Trump, Pennsylvania and AI
Digest more
Pa. State Sen. Katie Muth (D-44th dist.) has announced that she intends to introduce a bill to require all drivers in the state to have two license plates -- on the front and rear of vehicles -- in order to improve identification in hit-and-run incidents.
1hon MSN
The Democratic-controlled state House took the first step toward a budget deal Monday. But the bill does not have the Senate GOP’s support, and leaders say they want to reduce spending further.
Once again, a bill aimed at legalizing adult-use marijuana in Pennsylvania has been introduced, this time in the House. “While Pennsylvania has made significant strides in legalizing medical marijuana,
3hon MSN
Four independent voters in Pennsylvania are asking the state Supreme Court to rule that the closed primary system violates the state constitution.
Democratic Sen. Katie Muth says she plans to introduce a bill to require front plates on vehicles in Pennsylvania.
Lawmakers want to make the commonwealth more attractive to data center developers, and are proposing incentives and new regulations to lure them.
2hon MSN
The leaders who spoke at an energy summit in Pittsburgh said they were investing because of Pa.'s energy reserves, its skilled workforce and its political cohesion.
U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick says Pennsylvania is positioned to become a leading hub for the energy and artificial intelligence industries. “As the nation’s second-largest energy producer and a global nuclear power leader,
Study subjects who lived in Bucks and Montgomery Counties near military bases had water wells that contained PFAS amounts thousands of times over EPA limits.
Rep. John Joyce said moving the office to Pittsburgh would “ensure that the Department of Energy’s employees are invested in the communities their work directly impacts.”
President Donald Trump and Sen. David McCormick of Pennsylvania will jointly announce roughly $70 billion of energy investments in the state Tuesday as the president travels to Pittsburgh.
Provisional ballots account for a small fraction of votes in Pennsylvania, but they can be decisive in close races.