Penélope Cruz et Johnny Depp à l’assaut de Cannes

Samedi 14 mai, le Palais des Festivals de Cannes recevra les acteurs de Pirates des Caraïbes. Un arrivage de pirates célèbres pour ravir la Croisette, annoncé ce mardi par nos confrères du Parisien.

Ils en ont de la chance les prochains festivaliers de Cannes. C’est un tapis rouge de nouveautés qui va se dérouler devant eux. Après, la cérémonie d’ouverture et la présentation en avant-première de Midnight in Paris de

, le 64e Festival de Cannes s’offrira le quatrième volet de Pirates des Caraïbes, le samedi 14 mai. Un événement attendu, tant dans la salle de projection que sur le red carpet puisque ce nouvel épisode, La Fontaine De Jouvence, sera porté devant les Cannois par un incroyable casting d’acteurs.

et

en tête. Les deux acteurs principaux de l’épopée de piraterie façon Disney, ne se quittent plus. Mais pour la montée des marches, on espère que l’éternel Jack Sparow sera au bras de sa belle Vanessa Paradis, et que la sirène Cruz viendra avec son doux Javier Bardem. Les jeunes parents espagnols devraient ainsi faire monter la température d’un degré. D’autres loups de mer à l’affiche de La Fontaine de Jouvence feront aussi le déplacement, comme Ian McShane, Geoffrey Rush, Sam Chaflin. Et, au milieu de tous ces monstres du cinéma, la Française Astrid Bergès-Frisbey, 24 ans quiinterprète Syrena dans Pirates des Caraïbes 4, et que vous verrez également dans La Fille Du Puisatier, réalisé par Daniel Auteuil et en salles le 27 avril).

Rob Marshall, le réalisateur de Nine et chef d’orchestre de ce quatrième épisode sera également de la partie, sa vision nouvelle des aventures du capitaine Sparow, après celle donnée par Gore Verbinski, mise à l’honneur. Le pirate le plus sexy des Caraïbes va se trouver entraîné par une de ses anciennes conquêtes dans la recherche de la célèbre Fontaine de Jouvence. Coup de sabre, mer défaite et passions amoureuses risquent fort de figurer encore une fois dans le scénario. Réponse le 18 mai pour tous les moussaillons français.

Laure Costey

Mardi 12 avril 2011

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Lady Gaga dévoile encore un peu plus son Born this Way

Lady Gaga continue d’alimenter l’incroyable attente autour de son album, Born this Way, qui doit sortir le 23 mai. Deux nouveaux titres, Hair et Marry the Night confirment l’énorme potentiel commercial d’un album qui devrait cartonner.

Lady Gaga est joueuse, mais sait faire plaisir à ses fans. Au gré de ses passages dans des émissions télés un peu partout en Europe, la chanteuse offre quelques performances live et des prestations dont elle a le secret. Elle laisse filtrer quelques confidences sur elle et sa vie privée, juste ce qu’il faut pour alimenter le buzz et faire parler d’elle. Et pour satisfaire les gagas de la Lady qui n’en peuvent plus d’attendre la sortie de son album Born this way, prévue le 23 mai, elle révèle quelques uns des titres qui figureront sur le CD.

Après Born this Way, Judas et The edge of glory, deux nouvelles chansons circulent sur le net: Hair et Marry the night. Deux nouvelles bombes en puissance qui confirment ce que les précédentes annonçaient: l’album Born this way va casser la baraque. En plus d’être diablement efficace pour rythmer les dancefloors à travers le monde, il possède un potentiel commercial énorme qui devrait échapper à la crise du disque actuelle et aux baisses des ventes en général.

Les plus impatients pourront se faire une idée dès mercredi 18 mai, soit cinq jours avant la sortie officielle et mondiale, puisque Born this way sera disponible en pré-écoute sur la page Facebook de la marque Samsung. Reine de la promo, experte en marketing, Lady Gaga est bien décidée à s’installer au sommet des charts et à devenir l’artiste féminine numéro un au monde. Pour ceux qui voudront y échapper, autant prendre un billet pour la lune.

