The office of U.S. Senator John Boozman will host a workshop for the Veteran’s History Project on March 18 at 1p.m. at the Plantation Agriculture Museum State Park in Scott, Arkansas. The workshop will be led by Col.
Category: Senator John Boozman
Boozman goes the French Hill route on constituent access
HOLD THE PHONE: That’s the only way to get a question to Sen. Boozman. And it won’t be easy.
Religious freedom could top Sessions civil rights priorities
When President Donald Trump spoke to … . FILE – In this Feb. 2, 2017, file photo, President Donald Trump and Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., pause during the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington.
Trump vows to – totally destroy’ restrictions on churches’ support of candidates
President Trump vowed Thursday to “totally destroy” a law passed more than 60 years ago that bans tax-exempt churches from supporting political candidates, a nod to the religious right that helped sweep him into office. Speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, Trump said he would seek to overturn the Johnson Amendment, which prohibits tax-exempt nonprofits – including churches and other houses of worship – from “directly or indirectly” participating in a political candidate’s campaign.
A Huckabee lands West Wing job
President Donald Trump has tapped an Arkansan to work at the White House, hiring Sarah Huckabee Sanders as a key spokesman. The daughter of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee will serve as deputy assistant to the president and principal deputy press secretary.
A Lawmaker’s Tweet Sparks A Rally In Springdale
The Department of Health and Human Services is considering using the Ouachita Job Corps Center as a housing facility for undocumented immigrant children. Three days before Christmas, U.S. Senator Tom Cotton posted this tweet: “HHS should halt any plans to use the Ouachita Job Corps Center facility as an immigration shelter….” which then linked to a longer statement, that U.S. Senator John Boozman and Congressman Bruce Westerman both agreed.
2 from state take part in House-office shuffle
It’s packing time on the House side of Capitol Hill, with losers moving out, winners moving in and incumbents moving up. That meant 55 vacant offices up for grabs and weeks of packing and unpacking as those with seniority snapped up the prime real estate.