Tag: Blue

  • America’s Looming Conflict: Red Judges vs. Blue Governors

    America’s Looming Conflict: Red Judges vs. Blue Governors

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    He added a note of grim realism: “And I know there are misinterpretations of our Constitution. We’ve all lived with that.”

    It was a calibrated answer, indicating distaste for my hypothetical without completely ruling it out. And at this point, how could he — or any Democratic governor — foreclose the possibility that a rogue judge might precipitate that kind of clash?

    Pritzker, 58, made plain in our conversation that he is not looking for war with the federal judiciary. Yet in many respects war has come to him and other blue state governors, as a cohort of conservative legal activists on the federal bench flex their new power with rulings that strain constitutional credibility.

    Their decisions are attacking the blue state way of life: Stripping back gun regulations, threatening abortion rights and weakening federal policies on environmental regulation and civil rights that align with the values of America’s center-left cities and suburbs. Those communities make up much of the country, but their political power is concentrated in a relatively small number of densely developed states.

    It does not seem far-fetched to imagine that the leader of one of those states, with a population and economy the scale of a midsize nation, might eventually say: Enough.

    I asked to speak with Pritzker after a Texas-based district court judge, Matthew Kacsmaryk, issued a ruling halting the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of mifepristone, a drug used to terminate pregnancy. It was a brazen ideological decision by a judge with a record of espousing far-right views.

    Several politicians have called for the mifepristone ruling to be ignored, though none are governors. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) denounced it as the fruit of “conservatives’ dangerous and undemocratic takeover of our country’s institutions”; he and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) urged the Biden administration not to enforce the decision, which has largely been stayed so far.

    Rep. Nancy Mace, a South Carolina Republican, endorsed the same idea, saying that there was “no basis” for the ruling and warning her party that it was on the wrong side of the country on abortion.

    Should higher courts allow the decision to take effect, it would represent a drastic escalation of the judicial rollback of abortion rights. It would go beyond the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, which abolished the federal right to abortion, by hindering access to abortion even in states where the procedure is legal.

    Pritzker responded by declaring that the ruling had no force in Illinois. That was a statement of legal reality, however, rather than the declaration of a constitutional crisis.

    Illinois is involved in separate federal litigation in Washington state, where the state attorney general, Bob Ferguson, is suing to loosen FDA restrictions on mifepristone. The suit was devised in part as a tool for countering the Texas case: Ferguson told NPR earlier this year that it could help shield states like his from the immediate impact of an extreme ruling in Texas.

    That tactic worked. When the Texas decision came down, the judge in Washington ruled that the availability of mifepristone could not be restricted in the coalition of states suing to loosen access.

    This is a chaotic state of affairs that tests the coherence of the federal system. It is likely to get worse in the future, as the gulf in values widens between the majority of voters who favor abortion rights, gun control and other center-left policies, and an elite faction of judges who do not.

    In our conversation, Pritzker called this a crisis inflicted by former President Donald Trump, whose judicial appointees “are just finding any which way they can to effectuate their policies rather than follow the law.”

    The solution, Pritzker argued, was for Democrats to “appoint rational judges” and gradually grind away the impact of Trump’s appointments. For now, he said states like his should explore every legal tactic imaginable to protect themselves from reckless judicial fiats.

    The Washington state litigation on mifepristone was one such tool. When far-right groups file lawsuits before conservative-leaning courts with an eye toward changing national policy, blue states can launch competing litigation on the same subjects to engineer legal deadlock.

    That could be a frenzied process just to preserve elements of the status quo.

    “We’re all going to have to live with the craziness that is the leftover effect of Donald Trump being in office for four years,” Pritzker conceded.

    I told him I wasn’t sure people in a state like his were prepared to live with “the craziness” indefinitely. Democrats cannot restore the pre-Trump texture of the judiciary without winning a bunch of presidential and Senate elections in a row and then hoping for some well-timed judicial vacancies, particularly on the Supreme Court.

