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California Republicans vie to capitalize on their November victories and break the Democratic supermajority while balancing Trump’s influence
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In a press conference at the Oregon State Capitol, Republican party leaders blamed high taxes and excessive regulations for increasing costs, driving people out of the state and making it harder to work, live and manage a business.
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One of Oregon’s two Republican congressional representatives supports a just-announced impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. The other is keeping her distance.
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Republican and Democratic leaders in Salem have reached an agreement to end the legislative walkout that's stretched on for nearly a month and a half. Senate Republicans led the walkout in early May to protest legislation involving abortion access.
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In a sign they're ready to acknowledge their last plan didn't work, legislative Democrats now insist quorum rules should change.
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Oregon school districts are preparing their annual budgets this spring. They have to adopt them by the end of June.But until a schools budget is passed, districts won’t know how much money they’ll have.
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Oregonians have much to lose if the legislative session ends by June 25 without a functioning Senate that can vote on bills, Democrats warned Tuesday.
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Lawmakers have fewer than three weeks left to work through their differences.
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Republicans said they wanted the committee to hold government agencies accountable.
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On Thursday, Senate Democrats did not say how they plan to bill their colleagues, what would happen if Republicans don’t pay nor where the money would go.
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Bills that would help crime victims, prevent drug overdoses and pay for public defenders await action as the GOP-led walkout continues.
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With both parties unwilling to budge on a bill tackling abortion and transgender care, the 2023 session appears stuck.
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Conservative lawmakers have hired a prominent attorney to argue that the wording of Ballot Measure 113 does not do what voters thought it did when they passed it last year.
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Democratic lawmakers say that months of work on health care legislation could unravel after a group of senators announced Tuesday they’ll deny the chamber a quorum until the session’s last day.