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Wall Street scourge Sherrod Brown to get 'gigantic megaphone' as Senate Banking chair
[ELCA Lutheran] Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio is poised to lead the Senate Banking Committee, creating new headaches for finance industry executives.
ELCA presiding bishop joins NCC leaders in letter to vice president, Cabinet and Congress
Elizabeth A. Eaton, presiding bishop of the ELCA, joined leaders from the National Council of Churches in an open letter to Vice President Mike Pence, members of Congress and the Cabinet, calling for the removal of President Donald Trump from office.
Millions of students and adult dependents won’t receive a $600 stimulus payment
Young adults think the current eligibility standards disregard families that need the additional money.
Should Pastors Speak Up About the COVID-19 Vaccine?
About half of US Protestant adults don’t plan to receive the new COVID-19 vaccine, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey.
Help 28 Children Facing Deportation
From Interfaith Immigration Coalition: Proyecto Dilley, Shut Down Berks Coalition, Berks Interfaith Witness, and Aldea are sounding the alarm about the imminent deportation of 28 children and their parents and are calling for support from the interfaith community.
In Blue States and Red, Pandemic Upends Public Services and Jobs
In reality, the degree of financial distress turns less on which party controls a statehouse or a city hall than on the number of Covid-19 cases, the kinds of businesses undergirding a state’s economy, and its tax structure.
Putting more food on more tables is job for Congress
It’s hard to overstate the gravity of the situation. A new report by the advocacy group Hunger Free America found that total SNAP caseloads in 33 states, including Arizona, jumped from 32 to 35 million in the pandemic’s early months.
#GivingTuesday
If loving your neighbor and advocating for social justice by lifting up issues and helping to shape policy in Arizona is important to you, please consider supporting the ministry of Lutheran Advocacy Ministry Arizona (LAMA) with a donation today. We, as people of faith, can make a difference.
Despite Biden’s vow to halt construction of the border wall, the Trump administration is expanding it.
In southeastern Arizona, the continuing political divisiveness around the Trump administration’s signature construction project has pitted rancher against rancher and neighbor against neighbor in a state that a Democratic presidential candidate narrowly carried for the first time in decades.
Democrats made inroads in Arizona. But it’s a deeply divided place.
Though Mr. Biden won the state, making him only the second Democrat presidential candidate to do so since 1948, he did so with the thinnest of margins, receiving roughly 11,000 votes or 0.3 percentage points more than Mr. Trump.
Virtual Town Hall with Rev. Eugene Cho recording now available
The 48-minute recording begins with devotions by Bishop Deborah Hutterer, followed by a personal story and remarks by Rev. Cho, then a Q&A section featuring both pre-submitted and impromptu questions by representatives from Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.
Gov. Ducey: First COVID-19 vaccines expected in Arizona in December
Gov. Doug Ducey took to Twitter on Monday afternoon to announce the State of Arizona has enrolled hundreds of providers who are ready to administer a coronavirus vaccine. According to Gov. Ducey, Arizona should expect doses on the ground in mid to late December.
Native American votes helped secure Biden’s win in Arizona
Voters in precincts on the Navajo and Hopi reservations in northeastern Arizona cast nearly 60,000 ballots in the Nov. 3 election, compared with just under 42,500 in 2016. Biden won Arizona by about 10,500 votes, according to unofficial results.
COVID-19 Relief Expiring at the End of 2020
A range of coronavirus relief programs expire Dec. 31, and it's time to prepare for life without them.
Take Action on the Next Coronavirus Supplemental Bill
Our voices are needed now more than ever in urging Congress to complete the bi-partisan negotiations to address COVID-19 before the holidays and congressional adjournment.
Medicaid expansion on chopping block in SCOTUS case
The Congressional Budget Office estimated in September that the number of people enrolled in Medicaid expansion will grow to 13.7 million people in 2021. The Urban Institute in an Oct. 15 report suggested that overturning the ACA would result in at least a 90 percent increase in the uninsured population for 25 of the expansion states.