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Republican bill making sheriff's offices verify citizenship of felony arrestees, headed for State Assembly

Republican bill making sheriff's offices verify citizenship of felony arrestees, headed for State Assembly

Yahoo12-03-2025

MADISON, Wis. (WLAX/WEUX) – A Republican bill cracking down on people living in Wisconsin Illegally has passed the Public Safety Committee. Assembly Bill 24 would require sheriff's offices across the state to verify the citizenship status of people they've arrested for felony offenses. If the sheriff can't verify someone is in the country legally, they would be required to report the findings to the Department of Homeland Security. If sheriffs don't comply with the reporting requirement, the bill dictates their counties would lose 15% of State Aid.
Despite Democratic opposition, the bill will be heading to the Assembly for a Floor Vote. However, even if this bill passes through the Legislature, Democratic Governor Tony Evers has already indicated he will veto the bill.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Trump isn't ready for a ceasefire with Massie
Trump isn't ready for a ceasefire with Massie

Politico

time17 minutes ago

  • Politico

Trump isn't ready for a ceasefire with Massie

Just as President Donald Trump appears to have hit pause on a major conflict in the Middle East, he is intensifying one at home. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) is the chief target of the president's powerful political operation, which is looking to oust the outspoken congressman in the GOP primary next year. The congressman has been a thorn in the president's side in the past, but Massie's latest threat to introduce a resolution aimed at reining in presidential war powers comes as Trump was already seething about Massie's multiple attempts to thwart the 'big, beautiful bill' ahead of Republicans' self-imposed July 4 deadline. Massie has easily beat back challenges before, including a raft of money from pro-Israel donors. But this time, the six-term Congressman's strong independent political brand may not withstand the blitz that the president's allies appear ready to unleash. Not only has Trump vowed to campaign 'really hard' against Massie next year, his political operation has launched a super PAC dedicated solely to defeating the Kentuckian. 'He's probably more vulnerable than he's been since he first won in a primary because of all this,' said GOP strategist and former Kentucky state Rep. Adam Koenig. 'There's money outside of Trump world ready to go after Massie.' Trump's political apparatus began ramping up its efforts to boot Massie after the representative voted against the party's massive tax-and-spending package for the president's domestic policy priorities when it first went through the House last month. It went public with its plans — a super PAC dubbed Kentucky MAGA led by two of the president's most-trusted lieutenants, Chris LaCivita and pollster Tony Fabrizio, first reported by Axios — as Massie pushed to reassert congressional authority over Trump's military actions in Iran. 'He has established himself as a contrarian for contrarian sake,' LaCivita said in a text message to POLITICO. 'He should be a man and switch parties instead of posing as a Republican.' The president and his advisers have viciously attacked Massie on social media in recent days, with Trump marshalling his MAGA base to dump 'LOSER' Massie and 'GET THIS 'BUM' OUT OF OFFICE.' Trump and Massie have had a contentious relationship dating back to the president's first term, when he pushed to 'throw Massie out of the Republican Party' after the Kentucky Republican erected a roadblock to Trump's Covid-19 relief package in March 2020. Trump later endorsed Massie's 2022 reelection bid and Massie backed Trump in 2024 — but only after initially supporting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the presidential primary. But now that Trump is back in the Oval Office, Massie has attempted to cripple the president's legislative agenda multiple times, including becoming the only Republican to vote against a stopgap government funding bill in March. Unlike in the past, the president appears to be making good on his threats to try getting Massie out of office by putting a super PAC on the case. 'I think there's a real opportunity…they're going to spend upwards of $30 million to defeat Thomas Massie,' said one Kentucky GOP political operative who, like many interviewed for this story, was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive intraparty matters. The operative, who did not vote for Trump, also heard rumblings that AIPAC, one of the most prominent pro-Israel groups, is also ready to spend big in the May 2026 Kentucky primary — suggesting Massie's anti-war efforts may be met with resistance on multiple fronts. 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'That's a unique congressional district.' Former Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson believes Trump, as much as he is the undisputed leader of the Republican Party, may be overplaying his hand when it comes to Massie's district. 'As popular as Trump is in Republican politics, as popular as Trump is in Kentucky, as popular as Trump is in the 4th District, on the substance, on the policy, Thomas wins those arguments over Trump,' Grayson said. 'Until you see someone step up, Thomas is still pretty formidable.' He also warned of repercussions for Trump, who — constitutionally barred from seeking office again — is a lame duck. If the representative is able to fend off a primary challenge, it could open the floodgates for others who have private misgivings about the president's actions. 'It will make a difference if Massie were to overcome this,' Grayson added. 'If he wins, if you're a member, you'd be more likely to speak out in the future.' 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Israel-Iran live updates: Trump again says Iranian nuke sites 'completely destroyed'

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