Tucson Politics

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A respectful forum for Tucson's political discourse. Discuss local policies, debate civic matters, or get to know your representatives. Emphasizing civility, we aim to foster a productive space for political exchange. Let's discuss, not dispute.

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MODERATORS
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Take Action Tucson is your Central Hub for Tucson Activism.

If you are a part of this organization please reach out to me. I'd like to have a deeper partnership with them.

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This is pissing me the fuck off.

So let me make this utterly clear - henceforth any news article title that is erroneously using "deport" must be re-titled to use "exile" at the very least.

I'll do my part by editing the titles for any newsbot postings since that's all automated.

Language is important, deport has a very specific meaning. You cannot deport a citizen to a different country. The word the media seems to have difficulty using is "Exile" and "Salvadoran Death Camp".

So, I, as server admin will do it for them - because I'm not a fucking spineless coward.

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  Rodney Scott, a former head of U.S. Border Patrol during the first Trump administration, will lead U.S. Customs and Border Protection after a Senate vote on Wednesday.
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  The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee released a proposal calling for the sale of millions of acres in public lands as part of the reconciliation spending bill. The long list of federal lands that might be auctioned includes such local landmarks as Sabino Canyon and Mount Lemmon.
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  In Arizona, where distrust in elections runs high, many people agree that a manual check of election results could help boost confidence. And state law requires counties to do such audits. Yet they aren’t always happening.
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  Early voting began Wednesday in the Congressional District 7 primary election that voters will decide on July 15.
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  Immigration raids at houses of worship remain infrequent. But arrests at two Los Angeles-area churches have stoked fear among migrants and an uproar among advocates, and although no reports have surfaced of churches in Arizona being targeted, many were already on edge.
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  The Pima County Board of Supervisors voted 3-2 Tuesday to allow a developer to purchase public land for a planned $3.6 billion data center just southeast of Tucson, and approved a rezoning of the parcel to allow for the construction project.
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  The Tucson City Council voted 5-1 Tuesday in favor of a measure making it a misdemeanor to camp in city washes, after multiple failed attempts to pass the ordinance.
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  The U.S. House recently advanced legislation to eliminate solar federal tax credits at the end of 2025, though the credits are often the difference between dreaming of solar and being able to afford it.
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  Senate Republicans introduced their budget proposal Monday, which they spent weeks negotiating with Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs, though they have a long way to go to come to a consensus with Republicans who lead the Arizona House of Representatives.
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  Pima County voters will see several changes in the upcoming congressional election  as Pima County Recorder Gabriella Cazares-Kelly rolls out new vote-by-mail envelopes, 24-hour drop boxes and a new online dashboard for the July 15 primary election in CD 7.
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  As super-contagious measles continues to spread and nears a six-year U.S. record, cases in its original epicenter of West Texas may be subsiding as hesitant residents become more concerned and willing to vaccinate, while North Dakota is a new focus with the highest rate.
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  Republicans in Arizona’s House of Representatives passed their package of state budget bills by a vote of 31-0 Friday night, long after all Democratic lawmakers had headed home after a day of waiting around for Republicans to bring the bills to the floor for debate.
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  Each year on July 4, hundreds of dogs get spooked by fireworks and run away from home, ending up in shelters. To prepare for the holiday this year, Pima Animal Care Center is offering free microchips for both dogs and cats at the shelter each day through July 3.
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  What we are witnessing is a campaign that casts suspicion not on the guilty, but on the innocent; a campaign that confuses enforcement with intimidation, security with separation. Our immigrant families are not the villains in this story. — Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President Rob Elias
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  The Regional Transportation Authority wasn't without a boss for long: Just 11 days after narrowly voting to fire longtime chief Farhad Moghimi, the members of the RTA Board unanimously agreed to hire Mike Ortega, who stepped down as Tucson's city manager last year.
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  In hiring Mike Ortega — the ex-city manager of Tucson — to run things, the RTA Board offers another supplication to the City Council, which has had a lengthy list of grievances.
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  What we are witnessing is a campaign that casts suspicion not on the guilty, but on the innocent; a campaign that confuses enforcement with intimidation, security with separation. Our immigrant families are not the villains in this story. — Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President Rob Elias
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  A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction - brought by Prisma Community Care and eight other nonprofits - blocking the enforcement of executive orders which aimed to limit recognition of transgender identities, restrict advocacy efforts, and cut funding for DEIA programs.
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  A roundup of upcoming Tucson-area political events: Adelita Grijalva speaks to DGT; Voter registration deadline for CD7 special election is here; early voting in CD7 starts Wedesday; upcoming debates in Tucson City Council races; Sentinel team on the airwaves & more
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  Thousands of Tucsonans turned out for "No Kings Day," a nationwide protest against the Trump administration while the president celebrates his birthday with a military parade in Washington D.C.
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  A March executive order from President Donald Trump could create “chaos and confusion” surrounding the U.S. election process, a federal judge ruled in blocking parts of the order decried by Democratic states as “blatantly unconstitutional.”
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  Data center promising Pima County it will be a job machine, Tucson Council set to take another swing at camping ban and differential water rates, plus more from local government meetings around Tucson.
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