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Texans will vote on establishing dementia research center. Here's how much it would cost.

Texans will vote on establishing dementia research center. Here's how much it would cost.

Yahoo29-04-2025
Texas voters in November will decide if the state should fund a multibillion-dollar center to study the prevention and treatment of dementia, a group of cognitive impairments associated with aging that affect hundreds of thousands of Texans each year.
The state House passed Senate Joint Resolution 3 on Monday, a proposed constitutional amendment that would allocate $3 billion in surplus state revenue to create the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute of Texas. Lawmakers agreed to create the proposed center — contingent on voters approving the funding — when the House passed Senate Bill 5 last week.
More: Texas Senate OKs plan for $3 billion dementia research center. Here's how it would work.
Dementia is a broad group of cognitive impairments associated with aging that affects a person's memory and ability to reason and often hampers a person's day-to-day functioning. The most common form is Alzheimer's disease, which afflicts nearly half a million Texans, according to the state Department of Health and Human Services. It has no cure.
"I don't know no one in this House that doesn't have a family member or a friend or a neighbor who's not impacted by dementia or Alzheimer's," Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston, told members before Monday morning's vote. "This constitutional amendment gives us the funding to do the research so that we can give those persons who are impacted with these dreadful diseases a better quality of life."
SJR 3 and SB 5 are authored by Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, and passed the Senate in March. Thompson and Midland Republican Rep. Tom Craddick, the two longest-serving Texas House members, are among those sponsoring the legislation in the lower chamber.
"This could be the way we finally cure Alzheimer's and other dementia problems," Craddick said Monday. "This isn't a party vote; this is a vote for the people in the state of Texas."
#txlege: Texas 'school choice' clears final hurdle. Voucher program heads to Gov. Abbott's desk.
Despite the strong bipartisan support for dementia research, the resolution's fate was uncertain before it was brought up on the House floor. Democratic lawmakers blocked the passage of another Republican-authored constitutional amendment proposal last week when 50 Democrats abstained from a vote on the measure as a show of force amid continued disagreement with Republicans on school vouchers.
Proposed constitutional amendments require a two-thirds supermajority to clear each legislative chamber before they can appear on a statewide ballot. The 88 Republican members do not comprise two-thirds of the 150-member House, meaning at least 12 Democrats need to back an amendment proposal for it to pass.
'Burn it all down': Hardline conservatives declare war on Texas House GOP leadership
The House passed SJR 3 by a 123-21 vote, with hardline Republicans making up the bloc that voted against the proposal. Opponents of the proposal have said dementia research is not the role of an already-bloated government, and that the Legislature should use the state's excess revenue to reduce property taxes instead.
Texas constitutional amendments do not require the governor's signature and advance automatically to an election after gaining the Legislature's approval.
This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Texas voters to decide if state funds $3 billion dementia institute
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Trump has pledged to ‘lead a movement to get rid of' voting by mail. Will Utah be a target?
Trump has pledged to ‘lead a movement to get rid of' voting by mail. Will Utah be a target?

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump has pledged to ‘lead a movement to get rid of' voting by mail. Will Utah be a target?

