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U.S. senators call for security funding boost after Minnesota assassination

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arkansasadvocate.com – Jennifer Shutt, Ariana Figueroa, Shauneen Miranda – 2025-06-17 13:00:00


Following the assassination of a Minnesota lawmaker and the attempted murder of another, U.S. senators met with Capitol Police and the Senate sergeant-at-arms to address growing safety concerns. The gunman reportedly had a list of Democratic officials and their home addresses. Lawmakers from both parties now support increasing funding for member security in the next government funding bill. Senate leaders Chuck Schumer and John Thune condemned political violence, while some, like Sen. Martin Heinrich, emphasized both tactical and cultural solutions. Immediate security steps are underway, but senators agree broader protections and reduced violent rhetoric are also urgently needed.

by Jennifer Shutt, Ariana Figueroa and Shauneen Miranda, Arkansas Advocate
June 17, 2025

WASHINGTON — U.S. senators emerged from a briefing with federal law enforcement officials Tuesday saying they’ll likely boost funding on safety and security for members and their families in an upcoming government funding bill.

The hour-long briefing by U.S. Capitol Police and the Senate sergeant-at-arms followed the weekend assassination of a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband as well as the attempted murder of a state senator and his wife.

The gunman had a list of Democratic elected officials, including members of Congress, and their home addresses, which renewed long-standing security concerns among lawmakers.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., spoke about the shootings during a floor speech shortly after the meeting, pressing for an end to political violence.

“I’m profoundly grateful to local law enforcement that the alleged shooter is in custody and I look forward to seeing him prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” Thune said. “There is no place for this kind of violence in our country. None.”

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, of New York, said that California Democrat Adam Schiff and Pennsylvania Republican Dave McCormick suggested during the closed-door meeting that Congress bolster funding for member safety.

“The Capitol Police and the sergeant at arms gave a very detailed discussion of how they can protect members here, back in our states, at our homes, in our offices,” Schumer said. “The violence, threats against elected officials, including people in the Senate, has dramatically increased, and that means we need more protection. We need more money.”

The USCP and other law enforcement agencies, Schumer said, are taking some immediate steps to bolster security, though he said “there are other things that will take a little while with more resources.”

Schumer also called on political leaders to be more cautious about how they discuss policy differences.

“The rhetoric that’s encouraging violence is coming from too many powerful people in this country,” Schumer said. “And we need firm, strong denouncement of all violence and violent rhetoric — that should be from the president and from all of the elected officials.”

Minnesota Democratic Sen. Tina Smith called the meeting “very productive,” but didn’t want to elaborate.

“I’m not going to comment any more,” Smith told reporters. “I think it’s important for members’ safety that we don’t talk a lot about what is being done to keep us safe in order to keep us safe.”

Support for funding increase

Senate Appropriations ranking member Patty Murray, D-Wash., said she expects the panel will increase funding for USCP in the bill that covers the upcoming fiscal year.

“I believe we need to do that,” Murray said.

Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons said the current situation is “incredibly concerning, gravely concerning.”

“And I appreciate the prompt and thorough bipartisan response,” Coons said.

Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who is running for governor in Alabama, said USCP will increase its security measures for members of Congress.

“They’re going to try to do as much as they can, that’s about it,” he said after the briefing. “You know, security at home and here.”

Asked whether there’s a legislative solution or anything lawmakers can do, Oklahoma GOP Sen. James Lankford told reporters “there’s a cultural solution.”

Sen. Martin Heinrich did not go into details about the meeting but said “everybody is having a very robust discussion about the sort of heightened security, dangerous environment we’re all operating in right now and what to do about that, both tactically to meet some of that threat, but also how to reduce the volatility of the environment that we’re in every day.”

The New Mexico Democrat is the ranking member on the Senate Appropriations Legislative Branch Subcommittee, which funds USCP and the sergeant at arms.

Asked about boosting USCP funding, Heinrich said this is “an obvious place that lawmakers will look,” but added that senators should be strategic about funding.

“We also just need to be smart and targeted about this,” he said. “There are a lot of things that can be done that don’t require a lot of funding that would reduce the scale of the target that is on the backs of anybody in public office these days.”

