Relevant Tags
All Tags
- 2011 (1)
- 2017 IFCA Convention Speaker (1)
- 2018 IFCA Convention Exhibitor (2)
- 2021 Annual Meeting (5)
- 4R Newsletter (11)
- Aerial Application (1)
- Alerts (7)
- Ammonia (23)
- Ammonia (5)
- Budget (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Convention 2018 - Exhibitors (1)
- Convention (1)
- DOT (14)
- DOT (1)
- Emergency Release Info (8)
- Energy (1)
- FREC 2011 Report (10)
- FREC Proceedings (1)
- Fertilizer (2)
- Fertilizer (11)
- Fire Prevention Plan (1)
- Free Tags (11)
- Fuel (3)
- IFCA Members: "News Under The Dome" - 2020 (6)
- IFCA: Legislative Alert National - 2024 (4011)
- In The News (105)
- Industry Resources (23)
- Industry Resources (1)
- Items of Interest (273)
- Items of Interest2 (503)
- Legislation (22)
- Legislation (1)
- Legislative Alert (10)
- Newsletter (7)
- Pesticides (10)
- Pesticides (17)
- R-Stamp (1)
- Recycling (1)
- Regulations (12)
- Regulations (62)
- Regulatory Alert (18)
- Regulatory Alert (101)
- Secretary of State (6)
- Secretary of State (1)
- Security (3)
- Soil Temps (2)
- Staying In The Know (18)
- Taxes (6)
- Test template (1)
- Welders (1)
- Worker Protection Standard (1)
- new Resources (2)
Filtered by : IFCA Members: "News Under The Dome" - 2020
Results6 articles found. |
---|
IFCA's "News Under the Dome" for NovemberClick Here to read IFCA's "News Under the Dome" for November. Stories in this month's newsletter include: -IDOA Issues New Dicamba Label for Soybeans in 2020 - IFCA Members Host Legislators at Their Facilities - Illinois Announces $23.5 Billion Road Plan - Illinois State Senate President John Cullerton to Retire - Clean-Up Bill on Marijuana/Employer Rights Heading to the Governor - Illinois State Rep. Luis Arroyo Accused of Bribing Senator for Bill Support - Trump Administration Clarifying Application Exclusion Zone - Consolidation of Suburban and Downstate Police ... |
Illinois House R’s Out Pace ExpectationsThis fall, Speaker Chris Welch spoke of the possibility of House Democrats picking up 4-5 seats on Tuesday. The House Republicans’ determination in these precincts paid off, despite being vastly outspent. There is a real possibility that the House Democrats might not pick up any new seats this cycle. As of this writing, without a full count and late-arriving mail-in ballots yet to be tallied, House Democratic challengers were behind in four races, even though they had massively outspent the Republicans. If those results hold up, the Democrats will not pick up a single seat and might ... |
Republicans Claim US Senate Majority OutrightRepublicans gained control of the US Senate early this morning, with GOP wins in a handful of key races cementing the new majority and flipping party control of the upper chamber. With a Senate map heavily in their favor, Republicans flipped West Virginia and Ohio, giving them at least a 51-seat majority as a handful of races remained as toss ups. One race that became surprisingly competitive in the final stretch of the campaign was Nebraska, which brought the GOP over the finish line. Democrats currently have a 51-49 majority in the Senate. Republicans last won a ... |
The Bulletinstory here |
Trump Returns to the White HouseFormer President Donald Trump will return to the White House. Trump won the key states of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, with a combined 29 electoral votes to clinch the 270 necessary to win the presidency. As of early this morning, Trump had 277 electoral votes total. This morning, Donald Trump was up 71,681,676 to Kamala Harris’s 66,770,049 in the popular vote. In Illinois, Donald Trump was trailing Kamala Harris by just 8 points. All votes are yet to be counted, of course, but that margin is less than half the 17-point margin he lost by in his last two presidential elections in ... |
US House Still Too Close to CallAs of this morning, there will be no major changes in Illinois on US House seats. Democrats will hold 14 of the 17 seats in Illinois. The three Republicans will be Mike Bost, Mary Miller and Darin LaHood. In the 2018 midterm election, Democrats took wide control of the US House picking up forty-one seats. Republicans responded by picking up a handful of seats in the 2020 General Election before taking back control of the House in 2022. As of this morning, it is too close to call on what party while control the House beginning in January, though, if trends ... |