Tag: ignore

  • Ignore Microsoft’s whines about the Activision Blizzard takeover. The CMA did its job | Nils Pratley

    Ignore Microsoft’s whines about the Activision Blizzard takeover. The CMA did its job | Nils Pratley

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    The silliest line in Microsoft president Brad Smith’s whine about the UK was his claim that the Competition and Markets Authority is “not only unelected but unaccountable”. That is an absurdly over-the-top reaction to a regulatory thumbs-down in the UK, on entirely coherent grounds, for Microsoft’s planned $68.7bn (£55bn) takeover of the video games firm Activision Blizzard.

    What does Smith want? A national poll to choose the directors of the independent body responsible for competition and consumer protection? In practice, one suspects, Smith would expect to see something like the UK’s current system.

    The chair of the CMA, its chief executive and the rest of the board are appointed by the business secretary of the elected government. Grant Shapps, holder of the post at the time, appointed Sarah Cardell as CMA chief executive last December.

    As for accountability, Smith must know that CMA decisions can be appealed. Microsoft is free to take its argument to the Competition Appeals Tribunal, a separate body. And, if it doesn’t like what the CAT decides, it can trot along to the court of appeal for another go.

    This setup is different from the one that operates in Smith’s and Microsoft’s home patch of the US, but not wildly so. In the US, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has to sue to block a deal (which, note, it is now doing in the Activision case). Ultimately, though, the process can end up in court in both countries.

    That is why, one trusts, Rishi Sunak will ignore Smith’s invitation to “look hard at the role of the CMA and regulatory structure in the UK” if he wants the tech industry to flourish here.

    Microsoft can yank investment from the UK if it wishes, but another part of the global tech industry may be encouraged by the rare sight of a regulator being willing to step into the path of US Big Tech’s steamroller.

    Smith hardly helped his case when he tried to paint the UK as a place where it’s hard for a successful tech founder to sell a business. The record shows that the number of deals blocked by the CMA – across all sectors – is tiny in most years.

    Indeed, the more common complaint is that the regulator is too willing to accept an acquirer’s proposed remedies to competition concerns. Microsoft tried the remedy route with Activision but the CMA, unusually, wasn’t convinced. Tough.

    And, whatever Smith thinks, the EU is not some regulatory paradise for big companies in which every big deal goes through on the nod. Deals sometimes get stopped by Brussels too.

    Those who regard Activision hits Call of Duty, Candy Crush and so on as recreational fluff may view the stakes here as low, but nobody should doubt the CMA’s right to inspect the Microsoft deal.

    One US company was trying to buy another US company, but the relevant measure is the size of UK revenue. Activision generates about £700m of its global £6bn turnover in the UK, so 10 times the CMA’s £70m cutoff. This was not a marginal case.

    On the substance of Smith’s grumble – that Microsoft’s remedies for the cloud part of the gaming market were sufficient – opinion obviously differs, but the CMA hasn’t lost its marbles.

    In essence, the takeover would wed a big content company (Activision) to a big next-generation platform provider (Microsoft). The proposal was never going to be a slam-dunk, which is why the FTC and the European Commission are also all over it.

    All contractual remedies – especially time-limited ones as offered by Microsoft – must be policed. So, if the CMA had said yes, the regulator would be permanently diving into a cloud market that is still in its infancy.

    It is surely a reasonable pro-competition and pro-innovation view of the world to believe, first, that the market should be left to develop freely if cloud-based delivery is the coming force; and, second, that Microsoft is big enough already if it has an estimated 60%-70% of cloud gaming services.

    For Smith and Microsoft, it is apparently “the darkest day in our four decades in Britain”. The remark merely advertises Big Tech’s sense of entitlement. Go to appeal, or take the decision on the chin. Either way, get a sense of proportion.

