Elon Musk gives $1 million to Wisconsin voter
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Two lowers courts on Saturday rejected the legal challenge by Democrat Josh Kaul, who argues that Musk's offer violates a state law prohibiting giving anything of value in exchange for a vote.
From The Press Democrat
Elections in Florida and Wisconsin have become key tests of President Donald Trump’s political standing two months into his second White House term.
From The Boston Globe
Musk painted the judicial race he has pumped more than $20 million into as pivotal for the country.
From CBS News
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Las Vegas attorney Sigal Chattah has been appointed interim U.S. attorney for Nevada, it was announced Friday. The job will start April 1, a U.S. attorney's office spokesperson confirmed.
The lawsuit argues that since the Education Department was created (and funded) by Congress, it can only take an act of Congress to end it — not an executive order from the president.
In his meeting with PennLive's Editorial Board, the attorney general sought to allay concerns over his independence and whether he would blindly follow edicts from President Donald Trump.
The state attorney general had raised the possibility of charging doctors with criminal conspiracy for recommending abortion care out of state.
NY Attorney General Letitia James recovers over $5 million from Community Options, Inc. for improperly billing Medicaid for unsatisfactory developmental disability services.
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New York Attorney General Letitia James has ordered a Rockland County car wash to stop a discriminatory pricing scheme that targeted Jewish customers preparing for Passover. An investigation by the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) found that Super 4 Seasons Car Wash,
Democratic state attorneys general denounced what they called the “chilling effect” of U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive orders targeting law firms and calls for impeaching federal judges, characterizing ongoing attacks as retribution against political opponents.
The bill attempts to restore the attorney general’s power to prosecute election laws. Citing state law and the Texas Constitution, the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled in 2021 that the attorney general “can prosecute with the permission of the local prosecutor but cannot initiate prosecution unilaterally.”