Illinois lawmakers go home with no action on major issues
They failed to make comprehensive changes to address the state's worst-funded-in-the-nation public pension systems, and no vote was held on legalizing same-sex marriage.
They failed to make comprehensive changes to address the state's worst-funded-in-the-nation public pension systems, and no vote was held on legalizing same-sex marriage.
Pounding rain soaked tornado-ravaged Moore, Oklahoma, on Thursday morning, and winds sent pieces of debris flying, hindering recovery efforts three days after the devastating tornado.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev reportedly has told investigators that his brother was the driving force behind the attacks and that they were motivated by religion, but did not have foreign help or contact.
The president made clear Friday that he would seek to avoid a government shutdown even if that means allowing the across-the-board cuts, known as the sequester, to continue.
At age 85, the pontiff said, he can no longer carry out his duties. His resignation, effective Feb. 28, is the first by a pope in six centuries.
In his state of the state address, the governor returned to the populist notes that have defined his political career, laying out a series of choice reflecting what he called either progress or a stalled economy.
The Convention and Visitors Commission can now either accept the ruling and go ahead with the $700 million improvement plan for the Edward Jones Dome or reject it and let the team break its lease in March 2015. The ruling set the stage for the next round of talks over St. Louis’ football future: a new stadium.
Starting his second term of office, President Barack Obama acknowledged that the often divisive and combative politics of today have sometimes fallen short of the size of the country’s problems.
The fiscal cliff compromise passed by the Senate drew scorn from many House Republicans. But the House passed the measure Tuesday night 257 to 167, with support from some among the GOP who feared the party would be blamed for blocking it. President Obama said there's much more work to do.
House Republicans objected to the Senate plan for raising tax rates too much and not controlling spending enough. A vote was possible but not certain. As 2013 began, the nation technically went over the fiscal cliff. But about 1 a.m. St. Louis time, the Senate voted 89 to 8 for a compromise that would raise tax rates on familes earning over $450,000 a year and postpone the automatic spending cuts for two months.