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    #Ignore #Microsofts #whines #Activision #Blizzard #takeover #CMA #job #Nils #Pratley
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • South Carolina Republican says to ignore FDA abortion pill ruling

    South Carolina Republican says to ignore FDA abortion pill ruling

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    image

    The ruling was appealed by the Biden administration as lawmakers, including Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), called on President Joe Biden to use his executive powers to protect the drugs’ availability even sooner. Hundreds of thousands of patients in the United States use the medication both for abortions and treating miscarriages.

    Mace sided with the outspoken Democrats, the first Republican to publicly do so.

    “This is an issue that Republicans have been largely on the wrong side of,” she said. “We have, over the last nine months, not shown compassion toward women, and this is one of those issues that I’ve tried to lead on as someone who’s pro-life and just have some common sense.”

    Mace said there’s “no basis” for the ruling, explaining that the Texas judge cited a Supreme Court decision, which was later overturned, for his decision.

    Over the weekend, Rep. Tony Gonzalez (R-Texas) floated the idea of defunding FDA programs if the ruling is ignored. When asked about those comments, Mace emphasized that most Americans aren’t radically opposed to abortion access and would likely agree with the FDA’s authority to allow the drug’s sale.

    “We are getting it wrong on this issue,” she said. “We’ve got to show some compassion to women, especially women who’ve been raped. We’ve got to show compassion on the abortion issue because by and large most Americans aren’t with us on this issue.”

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    #South #Carolina #Republican #ignore #FDA #abortion #pill #ruling
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • To retain pole position in 2024, BJP can’t ignore small parties in Bihar

    To retain pole position in 2024, BJP can’t ignore small parties in Bihar

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    Patna: The 2024 Lok Sabha elections may be contested between the Mahagathbandhan and the BJP in Bihar, but the importance of smaller parties cannot be ruled out.

    The political leaders know this fact and hence they are going all-out to bring them in their side.

    Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Friday invited Chirag Paswan during the Iftar party in his former official residence probably to pacify him. Chirag Paswan however refused to go there.

    MS Education Academy

    Deputy chief minister Tejashwi Yadav invited Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav (Jan Adhikar Party) in the Iftar party scheduled in Rabri Devi’s residence on Sunday. Pappu Yadav accepted the invitation and has given a positive signal for the event.

    Upendra Kushwaha, who recently left JD-U and formed a new political party Rashtriya Lok Janata Dal (RLJD), is making a strategy to become a strong contender at a time when he opts for an alliance. Similar situations are with Pashupati Kumar Paras (RLJP), Mukesh Sahani (Vikassheel Insaan Party) and Jitan Ram Manjhi (Hindustani Awam Morcha) as well.

    In Bihar, Chirag Paswan is considered as the strongest leader of all smaller parties. His popularity was seen several times during by-polls in Mokama, Gopalganj, Kurhani and other places. He is having bigger face value than any other leaders of BJP Bihar wing.

    It was seen recently during the birth anniversary celebration of Chaudhar Mal – a Dalit icon – in Mokama when a large crowd assembled there to see Chirag Paswan. When Samrat Chaudhary went on the dais to make the speech, people hooted. Samrat Chaudhary was claiming that he is also from OBC but they were not ready to listen to him. Eventually, Samrat Chaudhary left the event only in two to three minutes.

    Such a situation probably emerged after the Nawada rally when Union Home Minister Amit Shah claimed that BJP will contest the 2024 Lok Sabha election for all 40 seats in Bihar. Chirag Paswan himself claimed that he is a Hanuman of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and always stands behind BJP. Shah’s statement may hurt the supporters of Chirag Paswan.

    Following the Chaudhar Mal birth anniversary event, Chirag Paswan called for his party Lok Janshakti Party Ram Vilas (LJPR) state executive committee meeting in Patna and announced to contest on all 40 Lok Sabha seats of Bihar in 2024.

    Such a decision of Chirag Paswan could tease BJP as it is a single opposition party in Bihar and it has to face the might of Lalu Prasad, Nitish Kumar, Jitan Ram Manjhi, Dipankar Bhattacharya (CPIM-L) and Congress.

