politic-news.space - All about the world of politic!

  • Elections
  • European Politics
  • UK Politics
  • US Politics
  • World Politics
  • Network
    • *** .SPACE NETWORK ***
      • art-news
      • eco-news
      • economic-news
      • family-news
      • job-news
      • motor-news
      • myhome-news
      • politic-news
      • realestate-news
      • scientific-news
      • show-news
      • technology-news
      • traveller-news
      • wellness-news
    • *** .CLOUD NETWORK ***
      • sportlife
      • calciolife
    • *** VENTIDI NETWORK ***
      • ventidinews
      • ventidisocieta
      • ventidispettacolo
      • ventidisport
      • ventidicronaca
      • ventidieconomia
      • ventidipolitica
    • *** MIX NETWORK ***
      • womenworld
      • sportlife
      • foodingnews
      • sportingnews
      • notiziealvino
Search
Login

politic-news.space - All about the world of politic!

Menu
Search

HOTTEST

  • Billionaire environmental activist decides to end campaign Steyer struggled to compete in crowded Democratic field Billionaire environmental activist Tom Steyer has dropped out of the Democratic presidential race following a disappointing result in South Carolina, the early voting state on which his campaign staked its hopes. Related: Joe Biden hails South Carolina primary victory: ‘This […] More

  • Conseguir que se cubran los costosos tratamientos de fertilidad sería algo que no puede hacer un presidente solo, dijeron los expertos en políticas de salud.[Estamos en WhatsApp. Empieza a seguirnos ahora]El expresidente Donald Trump dijo el jueves en campaña que quiere que el tratamiento de fertilización in vitro (FIV) sea gratuito para todos los estadounidenses.“Bajo un gobierno de Trump, tu gobierno pagará o tu compañía de seguros estará obligada a pagar todos los costos asociados con el tratamiento de fertilización in vitro”, dijo Trump el jueves en un mitin en Potterville, Míchigan.La fecundación in vitro suele costar decenas de miles de dólares. Las políticas para cubrir esos costos serían difíciles de implementar, dijeron los expertos.Exigir a las aseguradoras que paguen estos procedimientos probablemente significaría aprobar leyes en el Congreso o persuadir a un panel de expertos para que añadan la FIV a una lista de servicios preventivos gratuitos de salud femenina establecidos por la Ley de Asistencia Asequible, la ley de cobertura de salud que Trump trató de derogar.Si el gobierno pagara directamente la FIV, se crearía un sistema de pagador único para una sola condición. El enfoque requeriría que el Congreso financie una nueva división del gobierno federal para supervisar el programa.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

  • Gunmen killed three Israeli police officers on Sunday morning as they drove through the Israeli-occupied West Bank, the latest episode in the spiral of violence in the territory that includes attacks by Palestinian and Israeli extremists, as well as ongoing raids by the Israeli military in Palestinian cities.The officers were shot and killed as they drove along a highway in the southern part of the West Bank, close to a major checkpoint where traffic is screened before entering Israel, according to statements from the Israeli police and Magen David Adom, the emergency medical service.One of the officers was the father of a police officer who was killed during Hamas’s Oct. 7 raid on southern Israel that started the war in Gaza, according to the police.The episode followed two attacks on Friday night by Palestinian militants, one of whom attempted to detonate a car bomb at a busy intersection in the southern West Bank, according to the Israeli military. In the second attack, a Palestinian drove into a nearby Israeli settlement, prompting a car chase and a shootout that caused an explosion in the Palestinian’s car, the military said.The Israeli military raided three major cities in the northern West Bank last week, killing at least 22 people, according to the Palestinian health authorities. The military said the operation was aimed at quelling armed Palestinian groups, but critics warned that the death and destruction caused by the raids risked encouraging the same violence that they aimed to reduce.Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967 after capturing it from Jordan during the Arab-Israeli war that year. Israel has since built hundreds of settlements in the territory, which are considered illegal by most of the world. Hundreds of thousands of Jewish Israelis now live under military protection in the West Bank, interspersed among roughly three million Palestinians who generally want the territory to form the backbone of a future Palestinian state.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

