Sinema Argues With Phoenix Council Member’s Staffer Over Restaurant Closures
“This one is simple. Vote to keep the emergency declaration in place, or more people will die. Period.”
“This one is simple. Vote to keep the emergency declaration in place, or more people will die. Period.”
“Hey Phoenix, let Laura Pastor know who you want our city to save lives.” – Senator Kyrsten Sinema
Perhaps the first-ever “great emergency” in Phoenix.
Former Vice President Joe Biden swept the Arizona Democratic presidential preference election on Tuesday.
At 8 p.m. tonight, bars will be forced to closed and restaurants must switch to delivery, takeout, or drive-thru only.
The House voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday to pass a bill requiring hens to be cage-free by 2025.
The state has nine cases of COVID-19 so far.
“Many of the issues Warren campaigned on are exactly the issues we are fighting for,” Sanders said.
The history Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran church is selling its parking lot to a developer, and nearby residents are not happy.
Eventually, the Human Services Campus could have nearly 1,000 shelter beds.
It’ll be at the same venue where President Trump held his rally last month.
But it’s not time to panic, health officials say.
Bloomberg pays entry-level field organizers $6,000 a month, which “does make it really challenging for smaller races,” a local staffer said.
“Eddie Farnsworth protects rapists,” read a white banner with red and black lettering hung over the Arizona Senate floor on Monday afternoon.
“For us, this is no different from DHS building a 30-foot wall along Arlington Cemetery.”
“Maricopa County, as you’ve heard me say, is a family. One big family. And sometimes families disagree.”
Readers don’t want “another media kingmaker.”
Families of people killed in cross-border shootings will not be able to sue for damages – impacting at least one Arizona case.
The bill could empower insurance companies to deny coverage to patients who take medications for mental illnesses.
Bernie Sanders is currently polling ahead of Elizabeth Warren in Arizona, but Warren isn’t giving up yet.
“I went there in good faith,” one applicant said. “I felt like I was kind of used, and I didn’t enjoy that at all.”
Phoenix, Tucson, and Arizonans in general dislike this new law, but the gas industry loves it.