A new I&I/TIPP poll found 57% of voters support building the wall versus 33% who are opposed it.
- Categories:
- FISM News
A new I&I/TIPP poll found 57% of voters support building the wall versus 33% who are opposed it.
Nearly 10% of American workers surveyed in 2020 were covered by a training repayment agreement, said the Cornell Survey Research Institute.
The practice, which critics call Training Repayment Agreement Provisions, or TRAPs, is drawing scrutiny from U.S. regulators and lawmakers.
With pressure mounting over unrelenting inflation ahead of the midterms, President Biden is doubling down on his party’s central campaign focus: abortion rights.
Early in-person voting for the first day ended at 131,318. According to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, this “is up from 70,849 on the first day of Early Voting in the 2018 midterm election, marking an 85% increase, and nears the day one Early Voting turnout in the 2020 Presidential election.”
Three weeks from the U.S. midterm elections, President Joe Biden’s approval rating stayed close to the lowest level of his presidency as Americans worried about inflation, a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll completed on Tuesday found.
“Solar geoengineering is an extremely risky and intrinsically unjust technological proposal that doesn’t address any of the causes of climate change,” said Silvia Ribeiro, Latin America director for the ETC campaign group. “The report asking for more research into a technology we don’t want is essentially flawed.”
Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge, and the New York Yankees put the Cleveland Guardians’ season to sleep on Tuesday as the Yankees stormed back from a 2-1 series deficit to punch their ticket to the AL Championship Series.
A preliminary investigation of damages to the two Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Danish part of the Baltic Sea shows that the leaks were caused by “powerful explosions”, Copenhagen Police said on Tuesday.
U.S. Air Force warplanes intercepted a pair of Russian bombers flying in international airspace near Alaska on Tuesday.
French cement maker Lafarge pleaded guilty in U.S. court on Tuesday to a charge that it made payments to groups designated as terrorists by the United States, including Islamic State, so the company could keep operating in Syria.