  • The Sun Ra Arkestra saxophonist, who remains captivated by the power of sound, is an inspiring onstage presence.In late June, the Sun Ra Arkestra was onstage at Roulette in Brooklyn, swinging its way through “Queer Notions,” a jaunty big-band tune by the saxophonist Coleman Hawkins. The rendition hewed closely to the relaxed, seesaw riffing of the original, recorded by Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra in 1933. But there was one prominent difference: the barrage of bleeps, whooshes and wobbly theremin-like tones emanating from an EVI — short for electronic valve instrument — played by Marshall Allen, the multi-instrumentalist and longtime Arkestra mainstay who had recently celebrated his 100th birthday.Allen’s longevity onstage would be noteworthy on its own. But when you take in an Arkestra gig — watching Allen repeatedly leap to his feet to solo, resplendent in a gold-sequined cap and vest — his endurance is mind-boggling. Both at Roulette, where the ensemble played the concluding set of the Vision Festival in honor of Allen’s centennial, and during a trio performance at the Brooklyn Music School a few days earlier, he wasn’t merely an eminent elder but a mirthful dynamo. His contributions on EVI and alto saxophone often clashed brilliantly with the surrounding textures, embodying the joyous eclecticism that helped make Sun Ra — the pianist, composer and Afrofuturist thought leader who helmed the Arkestra from the mid 1950s until his death in 1993 — one of the 20th century’s most prescient musical visionaries.Much like Sun Ra’s own keyboard work, Allen’s art is a study in extremes. His alto saxophone phrases are mini eruptions: Tensing his shoulders as he blows and raking his right hand up and down over the keys, he produces squeals, snarls and honks that register as Expressionist gestures as much as avant-garde sounds. Even set against the alto work of a musician one-fourth his age — as on the tribute LP “Red Hot & Ra: The Magic City,” where Allen appears alongside the rising star Immanuel Wilkins — his sonic splatters still hold a bracing power.But focusing on Allen’s more outré qualities can obscure just how much history he embodies. Enlisting in the Army during World War II, he played clarinet in a military band and, after an honorable discharge, studied at the Paris Conservatory and recorded with the bebop luminary James Moody. When he joined up with the Arkestra in Chicago in 1957, it was a compact, immaculately swinging big band, with a sound rooted in both Sun Ra’s admiration of giants like Fletcher Henderson and a pervasive Space Age aesthetic, manifesting in shiny costumes and sung slogans like “We travel the space ways/From planet to planet.” Allen was drawn in, he recalled to The New York Times in 2020, by the leader’s lectures on space and “all this other stuff: ancient Egypt and the Bible.”The Brooklyn Music School performance — where Allen was joined by fellow Arkestra members Tara Middleton (vocals) and Farid Barron (piano) — served as a reminder of his firm grounding in a bygone era. Though the set featured plenty of jump-scare saxophone and echoey EVI tones, there were also roomy stretches of poignant lyricism. On “Sometimes I’m Happy,” a 1920s-era standard that Sun Ra often played, Allen answered Middleton’s lines with soft, ruminative phrases that strongly evoked Johnny Hodges, whose legacy is as closely intertwined with Duke Ellington as Allen’s is with Sun Ra.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More

