Midwest
I'm Deb Fischer: This is why I want Nebraska's vote for Senate
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Two weeks ago, I stopped at the Hy-Vee grocery store off Pioneers Boulevard in Lincoln. I’d spent the day traveling back from meeting with Nebraskans in North Platte, Kearney and Grand Island – a long day on Interstate 80.
On my way in, an older gentleman recognized me and told me his story. He had lived right, paid his taxes on time, and contributed to Social Security his whole life. But now, that fixed income was buying less milk, fewer eggs and hardly any beef.
This wasn’t the future he’d expected. I thanked him for his thoughts, and as he walked away, he said, “Oh, and can you also fix that damn border?”
Sen. Deb Fisher speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill on May 1, 2024. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
All Americans, and Nebraskans especially, don’t need much to be happy. We take care of ourselves, and we work hard. But we do expect a safe place to raise a family, and a fair shot at earning a decent living – or at least enough to pay for housing, food and the occasional Huskers game.
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When my husband Bruce and I raised our family on the family ranch in Cherry County, things were different. Bringing up a family is hard work, but groceries were more affordable, and we knew that the police would keep the streets safe, all while the best military in the world protected our borders and our freedoms.
But as everyone now knows, including the gentleman in the parking lot of Hy-Vee, that’s not the America we’re living in anymore.
Sen. Deb Fischer speaks to the press on the transparency from the Department of Defense regarding the health of Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Jan. 11, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images)
Nebraska’s families today are paying about $1,140 more a month for essentials than they were just four years ago. We all feel the pinch in the checkout line, or when we pay our heating bill, or when we’re forced to choose between new school supplies and the mortgage payment. But when you put a dollar value on it, the loss is staggering. Every Nebraska family took at least a $13,000 pay cut this year compared to four years ago, and they didn’t do a thing to deserve it.
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The last four years, approximately five times the population of the entire state of Nebraska has poured into the United States – the vast majority across our southern border. Some people say illegal immigration is a victimless crime, what’s the big deal?
Try telling that to the Americans who’ve seen what an open border does to communities – sons and daughters lost to drug overdoses or violent crime, fathers and mothers who can’t get ahead at work because illegal immigrants work for less money under the table, or the hospitals and other social services that are now forced to care for people who aren’t even supposed to be here in the first place.
Sen. Deb Fischer speaks on border security and Title 42 during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol on May 11, 2023. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
In the last four years, the world has gone from a largely safe, stable place to literally on fire. Israel is fighting for its life, but America isn’t standing beside them. China is expanding its influence commercially and building up its military, but we’re not keeping up. Russia is taking advantage of weak American leadership, and other states will soon follow. The entire world that American leadership, power and commerce built the last 80 years is slipping through our fingers.
It’s not the America – or the world – I want my grandchildren to grow up in.
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When I first ran for Senate, I promised that I wouldn’t be another talking head on TV, another Washington show pony. Nebraska deserved a work horse, and so I put my head down and did the work. And I can honestly say to you today that I’ve delivered for the state that I love.
en. Deb Fischer speaks during a ceremony to unveil a statue of novelist Willa Cather in National Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol on June 7, 2023. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
In my years of public life, I’ve put $4 billion into repairing highways and local roads, rebuilding bridges, ensuring safe drinking water, and modernizing airports, including Omaha’s Eppley Airfield and the Lincoln Airport.
I’ve pushed for more funding for our troops, and I passed defense bills to reverse decades of a decline in American military power. I’ve also supported Nebraska’s role in keeping America safe, by fighting for improvements not only to our intercontinental ballistic missiles in the western part of the state, but also to Offutt Air Force Base in the east.
And I’ve voted many, many times to secure our border – for all the good it’s done during this administration.
Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Trump’s pick for the Supreme Court, meets with Sen. Deb Fischer at the U.S. Capitol on Oct. 1, 2020. (Graeme Jennings-Pool/Getty Images)
I worked with President Trump to pass better trade deals for our producers, and I’ve passed farm bills to keep the future of family farms and ranches alive for the next generation.
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I voted against the outrageous spending and regulations that fueled inflation. And I passed legislation that would have lowered the cost of shipping to keep grocery prices down – but President Biden vetoed it.
Working with Omaha law enforcement, I passed a law just this year to make it easier to recruit and retain police officers so that the streets are safer for our kids. And I’ve passed the first ever national paid family leave law so that we don’t have to choose between earning a living and taking care of those kids.
