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Tanya Miller

Coverage of Tanya Miller in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jun 17 · 04:20 UTCMost recent: Jun 20 · 19:02 UTC
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Recent coverage
  • POLITICSJun 20 · 19:02 UTCGEORGIA RECORDER
    Democrats block local property tax referendums as Georgia lawmakers clash over affordability

    Georgia Democrats have blocked Republican-led efforts to pass local property tax referendums during a special session, arguing the measures would shift tax burdens to lower-income residents. Republicans claim the proposals aim to provide property tax relief by allowing communities to vote on sales tax increases, but the measures failed in both chambers, with lawmakers vowing to continue efforts in a session without a set end date.

  • POLITICSJun 17 · 04:27 UTCWTOP DC
    In Georgia’s Capitol, Republicans’ redistricting session to begin without maps

    Georgia's Republican-led legislature is beginning a redistricting session to redraw voting districts after the U.S. Supreme Court weakened the Voting Rights Act, but no proposed maps have been released yet. The session aims to create districts for the 2028 elections, sparking criticism over lack of transparency and potential dilution of nonwhite voters' political power.

  • POLITICSJun 17 · 04:20 UTCWDIV CLICKONDETROIT
    In Georgia’s Capitol, Republicans' redistricting session to begin without maps

    Georgia Republicans are beginning a redistricting session without proposed maps, following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which invalidated a congressional map for racial gerrymandering. Outgoing Gov. Brian Kemp aims to delay new district lines until 2028, but Democrats and activists criticize the lack of transparency.

  • POLITICSJun 17 · 04:20 UTCWPLG LOCAL 10 MIAMI
    In Georgia’s Capitol, Republicans' redistricting session to begin without maps

    Georgia Republicans are beginning a redistricting session to redraw voting districts, potentially reducing political power for Black and nonwhite voters, following a Supreme Court decision that weakened Voting Rights Act protections. The session, called by outgoing Governor Brian Kemp, lacks proposed maps, frustrating Democrats and activists who demand transparency. The process could set a precedent for applying the court's ruling to state legislative maps in Southern states with high Black voter populations.

Tanya Miller · Dossier · The Nexus