attitudes, she says. Despite growing up in a solid two-parent household with one sibling in South Carolina, Few became promiscuous as a teen and young adult. She dabbled in homosexuality. She shaved her head and wore masculine-type clothes because…


States Ask Supreme Court to Review Harassment Decision That Could Affect Schools’ Federal Funding

Texas and eight other states are asking the Supreme Court to hear the University of Toledo’s appeal of a lower court ruling in a campus sexual harassment case they say threatens educational institutions with possible liability and loss of funding by the federal government. The decision, if left undisturbed, “threatens educational institutions with significant unknown…