Abc6 News Senator Jack Reed And Arizona Rep Raúl Facebook

Leo Migdal
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abc6 news senator jack reed and arizona rep raúl facebook

WASHINGTON, D.C. (WLNE) — In an effort to increase literacy and expand opportunity, Sen. Jack Reed and Arizona Rep. Raúl Grijalva introduced the bicameral Right to Read Act. The legislation aims to help address disparities in access to school library resources and surge federal investment in support of increasing student literacy across the country, Reed said. The U.S.

Department of Education reports that 2.5 million students are enrolled in districts where there are no school libraries. Reed said the Right to Read Act aims to address this issue, ensuring students have evidence-based reading instruction, well stocked and staffed school libraries, family literacy programs, and a wide range of reading materials. “Under the House Republican majority, GOP politicians have sought to politicize our children’s schools and enable the voices of an extreme few dictate what children can or cannot read,” Grijalva said. This is a listing for 'This Week' airing Sunday, February 23, 2025. SEN. JACK REED, REP.

MIKE LAWLER AND RETIRED GEN. GEORGE CASEY SUNDAY ON "THIS WEEK" WITH CO-ANCHOR MARTHA RADDATZ Ranking Member, Armed Services Committee Former Commander, Multi-National Force-Iraq Plus, Raddatz sits down with three recently fired federal workers, and ABC News contributor and former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie analyzes the legal fallout from DOGE's cuts to the federal workforce. var field59 = field59 || {}; field59.ipo = { "global": { } };

WASHINGTON — Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed spoke to ABC6 News Monday afternoon after Iran fired missiles at a United States military base in Qatar. A U.S. official told ABC News the missiles were intercepted and there were no impacts on the base. ABC6: With news of strikes on a U.S. airbase coming from Iran — from your end, what do you know so far about this latest attack?

Reed: The attack was made on Al Udeid Air Base, which is one of our principal locations in the Middle East. Apparently, the Iranians notified the Qataris beforehand and simultaneously they notified [the United States] that there would be an attack. There have been no damages to the airfield, and no causalities, thank goodness. I think this was part of a political signal that they will resist but also recognizing that they have suffered serious causalities in the chain of command, and also, they’re husbanding their missiles for... But we’re still at a time where we could see more calculated, more destructive retaliation.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. (WLNE) — In An Effort To Increase Literacy

WASHINGTON, D.C. (WLNE) — In an effort to increase literacy and expand opportunity, Sen. Jack Reed and Arizona Rep. Raúl Grijalva introduced the bicameral Right to Read Act. The legislation aims to help address disparities in access to school library resources and surge federal investment in support of increasing student literacy across the country, Reed said. The U.S.

Department Of Education Reports That 2.5 Million Students Are Enrolled

Department of Education reports that 2.5 million students are enrolled in districts where there are no school libraries. Reed said the Right to Read Act aims to address this issue, ensuring students have evidence-based reading instruction, well stocked and staffed school libraries, family literacy programs, and a wide range of reading materials. “Under the House Republican majority, GOP politician...

MIKE LAWLER AND RETIRED GEN. GEORGE CASEY SUNDAY ON "THIS

MIKE LAWLER AND RETIRED GEN. GEORGE CASEY SUNDAY ON "THIS WEEK" WITH CO-ANCHOR MARTHA RADDATZ Ranking Member, Armed Services Committee Former Commander, Multi-National Force-Iraq Plus, Raddatz sits down with three recently fired federal workers, and ABC News contributor and former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie analyzes the legal fallout from DOGE's cuts to the federal workforce. var field59 =...

WASHINGTON — Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed Spoke To ABC6

WASHINGTON — Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed spoke to ABC6 News Monday afternoon after Iran fired missiles at a United States military base in Qatar. A U.S. official told ABC News the missiles were intercepted and there were no impacts on the base. ABC6: With news of strikes on a U.S. airbase coming from Iran — from your end, what do you know so far about this latest attack?

Reed: The Attack Was Made On Al Udeid Air Base,

Reed: The attack was made on Al Udeid Air Base, which is one of our principal locations in the Middle East. Apparently, the Iranians notified the Qataris beforehand and simultaneously they notified [the United States] that there would be an attack. There have been no damages to the airfield, and no causalities, thank goodness. I think this was part of a political signal that they will resist but a...