Sen. Deb Fischer speaks during the International Association of Fire Fighters Legislative Conference General Session at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill, March 9, 2015. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
Despite all these things, I find myself in the same situation as the gentleman outside Hy-Vee – heartbroken by the current state of this nation, and deeply concerned for the future.
But with new leadership in Washington, and God willing, we will reverse America’s decline this November.
My name is Deb Fischer. I’m asking Nebraskans for their vote so we can change the course of this country. I’m asking for their trust and their support so we can build the future our children and grandchildren deserve – not the one we’re headed toward.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM SEN. DEB FISCHER
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Illinois
Illinois State Police release video of deadly shooting involving ISP troopers on South Side
CHICAGO (WLS) — Illinois State Police have released videos showing a deadly shooting involving state troopers last month in Chicago.
The video in the player above may be difficult to watch.
The shooting happened around 10:50 p.m. April 15 in the 6500-block of South Champlain Avenue in the city’s Woodlawn neighborhood.
ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch
Officers got a call for a domestic battery from a passenger in a vehicle on I-57.
That passenger led the officers to find her boyfriend, 24-year-old Jalen Carpenter, in the 6500-block of South Champlain Avenue.
That’s where the newly released video picks up.
ABC7 froze the video at the moment it appears Carpenter fires a weapon during a scuffle with the officers.
No one was hit by that bullet, but seconds later, the officers return fire, killing Carpenter, officials said.
The officers are still on administrative status while the Illinois State Police Division of Internal Investigation investigates the case.
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Indiana
Indiana Peony Festival rescheduled due to storms
NOBLESVILLE, Ind. (WISH) — Mother Nature is forcing one of central Indiana’s most popular spring festivals to move.
The Indiana Peony Festival has been rescheduled from Saturday, May 16, to Sunday, May 17, due to forecasted storms and high winds.
“After closely monitoring the weather overnight, and after doing everything we could to keep today’s plans in place, conditions have unfortunately taken a turn for the worse,” festival organizers said in a statement. “We are so incredibly sorry for any inconvenience this may have caused.”
Noblesville Mayor Chris Jensen says he supports the festival’s decision to postpone until Sunday.
“While we can’t control the weather, this adjustment helps ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for everyone involved. The city is ready to support the festival’s efforts for tomorrow, and we look forward to welcoming visitors to enjoy the event on Sunday,” Jensen said in a release.
Know Before You Go:
- Festival Hours: Remain the same — 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
- Location: Noblesville’s Seminary Park and Historic Downtown
- Events: Festival and Downtown Brunch and Retail Crawl Brunch & Blooms
For updated information, please visit indianapeonyfestival.com.
Iowa
‘Viral’ mac and cheese bar expanding in Iowa with new Waukee store
See the 2025 Des Moines Register Essential Restaurants
What are the best restaurants in Des Moines? These entries from the Des Moines Register’s Essential Restaurants list won’t let you down.
You know that viral mac and cheese place? The one that slathers every bowl with ungodly amounts of cheese? The one that makes you feel lactose intolerant just looking at it?
Yeah. Roni’s Mac Bar is opening its second Iowa location, this time in Waukee.
The store will celebrate with a grand opening on Saturday, May 16 at 10:30 a.m. sharp
In a video on social media, the company credits the new location choice to the Waukee man who drove to a location in Waco, Texas, asked for a bowl so cheesy that the chef making it felt lactose-intolerant just looking at it.
Frank Senese, chief executive officer of Roni’s Mac and Cheese, said the business as the “Chipotle of mac and cheese.”
“It’s comfort food; whether you’re a hungover college kid, tattooed biker or a little princess in a tutu, you’re going to find something here that you’ll love,” Senese told the Ames Tribune before the company’s restaurant opened there in 2025. “It’s a fun way to think outside the box.”
The first 100 people to get in line can spin the wheel for a chance to win giveaways and a year’s worth of mac and cheese.
Roni’s Mac bar boasts massive menu
The quote, “Think outside the box” is painted on the wall inside the mac and cheese bar, and the menu certainly inspires customers to do just that.
Roni’s Mac Bar has created a menu of more than 77 million possible combinations that continues to grow, Senese said.
Every bowl can be unique, with drizzles like pesto and ranch, and toppings such as tomatoes and even pineapple − a topping that can be a key indicator of a repeat customer, Senese said.
Where to find Roni’s Mac Bar in Waukee
- Location: 1195 SE Alice’s Road, Waukee
- Contact: 515-450-2497, ronismacbar.com
- Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. daily starting May 16
Lucia Cheng is a service and trending reporter at the Des Moines Register. Contact her at lcheng@gannett.com or 515-284-8132.
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