Arkansas Advocate is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Arkansas Advocate maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sonny Albarado for questions: info@arkansasadvocate.com.

The post U.S. senators call for security funding boost after Minnesota assassination appeared first on arkansasadvocate.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This content presents a factual report on a bipartisan issue concerning the safety and security of U.S. lawmakers following politically motivated violence. It quotes members from both Democratic and Republican parties, reflecting balanced perspectives without favoring one side. The tone is neutral, focused on shared concerns over violence and security, and avoids partisan language or framing, which supports a centrist bias rating.

News from the South - Arkansas News Feed

Arkansas man who pleaded guilty to killing four people in 2024 mass shooting sentenced to prison

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www.youtube.com – 40/29 News – 2025-08-04 21:54:05

SUMMARY: An Arkansas man, Travis Posey, who admitted to killing four people in a 2024 mass shooting at a Fordyce grocery store, has been sentenced to four life sentences without parole plus 220 years for 11 counts of attempted capital murder, all to be served consecutively. The community remains deeply grieving, with victims’ families expressing disappointment over Posey’s lack of remorse. Posey initially pleaded not guilty but changed his plea after more than a year in custody. The motive remains unclear. Victims included Callie Weems, Shirley Kay Taylor, Roy Sturgis, and Ellen Shrum, leaving lasting pain in the town.

Arkansas man who pleaded guilty to killing four people in 2024 mass shooting sentenced to prison

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Op-Ed: U.S. District Court rightfully blocked Arkansas’ PBM ban | Opinion

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Vance Ginn – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-04 09:06:00


Arkansas attempted to ban pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) from owning pharmacies, but a federal judge blocked the law as unconstitutional and anti-competitive. The ban, signed by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, would have forced closures of pharmacies like CVS, costing jobs and limiting rural access. Similar laws in Iowa faced legal challenges. PBMs emerged to manage drug prices in a flawed healthcare system distorted by government policies. Critics say banning PBMs ignores real issues like Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement cuts and protectionism favoring select companies. Experts advocate for restoring competition, cutting FDA approval times, and reforming reimbursement to improve healthcare.

Arkansas attempted to become the first state in the nation to ban pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) from owning or operating pharmacies. Instead, it became the first to be blocked by a federal judge for violating the Constitution – and for good reason. This kind of regulatory capture undermines the moral authority behind the legislation, and the court was justified in intervening.

On July 28, U.S. District Judge Brian Miller issued a preliminary injunction halting the Arkansas law, which was set to take effect August 5. He ruled that the ban “appears to overtly discriminate against plaintiffs as out-of-state companies,” and that the state “failed to show that it has no other means to advance its interests.”

In short, the law was not only anti-competitive but also unconstitutional.

The ban, signed earlier this year by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, would have forced companies like CVS and Express Scripts to shut down pharmacies across the state. CVS alone projected it would need to close all 23 of its Arkansas locations – eliminating nearly 500 jobs and reducing access to prescriptions, especially in rural areas where pharmacy options are already limited.

This is a policy failure masquerading as populist rhetoric. Banning PBMs may seem politically popular, with similar legislation being filed at both the federal and state levels, but it’s terrible economics and even worse health policy. Other states, including Louisiana and Tennessee, should take note – and reconsider their actions before causing further harm.

Congress should pay attention, too. Several lawmakers are proposing national legislation to ban PBMs from owning pharmacies. That would magnify the damage across all 50 states, stifle innovation, and further entrench government distortion in an already broken system.

Arkansas isn’t the only example of this approach failing in court. Just days earlier, a federal judge in Iowa issued a preliminary injunction against several new PBM regulations, including restrictions on pharmacy networks and reimbursement requirements. The court found that Iowa’s law likely violates the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause and ERISA, reinforcing that these state-level PBM crackdowns aren’t just bad policy – they’re legally suspect and increasingly falling apart in federal court.

Yet lawmakers keep pushing them, hoping to look like they’re “doing something” about high drug prices while avoiding the real structural issues driving costs higher.

