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Gov. Andy Beshear has vetoed a measure that would eliminate state-level worker protections and leave in place only federal minimums.
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For about 30 years, the Ph.D. Project has supported students from underrepresented groups who are earning doctoral degrees in business. Now, it's attracted the attention of the Trump administration.
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The town hall was hosted by SoKY Indivisible in downtown Bowling Green. The group said it was holding the event because they feel that U.S. Rep. Brett Guthrie had not responded to their requests to hold a town hall.
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Rural residents are left holding the bills for everything from solar panels to grain dryers.
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Federal orders from President Donald Trump axing DEI initiatives are hitting multiple sectors. Kentucky arts and culture organizations have not been exempt from the fallout.
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Kentucky's governor vetoed a GOP-backed bill Thursday to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at public universities, declaring that diversity should be embraced as a strength while branding the legislation as being “about hate.”
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U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is making the case for more U.S. investment to help Ukraine defeat Russia.
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Medicaid, concealed carry and telework ban: Friday was the final day for the Kentucky General Assembly to pass legislation that is veto proof, with some notable bills making the cut, and some left behind.
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The Lexington Herald-Leader’s Taylor Six spent months investigating jail deaths across the state.
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Trying to prove the real inventor of the March Madness pool seems about as implausible as picking a perfect bracket. A Staten Island pub says it was the first in the late 1970s to design what would become the modern-day bracket. The family of a U.S. Postal Service worker out of Kentucky says he was the first one to create the bracket.