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Politics

Biden orders sweeping cryptocurrency review, setting stage for regulation

President Biden signed an executive order Wednesday for a sweeping review of the government’s approach to cryptocurrencies, aiming to secure the nation’s position as a leader in the rapidly growing industry while containing risks to consumers and the financial system itself. Ultimately, some structure could be imposed on what has been a fractured regulatory response to the rise of digital assets in a global market now valued at roughly $1.85 trillion.

Maryland poised to become second state in U.S. to ban declawing cats

Move over, liquor lobby. Step aside, Big Pharma. The cat lobby has arrived in Annapolis and already notched a win: Maryland is poised to become the second state in the country to ban declawing. The procedure, commonly performed for decades but now deemed barbaric and unnecessary by pet owners and some veterinarians, is banned in many parts of the world and also in several cities across the country, including Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, San Francisco and Denver. New York passed a statewide ban in 2019.

Floor Report: Lawmakers Seek to Limit Possible Primary Election Delay, Introduce Russian Divestment Bill, and More

Lawmakers amended a proposed elections cost-sharing agreement to ban election officials from asking courts to push back the upcoming primary election beyond July 12 during a Tuesday morning floor session. The amendment, introduced by Del. Jheanelle K. Wilkins (D-Montgomery), would mean that election officials wouldn’t be able to ask for an extension beyond two weeks after the currently scheduled June 28 primary election if the bill passes.

In Redistricting Lawsuit, Baltimore County Council Proposes Another Map With One Majority Black Council District

Baltimore County waited until the eleventh hour to submit a redrawn map to a federal judge Tuesday night — and the county council’s revised map still included only one majority Black Council district. U.S. District Court Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby issued an order in February requiring county officials to adopt a new plan that “either includes two reasonably compact majority-Black Districts for the election of County councilmembers, or an additional County District in which Black voters otherwise have an opportunity to elect a representative of their choice” and complies with the Voting Rights Act on or before March 8.

Baltimore State’s attorney candidate Roya Hanna to drop out of Democratic primary, run as independent

Baltimore State’s attorney candidate Roya Hanna announced Tuesday that she’s dropping out of the Democratic primary and running as an independent in the general election. A defense attorney and former prosecutor, Hanna said party affiliation hinders elected prosecutors and declared that she’s running as an independent because “the business of prosecution is too important for politics.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Pittman To Testify In Support Of Bill To Study Health And Economic Impacts Of Development Near BWI

Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman said he will testify Wednesday in support of a bill creating a commission to study the health and environmental impacts of Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. Since the 2015 implementation of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Next Generation Air Transportation System, which allows for more flights in the air by guiding planes with satellite instead of radar, the noise for nearby communities has gotten worse, he said.

Read More: WJZ
Trial date set for challenges to Md. legislative redistricting

A series of challenges to Maryland’s legislative redistricting plan will go to trial starting March 22, the state court system announced Tuesday. The bench trial will take place before Special Magistrate Alan M. Wilner, a retired Court of Appeals judge who also handled redistricting challenges a decade ago.

In final blow to Pr. George’s council, Maryland Court of Appeals affirms ruling on redistricting

In what amounted to a final blow for the Prince George’s County Council, the Maryland Court of Appeals on Monday affirmed that the council must throw out its widely panned redistricting map — a decision that will affect races already underway this election season. The ruling upheld a lower-court ruling directing the council to adopt district lines proposed by its nonpartisan redistricting commission.

Petition Would Expand Baltimore County Council Seats to 11

A petition drive is on to expand the Baltimore County Council from seven members to eleven. Baltimore County’s Council has had just seven members since it was created in 1956 and a coalition of residents and local advocacy groups says it’s time to expand representation. The Vote4More initiative, led by county resident Linda Dorsey Walker, aims to put a measure on the November ballot to add four seats to the council, according to the group’s website.

Senate Passes Judicial Transparency Act, Gives Preliminary Approval to Coal Tar Sealant Ban

The Maryland Senate quietly passed an amended version of Senate Bill 392, the Judicial Transparency Act of 2022, Monday evening. That bill is a top legislative priority for Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R), and as originally introduced would have required a comprehensive annual report on the sentencing decisions by individual judges, including details on sentences outside of the Maryland Sentencing Guidelines.

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