    Pritzker initially thought I was suggesting voters would grow dejected and stop turning out to support Democrats. Quite the opposite, I clarified — I think voters will get volcanically angry.

    “I think that’s what people are doing,” he agreed, “and their reaction is at the ballot box and their reaction is in the streets.”

    Pritzker cited an election this month for control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court: In a “50-50 state,” the liberal-leaning candidate won by a landslide in a campaign in that hinged in part on abortion.

    There are democratic correctives to an out-of-control judiciary, in other words, short of an all-out battle against the bench. It is possible that the task of winning several consecutive national elections for the Democratic Party, and overhauling the judiciary in the process, may not be an unappealing challenge for Pritzker, who is widely seen as a future presidential candidate.

    Yet there is still the problem of the present.

    In many instances, like the mifepristone case, blue states will have legal backup options to try before a governor would have to yield to an extreme district judge. But counting on relief from higher courts is hardly a satisfying strategy for Blue America, under the circumstances.

    The moment may come sooner or later when a strong-willed governor in a major blue state will run out of stays and appeals and injunctions and be left to implement an intolerable, ideological decision in a state with contrary social values and political priorities.

    The voters of that state will probably view the judiciary with distrust or worse if current polling trends hold. They will probably see the decision — it could be on abortion or LGBTQ rights or voting rights or guns — as an act of radicalism by distant figures in black robes.

    Within living memory, there were governors who responded to conditions very much like that by siding with the voters, defying the courts and insisting that their decisions could not be put into effect. They were not blue state progressives but Southern racists; they managed to obstruct desegregation for years and shape the course of American racial politics to this day.

    It is not too hard to conjure the mental image of a 21st Century, blue state George Wallace, standing in the schoolhouse door to defend an entirely different set of social values.

    Consider the Supreme Court decision last year voiding a New York gun regulation, in force since 1911, that required people to show “proper cause” for seeking to carry handguns outside the home in order to obtain a license to do so.

    Let’s say that ruling had come down when the governor of New York was not Kathy Hochul, a conventional Democrat, but rather a politician with more rigid convictions and an appetite for risk and combat — someone who has already expressed support for ignoring certain kinds of judicial rulings, like a Gov. Ocasio-Cortez.

    Let’s say that when the Supreme Court ruled that a century-old handgun restriction was suddenly unconstitutional, that governor responded: The court’s analysis is noted, but our local gun laws are deeply rooted and it would not be practical to change the way we do licensing at this time.

    What would happen then?

    Would the president nationalize New York’s firearm licensing bureaucracy? Or threaten the governor with arrest? Or send in federal forces, like Eisenhower deploying the 101st Airborne to help desegregate Arkansas public schools?

    The answer might depend on which party controls the White House, a political reality that speaks to how frayed the constitutional order already is.

    A Republican administration might seek swift punishment for Gov. Ocasio-Cortez. Would a Justice Department overseen by President Biden or President Harris — or President Pritzker — do the same?

    If not, what then?

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    #Americas #Looming #Conflict #Red #Judges #Blue #Governors
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus (Prism Blue, 8GB RAM, 128GB Storage)

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  • Samsung Galaxy A23 5G, Light Blue (6GB, 128GB Storage) with Offer

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  • What last night’s abortion pill twist means for access — even in blue states

    What last night’s abortion pill twist means for access — even in blue states

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    Unless the Supreme Court intervenes, the 5th Circuit’s decision means that starting Saturday, mifepristone will remain legal at the federal level but access will be much more restricted.

    Mifepristone, one of two drugs commonly used together to cause an abortion, was approved 23 years ago by the FDA for use in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy and recently became the most common method of abortion in the United States.

    The 5th Circuit did not go as far as U.S. District Court Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, whose ruling last Friday would have effectively removed the pill from shelves nationwide, but it did significantly roll back much of the FDA’s recent efforts to expand access.

