icon-show

Now Playing

Outdoors Show with Don Dubuc

FM Talk 1065

  • College Pick Em 2024
  • Hear Dr. Bill Williams' Forecast

    twice an hour on FMTalk1065

Three Big Things

1 2 3
  • House Rejects GOP Plan Backed by Trump as Government Barrels Toward Shutdown

    House Republicans’ slimmed-down plan to try to avert a government shutdown was defeated in a hastily called vote Thursday, as several dozen GOP lawmakers joined with Democrats in rejecting the proposal endorsed by President-elect Donald Trump.

    The revised legislation proposed extending government funding for three months and providing more than $100 billion in disaster relief and aid for farmers, while stripping out a series of other provisions, such as restrictions on investments in China, 9/11 healthcare funds and new rules on pharmacy-benefit managers. It also proposed suspending the nation’s borrowing limit for two years.

    It had 174 votes in favor and 235 against, with one member voting present, well short of the two-thirds supermajority required under special fast-track procedures. Crucially, it also was shy of a simple majority of the GOP-controlled chamber, dimming its chances of being brought to the floor again. 

    If no bill is passed and signed into law by President Biden by 12:01 a.m. Saturday, the federal government would partially shut down, furloughing hundreds of thousands of federal workers, though critical services would continue to function.

    The vote came a day after Trump killed a bipartisan deal backed by Johnson and other congressional leaders that had drawn widespread criticism from rank-and-file GOP lawmakers. The new legislation came in at 116 pages, down from the 1,547 pages in the original bill. As with the initial proposal, the bill would extend government funding until March 14. 

    Talk circulated among lawmakers about a possible weeklong funding extension, which would push the shutdown deadline past Christmas. But that too would need bipartisan support to get through the Senate.

    Trump had told Republicans that he wanted a stopgap bill that included disaster relief and aid for farmers. He also wanted the bill to raise or eliminate the nation’s debt ceiling, which must be adjusted regularly to allow the U.S. to continue paying its creditors and avoid default.

    He demanded Republicans drop what he called “bells and whistles,” a reference to a slew of unrelated provisions in the original bill. He also threatened that any Republican who opposed a debt-ceiling adjustment would face a primary challenge in the next election. 

    The GOP setbacks raised doubts about the future for Johnson, who until this week had been seen as a shoo-in to be elected speaker when the new House votes on Jan. 3. Now, several GOP lawmakers are indicating they would oppose him, given his handling of the stopgap bill. 

    Trump said he continued to back Johnson in the role. In an interview with Fox News Digital, he said that Johnson would “easily remain speaker” if he “acts decisively and tough” to eliminate “all of the traps being set by Democrats.”

    Republicans have struggled for the past two years to pass major funding bills, with party leaders heavily dependent on Democratic votes. The GOP majority in the House currently stands at 219 to 211. In the wake of the November election, the Republicans will likely have a 219-215 margin on the first day of the new Congress.


    READ MORE HERE: House Rejects GOP Plan Backed by Trump as Government Barrels Toward Shutdown - WSJ

  • Fort Morgan plant looks to pipe treated sewage through Oyster Bay pipe into Intracoastal Waterway

    Baldwin County Sewer Service, one of the largest utilities in the county, has an unusual proposal to increase capacity at its controversial Fort Morgan treatment plant: piping treated effluent through Oyster Bay into the Intracoastal Waterway.

    READ MORE HERE: Fort Morgan plant looks to pipe treated sewage through Oyster Bay pipe into Intracoastal Waterway - al.com

  • Georgia appeals court disqualifies Fani Willis from Trump election interference case

    The Georgia Court of Appeals has disqualified Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and her entire office from her 2020 election interference case against President-elect Donald Trump.

    In a shocking 2-1 ruling Thursday, a three-judge panel from the second division of the Peach State’s appellate court denied a request to throw out the case entirely but granted a motion to kick off Willis and her team who led the indictment against Trump and 18 co-defendants last year.

    Judge Trenton Brown said in the 12-page order that Trump and eight of his co-defendants had “numerous grounds” to appeal the case after a lower court “imposed an improper remedy” despite concluding that Willis’ prosecution had a “significant appearance of impropriety.”

    The ruling cites Willis’ decision to hire and extravagantly pay her now-ex-lover Nathan Wade as a special prosecutor, taking him on lavish trips and allowing him to excessively bill her office for his work on the Trump case.

    “While we recognize that an appearance of impropriety is generally not enough to support disqualification, this is the rare case in which disqualification is mandated and no other remedy will suffice to restore public confidence in the integrity of these proceedings,” Brown and the other appellate jurists contended.

    The judges underscored that booting Willis from the case would help resolve the “odor of mendacity.”

    Last month, special counsel Jack Smith withdrew his four-count 2020 election subversion indictment against Trump and also ended efforts to revive the 40-count Mar-a-Lago document case. His legal team is also scrambling to quash the 34-count “hush money” conviction in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s case.

    Trump was facing 10 counts in the Fulton County case and has pleaded not guilty.

    While Willis may have been booted, the president-elect is not out of the woods yet. 

    Technically, Willis could appeal the court’s Thursday ruling to the Peach State’s Supreme Court. Should that fail or she neglect to do so, the 2020 election racketeering case will get handed over to the Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia.

    The Georgia Court of Appeals is also mulling a separate appeal in the racketeering case as to whether to revive six charges prosecutors sought to bring back that McAfee had axed over concerns they lacked appropriate detail.


    READ MORE HERE: Georgia appeals court disqualifies Fani Willis from Trump election interference case

M Mon Monday
T Tue Tuesday
W Wed Wednesday
T Thur Thursday
F Fri Friday
S Sat Saturday
S Sun Sunday
  • Got Junk

    Vote for the 2024 Alabamian of the Year. Winner will be announced Monday, December 23.

  • Weekdays with Gordon Deal
  • Mason Hills Farm
  • Tune In
  • Ben Murphy Roofing Company
  • Southern Cancer Center
  • Advertise With Us