    For BJP, making alliances with smaller parties is its political compulsion. At the same time, if Chirag Paswan would opt for the strategy of the 2020 assembly election, his political existence could be over in Bihar. During the 2020 assembly election, Chirag Paswan had given the tickets to candidates against JD-U only to cut the votes of its candidates. He had deeply hurt the JD-U at that time, reducing it from 69 in 2015 to 43 in 2020.

    Pasupati Kumar Paras, the MP from Hajipur and national president of Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party (RLJP), is another leader in Bihar who is currently sharing the cabinet of the Narendra Modi government. After the separation from Chirag Paswan, five MPs came into RLSP. In the case of alliance with BJP, it will be a tough challenge to accommodate Paras in NDA. Chirag Paswan already announced that he will not make an alliance with his uncle Pasupati Kumar Paras’s party.

    Mukesh Sahani is another leader in Bihar who claimed himself as the son of Mallah (Fisherman community). The Narendra Modi government had given Y plus category security to him. The idea could be to make an alliance with his party VIP in the 2024 Lok Sabha election.

    Sahani is considered an influential leader in the fisherman community in Bihar and he proved it in the 2020 Bihar assembly election when VIP won four seats. Mukesh Sahani however lost his own seat at that time. Later, three of his MLAs joined the BJP and another MLA died in 2021. Sahani has not opened his cards about which way he will go. Since Mahagathbandhan has seven parties, the chances of negotiation for the alliance are thin. So, he may side with BJP.

    Upendra Kushwaha is another prominent face of Kushwaha community in Bihar. Like Chirag Paswan, Upendra Kushwaha is another leader who has openly supported BJP in Bihar.

    However, BJP has given a clear message to Upendra Kushwaha that the former is not dependent only on him for the Kushwaha vote bank. BJP recently appointed Samrat Chaudhary as state president of the party. He also comes from Kushwaha community.

    For the BJP, the vote of the Kushwaha community is important. It is a core vote bank of Nitish Kumar’s Lav-Kush equation. BJP wants to intrude into Nitish Kumar’s vote bank and the separation of Upendra Kushwaha followed by the appointment of Samrat Chaudhary could be a plan of its strategy.

    When it comes to Chirag Paswan and Pashupati Kumar Paras, BJP has to make an understanding between these two. In case anyone would go away from NDA, it will deeply hurt the Dalit vote bank which the BJP is aiming at through these two.

    The trust issue could arise between BJP and Upendra Kushwaha as well after the appointment of Samrat Chaudhary. The motive of Upendra Kushwaha has been hit after the BJP appointed Samrat Chaudhary as Bihar unit chief.

    Similarly, Mukesh Sahani needs to be cautious this time while dealing with BJP. He knew how BJP got his three MLAs.

    The Lok Sabha election 2024 is crucial for BJP in Bihar. The state has 40 seats which will decide the fate of Narendra Modi. It is a non-BJP-ruled state and hence the saffron leaders are dependent only on the mood of voters. In that case, negotiating with smaller parties is the only way to get success and smaller parties, they would not afford to come in the position of ‘Vote Katwa’ to help BJP.

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    #retain #pole #position #BJP #ignore #small #parties #Bihar

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ignore the courts? Some Democrats say Texas abortion pill ruling demands it.

    Ignore the courts? Some Democrats say Texas abortion pill ruling demands it.

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    Now, senators, representatives, state officials and advocacy groups are calling on President Joe Biden to defy the U.S. District Court judge and use his executive powers to protect the drugs’ availability even before the case is heard by the conservative-leaning 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

    “I believe the Food and Drug Administration has the authority to ignore this ruling, which is why I’m again calling on President Biden and the FDA to do just that,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said Friday. “The FDA, doctors, and pharmacies can and must go about their jobs like nothing has changed and keep mifepristone accessible to women across America. If they don’t, the consequences of banning the most common method of abortion in every single state will be devastating.”

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) backed Wyden’s call in a CNN interview Friday, arguing that the “deeply partisan and unfounded nature” of the court’s decision undermines its own legitimacy and the White House should “ignore” it.