    The court decision cuts off — at least temporarily — many of the pathways patients have used to obtain the pill in the last few years, including telemedicine prescriptions and mail delivery, and moves the cutoff for prescriptions from the current 10 weeks of pregnancy to seven.

    Should the ruling stand, retail pharmacies will no longer be authorized to dispense the drug. Physicians will not be able to prescribe the drug via telemedicine; instead, patients will have to make multiple in-person office visits to get a prescription. Additionally, non-physicians will not be able to prescribe or administer the drug, and prescribers will have to resume reporting “non-fatal adverse events” related to mifepristone to the federal government. The decision also suspends FDA approval of the company GenBioPro’s generic version of mifepristone, another blow to access.

    Isn’t there another abortion pill?

    Yes, misoprostol. The two pills are usually taken together to end a pregnancy during the first 10 weeks. Numerous studies have found both pills to be safe and effective.

    The new restrictions set to take effect don’t apply to misoprostol, because it is subject to fewer FDA regulations as the medication is primarily prescribed for non-abortion purposes, including treatment for stomach ulcers. Misoprostol can still be used on its own to end a pregnancy and abortion providers around the country say they’ve been preparing for months to pivot to offering misoprostol-only abortions if needed. However, there is a slightly higher risk of side effects and complications when the pills are used without mifepristone. States including California and New York announced this week that they’d be stockpiling misoprostol as a way to ensure access to an alternative method of abortion.

    What does the Biden administration do now?

    Attorney General Merrick Garland said Thursday that the Justice Department will seek emergency relief from the Supreme Court in order “to defend the FDA’s scientific judgment and protect Americans’ access to safe and effective reproductive care.” It would take five justices to put the 5th Circuit’s decision on hold and maintain the status quo while further appeals continue, although it’s possible Justice Samuel Alito — who oversees the 5th Circuit — could issue a temporary stay while the other justices weigh in.

    Can doctors use “off label” prescribing beyond seven weeks of pregnancy?

    Yes, but they may be reluctant to do so. The 5th Circuit’s decision rolled back an FDA policy that had expanded the use of mifepristone for use in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy rather than just the first seven weeks. Many doctors currently prescribe the drug beyond 10 weeks as an off-label use. Under the court decision, prescribing the drug after seven weeks would now be considered off-label. Some doctors may exercise that option, but there is likely to be a chilling effect from the court’s decision, with many doctors wary of running afoul of the court order during a time of legal uncertainty.

    What does this mean for people who live in states where abortion is illegal after six weeks?

    Most people do not know they are pregnant before six weeks. Abortion pills, which could be ordered online and delivered through the mail, had been seen as a way for people who live in states with six-week bans to terminate their pregnancies even after six weeks. Reining in the drug’s availability is likely to dramatically diminish its usefulness in these states.

    What about in blue states, where most abortions remain legal?

    The decision could also hamper access in blue states that have sought to maintain access to the pills, making them harder to access both for their own residents and the wave of people traveling from red states to terminate a pregnancy.

    Jennifer Dalven, the director of the ACLU’s Reproductive Freedom Project, argued to reporters Thursday that a competing district court ruling out of Washington state ordering the FDA to maintain the status quo should mean that nothing changes in the 17 states and Washington, D.C., where attorneys general sued the FDA — but without clear direction from judges and administration officials the legal status in those states remains uncertain.

    “In some places, FDA is under an obligation, a court order, not to further restrict access to abortion,” she said. “But it is completely unclear right now exactly how this will play out. We really need guidance both from the Supreme Court and potentially, ultimately the FDA.”

    Even if those 17 states and D.C. are shielded from the impact of the ruling for now, several of the country’s biggest states, including New York and California, are not part of the case and thus could be hit with the new restrictions ordered by the 5th Circuit.

    What will the anti-abortion challengers do?