Eva Przybyla, front, and Nicholas Wells process ballots at the Salt Lake County Government Center in Salt Lake City on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch) President Donald Trump this week vowed to 'lead a movement to get rid of' voting by mail ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. 'WE WILL BEGIN THIS EFFORT, WHICH WILL BE STRONGLY OPPOSED BY THE DEMOCRATS BECAUSE THEY CHEAT AT LEVELS NEVER SEEN BEFORE, by signing an EXECUTIVE ORDER to help bring HONESTY to the 2026 Midterm Elections,' the president said in a post on Truth Social Monday. Trump, who has long opposed voting by mail, continued to claim, without evidence, that it's fraught with fraud. Utah has been the only red state among eight that have conducted universal by-mail elections, including six Democratic strongholds and one swing state — a fact that some conservatives here have balked at, while others have defended the state's by-mail system as a popular, convenient and safe voting method. After Trump's post, Utah's top election official, Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, a Republican, issued a short statement on social media without addressing the president directly. Utah Legislature approves bill to require voter ID, phase out automatic voting by mail by 2029 'The constitutional right of individual states to choose the manner in which they conduct secure elections is a fundamental strength of our system,' Henderson said. The president, however, asserted that states should do what the federal government wants. 'Remember, the States are merely an 'agent' for the Federal Government in counting and tabulating the votes,' Trump said. 'They must do what the Federal Government, as represented by the President of the United States, tells them, FOR THE GOOD OF OUR COUNTRY, to do.' Another high-ranking Republican and member of GOP legislative leadership — Senate Majority Assistant Whip Mike McKell, R-Spanish Fork — disagrees. McKell told Utah News Dispatch in an interview Tuesday that, like Henderson said, states have the right to choose how to administer their elections, and that he'd push back on an effort to completely undo voting by mail. 'In Utah, we're in a good place. I think there's strong support for vote by mail. There's also strong support for security,' McKell said. He added that's 'the needle we tried to thread' earlier this year when the 2025 Utah Legislature passed a bill that he sponsored to require voter ID and eventually phase out automatic voting by mail in this state by 2026. The aim of that bill, he said, was to preserve voting by mail as an option for Utah voters while also adding a new layer of security. Even though local polls have shown a vast majority of Utahns remain confident in their elections, Gallup polling shows trust nationally has decreased especially among a faction of Republican voters since 2006 as elections have become more polarized. After Trump lost the 2020 election, he ramped up rhetoric to cast doubt on election security and voting by mail. Asked about Trump's comments this week, McKell reiterated it's a matter of states rights. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX 'It is a federalism issue,' he said. 'If it's not enumerated in the (U.S.) Constitution, it's reserved for the states. That's article 10. I think states have the right to dictate how they run their elections.' McKell also defended Utah's track record as a state that has used voting by mail for years, starting with optional pilot programs that counties opted into before moving to universal voting by mail. 'In the state of Utah, Republicans have done really well with vote by mail. We elect Republicans,' he said, also noting that Trump in 2024 won the red state handily. 'There's generally broad support for vote by mail, especially among rural voters and elderly voters in Utah.' He added that 'it's OK if there's some tension between the federal government and state government,' but he argued the Constitution clearly reserves elections for states to control and administer. Pressed on how he'd respond to pressure from the Trump administration to get rid of voting by mail, McKell said, 'I would resist a movement that didn't originate in the state,' adding that he responds to his constituents, not the federal government. 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What are Norwich mayoral candidates doing to increase voter participation?
What are Norwich mayoral candidates doing to increase voter participation?

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What are Norwich mayoral candidates doing to increase voter participation?

If past behavior is a predictor of the future, it's likely that the Norwich mayoral election will have fewer than 50% of the eligible voters participate. In Norwich, presidential elections get better turnouts. In 2020 and 2024, 90% and 71% of eligible voters in the city cast a ballot. In 2021, 2022, 2023, 32%, 47%, and 31% of eligible voters turned out, according to data from the Norwich Registrar of Voters Office. It's unfortunate that non-presidential years get a lower turnout, mayoral candidate Stacy Gould (R) said. What are the candidates doing to get out the vote? 'I'm hoping that people with a vested interest in their city come out and vote on Nov. 4,' she said. Despite the lower voter turnouts in non-presidential years, mayoral candidate Swarnjit Singh (D) feels it's more important for the public to participate in local elections, as the decisions that impact someone's day-to-day life are at the local level, he said. 'You cannot pick up a phone and call the president of the United States of America, but you have the flexibility to call your mayor,' he said. How the candidates are working to get out the vote Singh, campaigning as Singh Swarnjit, said he's knocked on over 1,000 doors in the city to get support for his campaign. He also wants to knock on the doors of people who don't normally participate in politics, as civic education, including absentee ballots, early voting, and encouraging green card holders to become citizens, is a keystone of his campaign, he said. 'That's a lot of civic education that needs to be promoted,' he said. During his door-to-door campaigning, Singh recalls even being invited inside the houses of local Republicans to talk about the issues, he said. 'I feel its going in a good direction, but I'm not taking things for granted,' he said. When The Bulletin spoke to petitioning candidate Marcia Wilbur, she hadn't been made an official candidate yet by the state, but she wants to hold town halls and other events where voters can meet her, she said. 'I think I have a pretty good pulse on what's going on, but, I definitely need to meet and greet more with the public,' Wilbur said. When Wilbur was collecting signatures for her petitioning candidacy, she, a registered Republican, got a signature from a Democrat who said they'd be willing to help with her campaign, because they wanted to support change in local politics, she said. Gould is encouraging locals to register to vote, reminding people that the two-week early voting period is an option, she said. Gould has also utilized door-knocking, signs and meet and greets to reach the voters. Her efforts are going well so far, she said. Multiple local business owners have already asked Singh for campaign signs to show their support, even though, Singh normally doesn't put campaign signs out until September, he said. Those signs can be seen in downtown and elsewhere. This article originally appeared on The Bulletin: What are the Norwich mayoral candidates doing to engage voters?

Daywatch: UChicago Medicine hopes to expand cancer care nationwide
Daywatch: UChicago Medicine hopes to expand cancer care nationwide

Chicago Tribune

time28 minutes ago

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Daywatch: UChicago Medicine hopes to expand cancer care nationwide

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