    But the Biden administration is afraid any public defiance of the Friday-night ruling could hurt its position while the case moves through the appeals process.

    A person who is advising the White House on legal strategy, granted anonymity to discuss the ongoing litigation, said administration officials think it would be “premature” and “pretty risky” to take the step Wyden is calling for, because it’s possible a higher court would reverse the decision by Texas U.S. District Court Judge Matthew Kacsmayrk.

    “They’re able to present themselves right now as the adults in the room who care about the rule of law,” the person said. “But that posture would come under pressure if they jumped out of the gate and said they wouldn’t abide by the ruling.”

    The person added that the White House sees limited benefit in publicly defying the court’s ruling at this juncture for three reasons:

    First, ignoring a lower court ruling stripping FDA approval of the pills wouldn’t stop GOP-controlled states from imposing their own restrictions and prosecuting those who violate them. Second, a future Republican president could reverse any decision on enforcement discretion and choose to aggressively prosecute those who sell or prescribe the pills. And third, even in the short term, the president defying the court could leave doctors across the country afraid to dispense the pills.

    “It’s a very, very loose Band Aid that wouldn’t actually ensure access to medication abortion,” the person said. “And when you have another option on the table like the appeals process, it’s a pretty risky strategy.”

    Additionally, the person said, because the Texas judge put his ruling on hold for one week to give the Biden administration time to appeal, the pills can still be legally prescribed in much of the country, limiting the urgency to take such a drastic action.

    Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) told reporters on a call Saturday that while she is sympathetic to Wyden’s position, she doesn’t endorse anything that could jeopardize the administration’s fight to overturn the district court ruling.

    “I get the sentiment, because this is a truly infuriating situation,” she said. “This outrageous decision had nothing to do with the facts or science or the law. But the key thing that needs to happen right now is making sure this decision is quickly appealed and reversed in court.”

    Murray and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Saturday signaled their intent to use the decision to mobilize their base in the 2024 elections — arguing that flipping the House and passing a law restoring Roe v. Wade is the best path to achieving more permanent protections for the pills than whatever temporary protections the Biden administration could offer through executive actions.

    “This battle is going to be fought with public opinion and with our votes at the ballot box, from here until we move forward in 2024,” Murray said.

    Schumer suggested Democrats will force votes in Senate in the coming months that “put Republicans on the record” on the issue.

    “The American people will see for themselves the stark contrast between Democrats who are relentlessly fighting for women’s rights, to make decisions about their own bodies and MAGA Republicans who will stop at virtually nothing to enact a national abortion ban with no exceptions,” Schumer told reporters on Saturday.

    Biden himself appeared to endorse this strategy in the hours after the ruling, saying in a statement that while the administration was appealing the case, “The only way to stop those who are committed to taking away women’s rights and freedoms in every state is to elect a Congress who will pass a law restoring Roe versus Wade.

    Even some abortion-rights leaders who have previously criticized the Biden administration for not doing enough to protect access say they support the wait-and-see strategy given the current judicial threats to the pills.

    “They do tend to be cautious,” NARAL President Mini Timmaraju told POLITICO. “But with stakes like this, with these courts, they should be. They’re the defendant. We want them to be careful. Also, it has served them well in the past. So I feel confident the administration is doing what they need to do.”

    Some legal experts are also warning the administration against defying the decision this early in the process, saying doing so could create a precedent that gives future presidents cover to ignore “future orders that would be more firmly rooted in the law.”

    “It would not be advisable for the FDA to disregard a court order even if they believe it’s wrong,” said Joanne Rosen, an attorney and senior lecturer at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “They could appeal. They could re-initiate the approval process of mifepristone all over again to get it back on the market.”

    Yet others in the legal community are urging the administration to play hardball, arguing that the FDA was given enforcement discretion by Congress and previous court rulings and the agency should use those to the fullest extent if it is ultimately ordered to rescind its approval of abortion pills.

