7 Highlights From Day 3 of the Trump Impeachment Trial

 
 
Jan 24, 2020
 

Happy Friday from Washington, where the 47th annual March for Life musters today in opposition to abortion on demand. Two lawmakers would mandate hospital access for abortion doctors. Rachel del Guidice reports. House prosecutors try to convince the Senate to remove President Trump for abuse of power. Fred Lucas has details. Plus: the future of historically black colleges and universities, the peril posed by birth tourism, and women who stand for the sanctity of life. Eighty-five years ago today, canned beer debuts in Richmond, Virginia. Enjoy the weekend.

 
 
 
News
Photo
By Fred Lucas

House Democrats argued that a crime isn't necessary to remove a president from office and doubled down on their defense of Joe and Hunter Biden.
Commentary
Photo
By Lora Ries

U.S. citizenship makes a child eligible for free public education and loan programs, government food assistance, Medicaid, and other welfare programs.
News
Photo
By Ken McIntyre

Historically black colleges and universities "are cultural institutions with storied legacies that are unique and remarkable," Secretary DeVos said at The Heritage Foundation.
News
Photo
By Rachel del Guidice

"Women deserve to have doctors and medical professionals who can provide quality care and quickly address any complications that may arise," says Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz.
News
Photo
By Allison Schuster

Kay C. James recalls the hostility she encountered as part of the first class to integrate a middle school in Richmond, Virginia. "I had to walk past dogs, and police officers, and screaming parents saying, 'We don't want you here,'" she says.
Commentary
Photo
By Abigail Moreno-Riano

I'm going to the March for Life because it is also the centennial anniversary of the 19th Amendment. It's a monumental year to remember that we are not marching without influence, nor without the ability to truly change the culture.
Analysis
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By Rachel del Guidice

Education Department official Leonard Haynes discusses how to make HBCUs more competitive.
Commentary
Photo
By Grazie Pozo Christie

The first feminists felt keenly that abortion was not an act of liberation, but of coercion. Abortion did not empower women, but degraded them, treating their fertility as a defect and their sons and daughters as disposable.
 
     
 
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