In the News
On Friday, October 2 U.S. Representative Gary Palmer (R from Hoover) was among the dignitaries on hand for the Grandview Medical Center Ribbon Cutting in Birmingham, Alabama.
Friday, September 28, the political world was rocked when the Speaker of the US House of Representative John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced that he had made the decision to resign from the both Speakership and his seat in the US House of Representatives.
U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks, R-5th, accurately predicted on Friday that a congressman from California would go after the House Speaker position.
On Monday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced his candidacy for the role left vacant by the surprise announcement that current House Speaker John Boehner would resign at the end of October.
Brooks made his prediction while speaking to Yellowhammer Radio about Boehner's resignation announcement on Friday.
John Boehner, the 13-term Ohio Congressman who led the Republican party to an impressive House majority in 2010 and again in 2012, announced he's stepping down as Speaker of the Houseand will resign from Congress at the end of October.
House Speaker John Boehner's abrupt decision on Friday to step down from his post and his congressional seat effective next month came as a shock to the Alabama congressional delegation, who said the path forward for the Republican agenda in the House remains unclear until a successor to Boehner is picked.
U.S. Congressman Gary Palmer announced Sept. 15 that the Verbena Volunteer Fire and Rescue Department received a grant for $69,715.
The Assistance to Firefighters Operations and Safety grant comes from the Department of Homeland Security.
The department's application competed against thousands through a peer review process for a portion of federal funding, according to a release from Palmer's office.
Behind him, multiple screens showed a graph of recent cybersecurity activity. Another showed a global map of ongoing cyberattacks in various parts of the world.
Rep. Gary Palmer toured Regions' Data Center as a team of the bank's technology experts explained what banks are doing to protect consumers and to help ensure consistent access to financial services.
"You can have the greatest technology," said Greg Gagliano, Chief Information Officer at Regions. "But if it doesn't work, it doesn't serve people."