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Iowa May Pass One Of The Most Restrictive Abortion Laws In The Nation

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(Via The AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Republican legislators sent Iowa’s governor a bill early Wednesday that would ban most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy, propelling the state overnight to the front of a push among conservative statehouses jockeying to enact the nation’s most restrictive regulations on the procedure.

Critics say the so-called “heartbeat” bill, which now awaits the signature of anti-abortion GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds, would ban abortions before some women even know they’re pregnant. That could set up the state for a legal challenge over its constitutionality, including from the same federal appeals court that three years ago struck down similar legislation approved in Arkansas and North Dakota.

Backers of the legislation, which failed to get a single Democratic vote in either Iowa chamber, expressed hope it could challenge Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that established women have a right to terminate pregnancies until a fetus is viable. Conservatives say an influx of right-leaning judicial appointments under President Donald Trump could make it a possibility.

“Today we will begin this journey as Iowa becomes ground zero, now nationally, in the life movement,” Sen. Rick Bertrand, a Republican from Sioux City, said during floor debate.

Erin Davison-Rippey, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, said in a statement Iowa Republicans “do not care how much taxpayer money will be spent on a lawsuit … or how many families may choose to go elsewhere because Iowa is no longer a state where they are safe to live and work.”

The House began debate over the measure early Tuesday afternoon, voting it out shortly before midnight with six Republicans there opposing it. The Senate then picked it up, with approval shortly after 2 a.m. Wednesday. The nearly back-to-back votes come as Iowa lawmakers are on overtime at the state Capitol, trying to pass a spending budget and tax cuts later this week.

Reynolds declined Wednesday to say whether she’ll sign the bill into law. She did note: “I’m pro-life. I’m proud to be pro-life. I’ve made that very clear.”

Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller told reporters Wednesday he’s reviewing whether his office would defend the bill if signed into law, acknowledging his staff is reviewing its constitutionality.

“We’re considering whether we should recuse ourselves,” he said. “We do this very rarely, but we’re looking at this case to see whether that should be one of those rare exceptions.”

Several states have attempted to advance abortion bans in recent years. Mississippi passed a law earlier this year banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, but it’s on hold after a court challenge. The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear similar heartbeat bills North Dakota and Arkansas approved in 2013, after they were rejected by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

A federal court challenge would likely make its way to that appeals court, which has become increasingly conservative during Donald Trump’s administration.

Of the 11 active judges on the court, only one Democratic appointment remains. Jane Kelly was named by Barack Obama in 2013. One judge is a Ronald Reagan pick, six were appointees of George W. Bush and three were named to the court by Donald Trump. Two Trump judges replaced Bill Clinton appointees. The third replaced a Bush judge.

The court begrudgingly rejected as unconstitutional the heartbeat bills from North Dakota and Arkansas.

In both cases the appeals court judges made it clear they were only striking down the laws because the U.S. Supreme Court precedent bound them to do so. They strongly suggested that the high court reverse previous abortion rulings by eliminating a federal constitutional right to abortion and allowing states to decide when a fetus is viable.

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Iowa

Cedar Rapids Tax Payers Foot Half A Million Dollars Bill For ‘Newbo Evolve’ Music Festival

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When you think of taxes and the services they supply, the first thoughts that come to mind are roads, police, fire-fighters, snow plow. Some even think of things in more progressive terms such as healthcare, college education, and market places where the average person could potentially be helped.

What you don’t usually think of is a Music Festival with Maroon 5 & Kelly Clarkson that Cedar Rapids Tax Dollars are going to support, $500,000 to be exact.

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Iowa

Randy Feenstra Built on Kim Reynolds’ Betrayal of Steve King: The Artificial Replacement Who Ousted a Conservative Warrior

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In the summer of 2020, Iowa’s 4th Congressional District witnessed one of the most brazen establishment takeovers in recent Republican politics. Nine-term Congressman Steve King—the fiery, unapologetic voice of rural conservatism, border security, and Western civilization—was unceremoniously dumped by his own party. In his place? State Senator Randy Feenstra, a polished, establishment-backed challenger who cruised to victory in the June 2 primary with 45.5% of the vote to King’s 35.8%.

This wasn’t a grassroots revolt. It was a calculated betrayal orchestrated by the very insiders King had helped elevate—including Governor Kim Reynolds, whom he had proudly endorsed and supported just years earlier.

The Endorsement: King Lifts Reynolds When She Needed Him Most

Flash back to 2017-2018. Kim Reynolds was running for a full term as governor after ascending from lieutenant governor. Steve King didn’t just back her—he went all-in. Reynolds named King a statewide campaign co-chair and proudly touted his endorsement. In a November 2017 press release, she gushed: “Congressman Steve King is a strong defender of freedom and our conservative values. He’s independent, principled, and is fighting the good fight in Washington, D.C. You never have to question where he stands.”

King delivered for Reynolds in the heavily conservative 4th District. She rode that support to victory in 2018. Their alliance was public, mutual, and mutually beneficial—classic Republican teamwork, or so it seemed.

The Betrayal: Reynolds Stabs King in the Back

Fast forward to January 2019. After years of King being smeared by the media for his blunt defense of immigration enforcement and cultural issues, House Republican leadership stripped him of his committee assignments over remarks questioning why “white nationalist” had become a slur. King’s enemies pounced. Enter Randy Feenstra, who announced his primary challenge against the incumbent.

Governor Kim Reynolds? She didn’t lift a finger to defend the man who had co-chaired her campaign. Instead, she publicly washed her hands of him. In an interview with WHO-TV, Reynolds declared she would “stay out of the primary” but pointedly noted King’s surprisingly close 2018 re-election as a “wakeup call.” Translation: She wasn’t backing King over Feenstra.