Let’s start with the facts: PBMs didn’t break the healthcare system. They are a response to a system that has long been broken by government interference. For nearly a century, federal and state policies have layered on price controls, tax distortions, and third-party payer models that disconnect patients from prices and providers from the outcomes of their care. With Medicare and Medicaid dominating reimbursement, and employer-based coverage distorted by the tax code, market signals are barely present.

As we argue in “Empower Patients: Two Doctors’ Cure for Healthcare,” co-authored with Dr. Deane Waldman, America’s healthcare crisis stems from the third-party payer system. The overwhelming majority of healthcare dollars flow not from patients, but from insurers and government programs. Until we reconnect patients with prices through tools like Health Savings Accounts, Direct Primary Care, and regulatory reform – costs will continue to rise and access will remain limited.

That’s where PBMs come in.

PBMs emerged to negotiate drug prices, promote the use of generics, and manage pharmacy benefit plans in a system already warped by public policy. In a true free market, PBMs might not be needed. But in today’s environment, they serve as one of the few checks on cost escalation  – even if imperfectly.

Arkansas didn’t just misunderstand this dynamic, it ignored it. Even worse, lawmakers carved out an exemption for employer-only pharmacies, conveniently shielding Arkansas-based Walmart from the law’s impact. If this were truly about fairness or access, there would be no need to pick winners. That’s not policy, it’s protectionism.

Supporters argue that PBMs are driving independent pharmacies out of business. But that blame is misplaced. The real culprits are shrinking margins from Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, costly federal mandates, and a lack of transparent, direct-to-consumer competition. Targeting PBMs is politically easy but economically backwards.

Banning PBMs won’t fix the system. It will make it worse.

Had the Arkansas law taken effect, it would have closed pharmacies, disrupted care, eliminated jobs, and reduced competition. Vertical integration between PBMs and pharmacies can improve coordination, reduce friction, and cut costs – benefits that disappear when politicians force companies to break apart.

Real reform means restoring competition, not banning it. That means cutting FDA approval times for generics and biosimilars. It means replacing outdated Medicare and Medicaid formulas that reward spending over results. It means decentralizing healthcare power from Washington back to the states – and ultimately, back to patients and their doctors.

Gov. Sanders and other state leaders deserve credit for wanting to fix what’s broken. But this isn’t the way. The Arkansas PBM ban – and similar efforts in Iowa and elsewhere – would fail patients, fail pharmacies, and fail the free market. Thankfully, the Constitution did its job. Now policymakers need to do theirs – by rejecting bans and embracing competition.

Vance Ginn, Ph.D., is president of Ginn Economic Consulting, host of the Let People Prosper Show, former chief economist at the White House Office of Management and Budget, and co-author of the book Empower Patients: Two Doctors’ Cure for Healthcare. Follow him on X @VanceGinn.

The post Op-Ed: U.S. District Court rightfully blocked Arkansas’ PBM ban | Opinion appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This article presents a clear ideological perspective favoring free-market principles and limited government intervention in healthcare. It critiques state-level legislation banning pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) from owning pharmacies as economically harmful, legally flawed, and protectionist. The tone emphasizes regulatory overreach and government distortion of markets, framing PBMs as necessary market actors within a flawed system. The language endorses deregulation, competition, and decentralization, aligning with conservative and pro-business viewpoints. While critical of populist legislative efforts, it promotes market-based reforms and individual choice, reflecting a center-right economic philosophy rather than neutral reporting.

Patients: Two Doctors’ Cure for Healthcare. Follow him on X @VanceGinn.

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Police: McGann admitted to killing the couple, DNA match found at the scene

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www.youtube.com – 40/29 News – 2025-07-31 22:42:45

SUMMARY: Andrew McGann admitted to killing Clinton and Cristen Brink in a random, brutal attack while they protected their young daughters. DNA from the crime scene matched McGann, who acted alone. Police described the case as one of the most heinous in their 27 years, emphasizing the couple’s efforts to shield their 7- and 9-year-old daughters, who were not targeted. Investigators narrowed the search using over 500 tips, identifying McGann through a black Kia Stinger and witness photos. Knives and clothing linked to the suspect were recovered. Authorities are still investigating McGann’s motives and any possible crimes in other states.

Police: McGann admitted to killing the couple, DNA match found at the scene

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