SNAP, Michigan and Democrats
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14hon MSN
Court orders Michigan House to send 9 bills passed in 2024 to Whitmer after months-long standoff
The Michigan Senate sued the House in February over nine bills passed by both chambers which were never presented to the governor.
The Michigan Court of Appeals ruled earlier this week in favor of the State Senate in a lawsuit that alleged that the Michigan House of Representatives withheld
Michigan House Democrats want to create a $900 million emergency fund to pay SNAP benefits for 1.4 million people across the state in November.
The push comes after the passage of the state budget, a key piece of which some fear will push people toward illegal markets.
The resolution in question was introduced by the Senate Democratic leader after Republicans proposed a different one memorializing Charlie Kirk.
Michigan voters in a new poll say costs for just about everything are up, but more Republicans believe the economy is on the right track.
Millions of Americans could lose SNAP benefits for food assistance if the government shutdown isn't resolved by November 1. Lighthouse CEO Ryan Hertz discusses the impact this could have on the communities they serve.
For unknown reasons, the bills weren't sent to Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's desk before Republicans took power in the Michigan House in January.
With food assistance to 1.4 million Michiganders being cut, the Free Press asked the state's members of Congress to talk: Here's what they had to say.
Rep. John Moolenaar (R-Mich.) with Margaret Brennan on Face the Nation Sunday about the TikTok deal and the ownership of TikTok once the deal is finalized.
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Why Michigan voters may eventually know if school board candidates are Democrats or Republicans
Supporters argue political party labels provide transparency, while opponents warn the change in school board elections would inject partisan division into local education.