Prominent Iowa Republicans like Sens. Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst followed suit and stayed neutral—abandoning the pattern of past support for King. Meanwhile, Feenstra raked in cash from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Right to Life, the Republican Jewish Coalition, and other establishment heavyweights. He painted King as “caustic” and ineffective, precisely the line the D.C. and Des Moines insiders wanted to hear.

Steve King, the guy who had carried water for the party through thick and thin, was left twisting in the wind. The same Reynolds who once called him a “strong defender of conservative values” now stood aside while the machine dismantled him.

Feenstra: The Artificial Candidate

Randy Feenstra didn’t storm onto the scene as a populist firebrand with grassroots rage behind him. He was the safe, scripted alternative. A state senator from Hull whose district overlapped King’s, Feenstra resigned a powerful Ways & Means committee chairmanship to run full-time—signaling deep establishment buy-in. He outraised King dramatically and dominated his home turf, but the broader narrative was clear: this was the party clearing out the “problematic” incumbent for someone who wouldn’t rock the boat or make national headlines for the wrong reasons.

Feenstra’s campaign pitch boiled down to “effectiveness” over principle. He criticized King’s rhetoric while promising results—code for “we’ll keep the seat Republican without the drama.” National GOP groups poured in to protect the safe red district from any general-election risk. King, stripped of power in Washington, was portrayed as the reason the district lacked a “seat at the table.”

The voters in the primary bought it. Feenstra won. King was out. The establishment had its man.

Why This Still Matters: The Pattern of Artificial Republicans

This wasn’t about ideology—Feenstra and King both cast conservative votes. It was about control. Steve King represented the raw, unfiltered voice of the heartland that made the Republican Party a fighting force. The insiders—Reynolds, the Chamber, the national PACs—wanted someone more manageable. Someone who wouldn’t embarrass them on cable news. Someone “artificial”: manufactured by money, party machinery, and calculated neutrality from the very people King had once helped.

Fast-forward to today, and the irony is thick. Feenstra is now running for governor in 2026, positioning himself as the heir to the Reynolds legacy. Meanwhile, Steve King—still influential in conservative circles—has thrown his support behind a challenger attacking Feenstra as the ultimate establishment candidate.

The 2020 primary wasn’t a rejection of conservatism. It was the establishment’s successful coup against one of its own most outspoken warriors. Randy Feenstra didn’t earn that seat through pure populist fire—he was handed it after the party betrayed the man who had helped build their machine.

Iowa conservatives should never forget: when the insiders decide you’re too loud, too principled, or too effective at exposing the real threats facing America, they’ll find a “cleaner” replacement. Steve King learned that the hard way. The rest of us should learn from it before the same machine installs more artificial candidates across the country.

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Iowa

Did City of Cedar Rapids Leaders Put Casino ‘Cash Grab’ Ahead of Clean Water?

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While Cedar Rapids families worry about toxic lead leaching into their kids’ drinking water from old service lines, city leaders have been laser-focused on fast-tracking a flashy new casino project. The city identified roughly 8,500 potential lead service lines, yet the rush to break ground on the $275 million Cedar Crossing Casino and Entertainment Center screams misplaced priorities from an America Last local government more interested in gambling revenue than protecting working families from a known neurotoxin.

The timeline tells the real story. Cities had to submit their initial lead service line inventories to the Iowa DNR by October 16, 2024, under EPA rules. Cedar Rapids published its interactive map and identified thousands of at-risk lines right around that deadline. Just weeks later, in December 2024, the city council approved the development agreement for the casino. Ground was broken in February 2025 after the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission gave the green light, with construction kicking off full steam toward a planned New Year’s Eve 2026 opening.

EPA’s Lead and Copper Rule Improvements (LCRI), finalized in October 2024, demands full replacement of lead pipes within 10 years starting around late 2027, with aggressive targets for communities like Cedar Rapids. The city is talking about aiming for near-complete inventory resolution by 2037 and prioritizing replacements on the public side—but that slow-walk timeline coincides perfectly with pouring concrete and chasing tourist dollars for the casino instead of treating this as the public health emergency it is.

This isn’t coincidence; it’s elite capture in action. Globalist-style priorities and big development interests always seem to trump the basics like safe water for American workers and children. Lead exposure hits kids hardest—lowering IQs, causing behavioral issues, and hammering working-class neighborhoods in older parts of town where these pipes linger. Cedar Rapids banned new lead lines back in 1971, but legacy pipes remain, and the city’s corrosion control only goes so far. While officials pat themselves on the back for adding chemicals to coat pipes, families are left wondering why the same urgency applied to casino approvals isn’t slamming into a full-court press on pipe replacements.

The consequences are clear for everyday Cedar Rapids residents. Delayed action means continued risk of lead in tap water for pregnant moms, infants, and schoolkids in affected homes. Homeowners bear the brunt on private-side replacements, which get expensive fast, while city resources and staff bandwidth shift toward making sure the casino’s shell goes up on schedule. This is the same pattern we see nationwide: out-of-touch local bureaucrats and developers chase economic “wins” that benefit connected insiders and tourism, while ignoring the quiet betrayal of middle-class families dealing with aging infrastructure.

It’s time for real accountability in Cedar Rapids. City leaders should redirect every available dollar and crew toward accelerating full lead service line replacements—public and private sides—using EPA and state revolving funds before the 10-year clock runs out. Put American families and public health first, not casino developers chasing New Year’s Eve 2026 ribbon-cuttings. Secure borders start at home with secure, safe basics like clean water. Patriots in Linn County need to demand their officials stop the surrender to flashy projects and deliver on core responsibilities: safe drinking water, law and order, and policies that actually protect working Americans instead of selling out to the next big spectacle. The lead pipes must go—now—not after the slot machines start ringing.

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