Arkansas legislature ‘Gulf of America' resolution declined by House for second time
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — A resolution that would have had Arkansas recognize the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America has died in the state House again.
House Resolution 1010 proposed mandating that all Arkansas state entities refer to the body of water as the Gulf of America going forward. The resolution aligned with an executive order signed by President Donald Trump renaming the body to the Gulf of America shortly after he took office.
'I just thought this was a good bill to show that we're willing to get President Trump's agenda done on the state level as well as our federal delegation gets it done on the federal level,' Rep. Aaron Pilkington (R-Knoxville) said after filing the resolution on Jan. 22.
The resolution was referred to the House Management Committee and it received a 'do not pass' on Jan. 29.
Cotton introduces bill aimed at protecting outdoor sporting events from unauthorized drones
On Feb. 13, it went to the House Management Committee a second time and received a 'do pass'.
The resolution was read during a House meeting on Feb. 17 and voted on through a voice vote where it failed. Pilkington gave a notice of reconsideration the next day.
The representative claimed the 'no' votes during the voice vote saying 'interference from the gallery that may have affected the outcome.'
The House voted on the resolution on Feb. 20 where it failed again by a 52-39 vote.
This comes weeks after search engine giant Google agreed to begin using 'Gulf of America' in its mapping for North American users and five days after the U.S. Coast Guard agreed to refer to the body of water as the Gulf of America.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
8 minutes ago
- New York Times
‘Golden Share' in U.S. Steel Gives Trump Extraordinary Control
To save its takeover of U.S. Steel, Japan's Nippon Steel agreed to an unusual arrangement, granting the White House a 'golden share' that gives the government an extraordinary amount of influence over a U.S. company. New details of the agreement show that the structure would give President Trump and his successors a permanent stake in U.S. Steel, significant sway over its board and veto power over a wide array of company actions, an arrangement that could change the nature of foreign investment in the United States. The terms of the arrangement were hammered out in meetings that went late into the night on Wednesday and Thursday, according to two people familiar with the details. Representatives from Nippon Steel — which had been trying to acquire the struggling U.S. Steel since December 2023, but had been blocked by the Biden administration over national security concerns — came around to Mr. Trump's desire to take a stake that would give the U.S. government significant control over the company's actions. Nippon had argued that this influence should expire — perhaps after three or four years, the duration of the Trump administration. But in the meetings, which were held at the Commerce Department, Trump officials led by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick insisted that the golden share should last in perpetuity, the two people said. Under the terms of the national security pact, which the companies said they signed Friday, the U.S. government would retain a single share of preferred stock, called class G — as in gold. And U.S. Steel's charter will list nearly a dozen activities the company cannot undertake without the approval of the American president or someone he designates in his stead. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Axios
21 minutes ago
- Axios
Trump has not called Walz following shooting of Minnesota lawmakers
President Trump has not called Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz more than 24 hours after a prominent Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband were killed in what officials have described as a "politically motivated assassination." The big picture: Saturday's fatal shooting of Minnesota House Democratic Leader Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark Hortman has exacerbated bipartisan security concerns among elected officials amid a volatile political landscape. Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette Hoffman were injured in a separate shooting at their home on Saturday. What we're hearing: Walz spokesperson Teddy Tschann confirmed to Axios that the governor had not heard from the president directly as of early Sunday afternoon. Walz spoke to both Vice President Vance and former President Biden on Saturday, Tschann said. The White House did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment. What he's saying: When asked by ABC News Sunday morning whether he planned to reach out to the Democratic governor, the president criticized Walz but left the door open to a conversation. "Well, it's a terrible thing. I think he's a terrible governor. I think he's a grossly incompetent person. But I may, I may call him, I may call other people too," he told ABC's Rachel Scott. On Saturday, Trump condemned the shooting as "horrific," saying such violence "will not be tolerated in the United States of America." Context: Law enforcement say 57-year-old Vance Boelter posed as a police officer when he killed Hortman and her husband in their suburban Twin Cities home early Saturday. Boelter is also wanted in connection with a separate shooting that wounded Hoffman and his wife. He remained on the run as of midday Sunday. Investigators recovered a manifesto featuring a target list that included the names of Democratic lawmakers and prominent individuals who support abortion rights in Minnesota. Zoom out: While Trump has not reached out personally, the state is receiving assistance and support from the administration. The FBI, which is on the ground in Minnesota, has offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to Boelter's capture and conviction. Attorney General Pam Bondi condemned the "horrific violence" in a post on X Saturday, pledging to prosecute "to the fullest extent of the law."


Bloomberg
22 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Bond Investors Look to Fed for Guidance on Timing of Rate Cuts
Treasuries investors whipsawed by President Donald Trump's trade and fiscal policies will this week glimpse the impact on the Federal Reserve's interest-rate policy. While Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues are set to keep their benchmark steady at the June 17-18 meeting, traders will scrutinize economic and interest-rate projections for insight into how policymakers may respond to the uncertainty.