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Texas Gov. Perry asks feds for drones to patrol border

By Gary Reese

February 8, 2010

Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry says unarmed, unmanned Predator drone aircraft should be used to patrol the Texas-Mexico border for illegal immigration and drug-trade activity. Perry, in a tough re-election fight this year, has asked the federal government for one Predator. Predators are now in use along the Arizona-Mexico border. Republican US Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, running for governor against Perry, called the idea a “boondoggle.”

--Headed to the state Senate floor today is a telecommunications restructuring bill designed to bring Georgia up to speed with other states in rates for long distance and other issues. A poll conducted by the group Citizens for a Digital Future with InsiderAdvantage shows voters “prefer a telecom marketplace where all companies are on an even playing field," the group said in a press release. See InsiderAdvantageGeorgia.

--North Carolina Republican Eighth District congressional candidate Tim D’Annunzio will seek to raise campaign cash and show his “commitment to Second Amendment rights” by having a shoot-out of sorts on Feb. 10; that is, for donations of at least $25, D’Annunzio supporters can attend a shooting range and fire Uzi machine guns. Among the door prizes will be a semi-automatic rifle.

--The Kentucky House on Monday passed a bill that would help replenish the state’s strained unemployment fund by raising taxes on small businesses and cutting jobless benefits. The bill passed 97-0 and now goes to the Senate. In the last 13 months, Kentucky has borrowed $645 million from the federal government to pay unemployment benefits.

--The Virginia Senate has passed a measure to add sexual orientation as another criterion for hiring protections for state government jobs. The vote in the Democratic-majority chamber was probably futile as anything more than a political gesture, however. Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell has declined to issue an executive order providing gays with hiring protections, and the GOP-majority House is expected to defeat the bill.   

   
   
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