    Alliance Defending Freedom, which represents the anti-abortion medical groups seeking to block access to mifepristone, told reporters on a call Thursday that it has “no immediate plans” to appeal the 5th Circuit’s decision even though the panel did not give anti-abortion groups the total suspension of the pills’ approval the groups requested and won from Kacsmaryk last week.

    “For now, we’ve got a great victory in the fact that there are now three required doctor visits to make sure women are safe, and the FDA complies with the rule of law,” said Erin Hawley, ADF’s senior counsel in the case. Hawley added, however, that the plaintiffs will continue pushing to have the FDA’s original approval of mifepristone overturned.

    “We anticipate that we might be able to persuade the 5th Circuit on a fuller briefing that the 2000 ruling is in play,” she said, noting that the appeals court did not take issue with the core of their arguments that the FDA approved the pills without adequately studying their safety risks and only took issue with the timeliness of the challenge to a decision the agency made 23 years ago.

    Josh Gerstein contributed to this report.

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    #nights #abortion #pill #twist #means #access #blue #states
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Plant Seller Senecio Vitalis Blue Live Plant

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  • Blue states are buying up abortion medication amid legal uncertainty

    Blue states are buying up abortion medication amid legal uncertainty

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    California contracted with ANI Pharmaceuticals through the state’s drug affordability initiative to pay a little over $100,000 for the first 250,000 doses on hand, with an option to purchase more at the same price of around 43 cents per pill, according to Deputy Legal Affairs Secretary Julia Spiegel. Pharmacies who cannot find the drug on their own can request some from the state’s supply.

    The details have been shared with other states who may want to take advantage of the same deal. “We wanted to be very mindful about not creating any kind of run on the market or uncertainty in other states,” Spiegel said.

    Newsom is not the only Democratic governor buying abortion medication in bulk. Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey also announced Monday that her state would be purchasing 15,000 doses of mifepristone through the state university system. Last week, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced his state had purchased 30,000 doses of mifepristone through the correctional system and 10,000 doses through the university system.

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul on Saturday told CNN she would push legislation that would require insurance companies to cover misoprostol. “We’re trying to figure out all the different ways we can get ahead of this,” she said.

    Newsom and fellow Democrats have long proclaimed California to be a “reproductive freedom state,” launching a website to connect abortion seekers with services, appropriating money to help people with the costs of getting an abortion and teaming up with other states to secure abortion access.

    Misoprostol works by causing contractions, so the uterus expels any products of conception and passes a pregnancy. It’s usually taken 24-48 hours after mifepristone, a drug that blocks the hormone progesterone and terminates a pregnancy.

    Mifepristone was the subject of two federal court rulings on Friday that could complicate patients’ access. A judge in Texas ruled that the FDA’s 20-year-old approval of the drug should be blocked — a decision the Justice Department immediately vowed to appeal. Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra said the Biden administration may simply ignore the decision. But on the same day, a federal judge in Washington ruled in a separate case against blocking mifepristone.

    Misoprostol can also be used by itself to end a pregnancy, which could provide a backstop if mifepristone suddenly becomes unobtainable.

    “Given the uncertainty and fear with the ongoing litigation and conflicting court opinions, it’s hard enough for those in the weeds of it to follow what’s happening,” Speigel said. “We purchased this stockpile to ensure Californians know that they have ongoing access to medication abortion no matter what is happening in the courts.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Story@Home Metro Collection 186 TC Cotton Bedsheets for Double Bed with 2 Pillow Covers, Beige and Blue

    Story@Home Metro Collection 186 TC Cotton Bedsheets for Double Bed with 2 Pillow Covers, Beige and Blue

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  • FRITZY 3 Layer Electronic Gadget Organizer Case, Electronic Accessories Organizer Bag for Cables, Hard Disk, Power Bank, Charger and tech kit Organizer – Blue

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  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Mondrian Stripes 144 TC 100% Cotton Double Bedsheet with 2 Pillow Covers, Blue and Yellow

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