Denver|News|
Kamala Harris Visits Colorado To Highlight Biden Administration's Climate Action
Vice President Harris joined elected officials and stakeholders to talk about the Biden administration’s efforts to tackle climate change.
Democracy functions only when people have access to reliable information about government and society. Colorado Newsline’s mission is to be a trusted source of such information. Newsline is nonprofit, nonpartisan and independent, and it provides fair and accurate reporting on politics, policy and other stories of interest to Colorado readers.
Vice President Harris joined elected officials and stakeholders to talk about the Biden administration’s efforts to tackle climate change.
Like most other cities across the state and the country, Denver is a more dangerous place today than it was a few years ago.
JACKSON, MISS. — The Pink House was the center of the U.S. Supreme Court case that overturned the federal right to abortion in June.
Lawmakers set to debate whether local governments should be able to sign off on sites where people can use drugs under medical supervision.
Bills would reduce premiums for Colorado Option plans, lower prescription drug costs and work to increase transparency for hospital profits.
The expanded child tax credit that families received in 2021 helped reduce child poverty across the country, but particularly in the South.
More than 1 in 10 new cars sold in Colorado in 2022 were electric vehicles.
Colorado's first-ever After School Satan Club is set to meet Monday at the Paonia K-8 school in Delta County.
U.S. Senate Republicans objected to Biden's pick to lead the FAA, while Democrats supported it, calling the objections “fake scandals."
Public workers in Colorado who work in settings like school districts, hospitals and courts could soon receive labor protections under bill.
The Protect the West Act, modeled on similar legislation previously proposed by Michael Bennet, was introduced in both chambers of Congress.
Senate Bill 23-97 won unanimous approval from the five-member Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday.
This story originally appeared in the Kansas Reflector.
This story originally appeared in the Kansas Reflector.
WASHINGTON — Colleen Shogan faced questioning from lawmakers for the second time since September.
WASHINGTON — They questioned whether the Department of Education could implement such a program without explicit congressional approval.
WASHINGTON — Lawmakers who will shape the next version of the bill indicated they would seek to address challenges facing U.S. farmers.
WASHINGTON — Kacsmaryk underwent extensive questioning about LGBTQ equality at 2017 confirmation hearing — and very little about abortion.
Republican state Rep. Ken DeGraaf said the bill would allow any voter to verify that their vote was counted for their chosen candidate.
Forty million people in the U.S. have difficulty affording household expenses, and a little more than 25 million do not have enough to eat.