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Greg Abbott proposes an addition $1,500 per preschool student if they're inn programs that meet "performance requirements set by the state."
Rahm Emanuel would hike property taxes and cut pension benefits.
Rick Perry says that federal anti-rape standards are "impossible."
A judge says Nathan Deal doesn't need to take the stand in an ethics case brought by a former state employee.
Teacher tenure and dismissal are on trial in California.
The greatest source of frustration for many physicians is working with electronic medical records.
Number of Washington, D.C., students who entered 2014's school lottery. About 71 percent of families were matched with at least one of their choices.
View migration data and components of population change for U.S. metro areas.
The City of Detroit on Monday proposed slightly lower payouts for some pensioners and unsecured bondholders as feverish negotiations continue in the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.
A federal judge on Monday refused to block new Arizona rules limiting the use of the most common abortion drugs, handing a victory to conservatives in a lawsuit over restrictions that are the most stringent in the nation.
Gov. Bill Haslam's plan to boost pay for teachers will be put on hold for at least a year, the governor announced Monday, as he works to close a $160 million gap in the state budget.
Oregon's exchange remains the only one in the country that does not let the public self-enroll for health coverage in a single-sitting, despite more than $200 million spent so far.
Candidates for D.C. mayor made final preparations Monday to get core supporters to the polls for the Democratic primary, an effort that could make all the difference in an election widely expect to attract low participation.
The vote by the association’s board of trustees was called the first of its kind in the nation by the leader of an international group of law enforcement officials seeking the legalization of pot.
Both the federal and state insurance exchanges reported record levels of traffic on the last day of enrollment, causing some to experience technical difficulties.
The city has published on online scorecard to promote better transparency.
Washington state used outdated data to allow logging on the Snohomish County slope.
Amount of extra money given to food stamps recipients in Georgia due to processing errors, either accidental or deliberate.
Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander, on being the youngest statewide elected official in the United States.
Gov. Jay Inslee signs a bill prohibiting life sentences without parole for killers younger than 16.
Earl Ray Tomblin vetoes legislation that would have enacted a 20-week abortion ban, saying the bill is unconstitutional.
Despite policy successes, water still vexes San Antonio.
The state spends millions extra through food stamp errors.
Didn’t pay a toll? Enforcers might track you across state lines.
One new company offers Californians quick assessments of some possible insurance plans.
Steve Rosenthal, president of the Organizing Group, a political strategy consulting firm.
Number of Washington, D.C., voters who cast ballots during a two-week early voting period for the mayoral election, down from 22,000 early voters in the city's last election four years ago.
If they are stuck with a surprise bill, patients will be responsible only for whatever their co-pay would be if the doctor were in-network.
People are angry over Albuquerque police’s involvement in 37 shootings, 23 of them fatal since 2010. Critics say that’s far too many for a department serving a city of about 555,000.
after continuing calls for his ouster, and the release of an internal report to the governor earlier in the week recommending a complete restructuring of the powerful bistate agency, David Samson finally walked away.