  • The changes outlined by the senators are intended to prevent a repeat of the effort on Jan. 6, 2021, to overturn the presidential election in Congress.WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of senators proposed new legislation on Wednesday to modernize the 135-year-old Electoral Count Act, working to overhaul a law that President Donald J. Trump tried to abuse on Jan. 6, 2021, to interfere with Congress’s certification of his election defeat.The legislation aims to guarantee a peaceful transition from one president to the next, after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol exposed how the current law could be manipulated to disrupt the process. One measure would make it more difficult for lawmakers to challenge a state’s electoral votes when Congress meets to count them. It would also clarify that the vice president has no discretion over the results, and it would set out the steps to begin a presidential transition.A second bill would increase penalties for threats and intimidation of election officials, seek to improve the Postal Service’s handling of mail-in ballots and renew for five years an independent federal agency that helps states administer and secure federal elections.While passage of the legislation cannot guarantee that a repeat of Jan. 6 will not occur in the future, its authors believe that a rewrite of the antiquated law, particularly the provisions related to the vice president’s role, could discourage such efforts and make it more difficult to disrupt the vote count.Alarmed at the events of Jan. 6 that showed longstanding flaws in the law governing the electoral count process, a bipartisan group of lawmakers led by Senators Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, and Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, had been meeting for months to try to agree on the rewrite.“In four of the past six presidential elections, this process has been abused, with members of both parties raising frivolous objections to electoral votes,” Ms. Collins said on Wednesday. “But it took the violent breach of the Capitol on Jan. 6 of 2021 to really shine a spotlight on the urgent need for reform.”In a joint statement, the 16 senators involved in the talks said they had set out to “fix the flaws” of the Electoral Count Act, which they called “archaic and ambiguous.” The statement said the group believed that, in consultation with election law experts, it had “developed legislation that establishes clear guidelines for our system of certifying and counting electoral votes for president and vice president.”Though the authors are one short of the 10 Republican senators needed to guarantee that the electoral count bill could make it past a filibuster and to final passage if all Democrats support it, they said they hoped to round up sufficient backing for a vote later this year.Ms. Collins said she expected the Senate Rules Committee to convene a hearing on the measures before the August recess. Senator Amy Klobuchar, Democrat of Minnesota and the chairwoman of the panel, was consulted in the drafting of the legislation.The bills were announced on the eve of a prime-time hearing by the House committee investigating the events surrounding the Jan. 6 attack, including Mr. Trump’s multilayered effort to invalidate his defeat. They also came as an investigation intensified into efforts by Mr. Trump and his allies to have Georgia’s presidential election results reversed. A Georgia judge has ordered Rudolph W. Giuliani, who spearheaded a push to overturn election results on behalf of Mr. Trump, to appear before a special grand jury in Atlanta next month.Key Revelations From the Jan. 6 HearingsCard 1 of 8Making a case against Trump. More

World Politics

  • Protecting one small species is a giant opportunity to safeguard our planet

    Read More

  • Project 2025 and Donald Trump’s Dangerous Dismantling of the US Federal Government

    Read More

  • FO° Podcasts: Why Has Trump Deployed Thousands of National Guard Troops in Washington, DC?

    Read More

  • Early modelling reveals the impact of Trump’s new tariffs on global economies

    Read More

European Politics

  • in European Politics

    The Netherlands is trying to draw a line under a year of chaos with fresh elections – will it work?

    21 October 2025, 17:07

  • in European Politics

    Welcome to post-growth Europe – can anyone accept this new political reality?

    7 July 2025, 16:08

  • in European Politics

    How pro-Europe, pro-US Poland offers the EU a model for how to handle Trump

    21 May 2025, 11:06

  • in European Politics

    The Conversation

    3 April 2025, 02:24

  • in European Politics

    How should Labour and the Tories respond to the populist right? Lessons from Europe

    7 March 2025, 13:10

  • in European Politics

    German election: why most political parties aren’t talking about the climate crisis

    20 February 2025, 16:59

  • in European Politics

    The EU was built for another age – here’s how it must adapt to survive

    10 February 2025, 11:56

  • in European Politics

    Populist parties thrive on discontent: the data proves it

    12 November 2024, 12:48

  • in European Politics

    East is East, West is West − and Turkey is looking to forge its own BRICS path between the two

    12 September 2024, 12:30

UK Politics

  • in UK Politics

    Martin Lewis issues verdict on Rachel Reeves’s £26bn tax-raising budget

    26 November 2025, 23:40

  • in UK Politics

    Jeremy Corbyn slams Labour’s Budget as he issues tax warning

    26 November 2025, 20:19

  • in UK Politics

    Millions more dragged into paying higher income tax in Reeves’s £26bn Budget squeeze

    26 November 2025, 20:02

  • in UK Politics

    ‘I’m a landlord – renters will pay the price for Labour’s war on landlords’