    Those in this camp are pointing to another court ruling Friday night out of Washington State ordering the FDA to maintain the status quo for abortion pills and forbidding the agency from rolling back access in the dozen blue states that brought the challenge. Those clashing decisions, they say, give the Biden administration cover to maintain access to the drugs in defiance of the Texas court if that ruling stands.

    “These are not radical,” said David S. Cohen, a professor at the Drexel University Thomas R. Kline School of Law. “These are real strategies within the law.”

    Other Senate Democrats, anticipating this ruling, have called on the Biden administration to “use every legal and regulatory tool in its power” to keep abortion pills on the market. Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) recently petitioned the White House to use “any existing authorities, such as enforcement discretion, to allow mifepristone to remain available.

    “FDA has previously used its authority to protect patients’ access to treatment and could do so again,” they wrote.

    Timmaraju sees the mounting pressure from Democratic officials to ignore the court ruling as meaningful — even if they don’t ultimately goad the Biden administration into sweeping action.

    “The senators are doing their jobs — it’s their job to push the White House and agencies like the FDA,” she said. “We need lawmakers from blue states getting out there and calling public attention to this case and raising awareness. For us, the biggest point people need to understand is that there is no state that is safe from these tactics.”

    Adam Cancryn contributed reporting.

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    #Ignore #courts #Democrats #Texas #abortion #pill #ruling #demands
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Can’t ignore Savarkar’s sacrifice in freedom struggle, says Pawar

    Can’t ignore Savarkar’s sacrifice in freedom struggle, says Pawar

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    Nagpur: Nobody can ignore late Hindutva ideologue VD Savarkar’s sacrifice for the country’s independence struggle but disagreements over him cannot be made a national issue today as there are many pressing matters to focus on, said Nationalist Congress Party chief Sharad Pawar on Saturday.

    Defending Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, who is being targeted by the Bharatiya Janata Party for speaking about issues in India on foreign soil, he said this is not the first time an Indian has spoken about issues in the country while abroad.

    Pawar was speaking at the Press Club in Nagpur, where he also visited Union minister Nitin Gadkari’s home.

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    To a query on whether he spoke to Rahul Gandhi about Savarkar and if the Congress leader would slow down in his criticism of the late Hindutva ideologue, Pawar said leaders of 18-20 political parties recently sat and discussed major issues before the country.

    The BJP has accused Gandhi of repeatedly “insulting” Savarkar. It is also organising Savarkar Gaurav Yatra in his honour.

    “I suggested that there is a need for us to deliberate on the way the country is being run by those in power,” he said.

    Pawar said, “Today, Savarkar is not a national issue, it is an old thing. We had said a few things about Savarkar but it was not personal. It was against Hindu Maha Sabha. But there is another side to it as well. We cannot ignore the sacrifice made by Savarkar ji for the independence of the country.”

    About 32 years ago, Pawar said, he had spoken in Parliament about Savarkar’s progressive views. He said Savarkar built a house in Ratnagiri and also constructed a small temple in front of it. “He deputed a person from the Valmiki community to perform puja in the temple. I think this was a very progressive thing,” said Pawar.

    The NCP leader said there is no need to thrust Savarkar into the national narrative especially because there many other major issues concerning the common public.

    On the BJP’s criticism of Gandhi, Pawar said the Congress leader also has the freedom to put his opinion like everyone else.

    Asked if it is proper for a leader to speak about issues concerning India on foreign soil, Pawar said one should not give much importance to it as this has not been done for the first time.

    The NCP leader leaders criticised the government in the past as well. “Only now such issues are being brought up repeatedly. If people feel agitated over something in the country and if an Indian talks about it, then I think those issues should be addressed.”

    To a query if he thinks Lok Sabha and state elections will be held together in 2024, Pawar said they won’t happen at the same time.

    During his Nagpur visit, Pawar also visited Union minister Nitin Gadkari at the latter’s home and called it a courtesy visit. On the request of Gadkari to Pawar, a sub-centre of Vasantdada Sugar Institute, Pune, is coming up in Nagpur. Pawar is the president of this institute.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #ignore #Savarkars #sacrifice #freedom #struggle #Pawar

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )