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Louisiana teachers worry about state constitution changes. Ohio experts support a $15 minimum wage for 1 million people. An Illinois mother seeks passage of a medical aid-in-dying bill. And Mississippi advocates push for restored voting rights for people with felony convictions.

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Biden says the U.S. won't arm Israel for a Rafah attack, drawing harsh criticism from Republicans. A judge denies former President Trump's request to modify a gag order. And new data outlines priorities for rural voters in ten battleground states.

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Some small towns in North Dakota worry they'll go to pot if marijuana is legalized, school vouchers are becoming a litmus test for Republicans, and Bennington, Vermont implements an innovative substance abuse recovery program.

GAO: WYO Canada Lynx Falls Prey to Illegal Political Tampering

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Thursday, May 22, 2008   

Cheyenne, WY – Politics have skewed American science when it comes to endangered species, according to a new Government Accountability Office report. The GAO investigation finds that appointed officials aggressively tried to squelch protection of endangered species, including habitat preservation for Canada lynx in Wyoming.

Bill Snape with the Center for Biological Diversity says there has always been political disagreement about the Endangered Species Act. Debate is good, he says, but political interference has never been this blatant.

"What I think is disturbing is that you have an administration which set out as its objective to not obey the law, and to destroy the law."

Snape says the GAO report sets the stage for further review of endangered species cases, and he thinks up to 300 could be tainted.

"I think we need to investigate how decisions are made. A great place to start would be the recent polar bear decision, which while they listed the species as threatened, then denied the species any kind of protection."

One Interior Department official resigned last year after allegations of illegal tampering in endangered species cases. The administration has said that the interference was limited to just a few bad apples acting on their own, and was not carried out on White House orders.

To view the GAO report, visit
http://www.gao.gov/.


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