    26 November 2025, 18:04

  • in UK Politics

    Rachel Reeves dodges question on her future after Budget unveiled

    26 November 2025, 16:37

  • in UK Politics

    Deputy speaker Nusrat Ghani scolds Labour over early Budget briefings

    26 November 2025, 16:13

  • in UK Politics

    Badenoch takes aim at Reeves over chancellor’s complaints of misogyny

    26 November 2025, 16:12

  • in UK Politics

    ‘I can’t afford to keep my heating on overnight – Reeves’ Budget doesn’t do enough for pensioners’

    26 November 2025, 16:10

  • in UK Politics

    Voices: ‘A kick in the teeth’: Readers say Rachel Reeves’ Budget ‘punishes responsibility’

    26 November 2025, 15:29

US Politics

  • Two West Virginia national guard members shot in Washington DC

  • Georgia prosecutor confirms final criminal case against Trump is ‘over’

  • Hegseth reportedly plans to cut support to US scouts group for being ‘genderless’

  • US police involved in fatal incidents use victims privacy law to hide their identity

  • ‘Ignoring minorities is our original sin’: the complex roots of Nigeria’s security crisis

  • Is Queens the new political belleweather of America? | Michael Massing

  • Trump envoy Witkoff reportedly advised Kremlin official on Ukraine peace deal

Elections

  • New York’s BQE Is Falling Apart. The City Can’t Agree on How to Fix It.

  • Map: Small Quakes Shake Northern California

  • Which Notable Book of 2025 Should You Read? Let Us Help You.

  • Fox Corp chief told Sean Hannity that Trump could not go on air in 2020 if he attacked network

  • Trump hints support for fringe theory that Venezuela rigged 2020 election

  • Trump’s DoJ investigating unfounded claims Venezuela helped steal 2020 election

  • Thanksgiving 2025 Hot Takes

ABOUT

The QUATIO - web agency di Torino - is currently composed of 28 thematic-vertical online portals, which average about 2.300.000 pages per month per portal, each with an average visit time of 3:12 minutes and with about 2100 total news per day available for our readers of politics, economy, sports, gossip, entertainment, real estate, wellness, technology, ecology, society and much more themes ...

politic-news.space is one of the portals of the network of:

Quatio di CAPASSO ROMANO - Web Agency di Torino
SEDE LEGALE: CORSO PESCHIERA, 211 - 10141 - ( TORINO )
P.IVA IT07957871218 - REA TO-1268614

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2015 - 2025 | Developed by: Quatio

ITALIAN LANGUAGE

calciolife.cloud | notiziealvino.it | sportingnews.it | sportlife.cloud | ventidicronaca.it | ventidieconomia.it | ventidinews.it | ventidipolitica.it | ventidisocieta.it | ventidispettacolo.it | ventidisport.it

ENGLISH LANGUAGE

art-news.space | eco-news.space | economic-news.space | family-news.space | job-news.space | motor-news.space | myhome-news.space | politic-news.space | realestate-news.space | scientific-news.space | show-news.space | sportlife.news | technology-news.space | traveller-news.space | wellness-news.space | womenworld.eu | foodingnews.it

This portal is not a newspaper as it is updated without periodicity. It cannot be considered an editorial product pursuant to law n. 62 of 7.03.2001. The author of the portal is not responsible for the content of comments to posts, the content of the linked sites. Some texts or images included in this portal are taken from the internet and, therefore, considered to be in the public domain; if their publication is violated, the copyright will be promptly communicated via e-mail. They will be immediately removed.

  • Home
  • Network
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Contact
Back to Top
Close
  • Elections
  • European Politics
  • UK Politics
  • US Politics
  • World Politics
  • Network
    • *** .SPACE NETWORK ***
      • art-news
      • eco-news
      • economic-news
      • family-news
      • job-news
      • motor-news
      • myhome-news
      • politic-news
      • realestate-news
      • scientific-news
      • show-news
      • technology-news
      • traveller-news
      • wellness-news
    • *** .CLOUD NETWORK ***
      • sportlife
      • calciolife
    • *** VENTIDI NETWORK ***
      • ventidinews
      • ventidisocieta
      • ventidispettacolo
      • ventidisport
      • ventidicronaca
      • ventidieconomia
      • ventidipolitica
    • *** MIX NETWORK ***
      • womenworld
      • sportlife
      • foodingnews
      • sportingnews
      • notiziealvino