Découvrez la chanson Hair:

Jean-Christian Hay

Mardi 17 mai 2011

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Un remake japonais pour “Impitoyable” !

“Impitoyable”, film culte réalisé et interprété par Clint Eastwood, fera l’objet d’un remake au pays du soleil levant, avec Ken Watanabe (“Batman Begins”) dans le rôle-titre.

C’est désormais chose certaine : il y aura un remake japonais d’Impitoyable, inoubliable western qui avait valu à Clint Eastwood l’Oscar du Meilleur film en 1993. La mise en scène est confiée à un certain Lee Sang-il, et le comédien Ken Watanabe, redoutable maître d’arts martiaux dans Batman Begins, doit endosser le rôle principal, originellement tenu par Eastwood : un chasseur de primes (ici samourai) désormais rangé mais contraint à reprendre du service pour subvenir aux besoins de sa famille (à noter également que les deux hommes s’étaient déjà côtoyés sur Lettres d’Iwo Jima). Le tournage devrait commencer en septembre au Japon.

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La bande-annonce d’Impitoyable (1992) :


Impitoyable

Laurent Schenck avec Asian Wiki

Les jambes d’Heidi Klum ne se valent pas

Heidi Klum est certes une bombe anatomique, icône des runways, à la tête de l’écurie Victoria’s Secret pendant de nombreuses années, elle n’en est pas moins une femme faite de chair, que les petits accidents de la vie n’ont pas épargnée. Lorsqu’en 2004 elle a fait assurer ses jambes, elle a découvert que l’une d’entre elle vallait moins que l’autre…

«Je ne les ai pas assurées personnellement, c’est un de mes clients à l’époque qui l’a fait. Alors du coup, j’étais à Londres, et j’ai dû aller dans cet endroit où ils ont longuement observé mes jambes. Ils les ont regardées et j’avais une cicatrice sur l’une d’entre elle parce que je suis tombée sur un verre il y a longtemps. Donc ma jambe gauche n’était pas aussi chère que ma jambe droite», a confié Heidi à Showbiz Spy.

Une révélation qui tombe comme un couperet et casse le mythe de la beauté parfaite: Heidi Klum est une femme comme les autres. Avec des jambes toutefois assurées à 1,2 million d’euros à l’époque, une garantie souscrite pour son client qui n’était autre que Braun, la célèbre marque d’épilateurs et rasoirs. Le projet avait alors emballé le groupe d’assurance Phillips de Pury: «Après avoir évalué des objets depuis plus de quinze ans, c’est complètement autre chose d’évaluer quelque chose de vivant. Et j’avoue admirer les lignes délicieuses de cette « pièce ».»

Miss Klum rejoint le clan des célébrités dont l’anatomie a été assurée, comme les jambes du footballeur David Beckham estimées à 45 millions d’euros. Même si ses deux jambes ne se valent pas –et qu’elle a été décrétée femme la plus dangereuse du web– Heidi reste l’incarnation de la féminité, et non une beauté photoshopée.

Pauline Gallard

Mercredi 21 septembre 2011

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Nicolas Sarkozy et Carla Bruni: un baiser volé qui coûte cher

Mercredi 15 février, quelques minutes avant d’annoncer officiellement sa candidature sur le plateau de Laurence Ferrari, Nicolas Sarkozy avait échangé un baiser furtif avec sa femme Carla Bruni-Sarkozy. La séquence qui ne devait pas être filmée s’était retrouvée sur la Toile.

La courte séquence (18 secondes) a été vue des milliers de fois sur Internet. Quelques secondes avant l’intervention de son mari au JT de TF1, Carla Bruni, réajuste sa légion d’honneur sur le revers de sa veste, lui susurre quelques mots («il faut la mettre à l’horizontal») puis lui fait un baiser furtif.

Des images OFF qui seront mis ligne 48 heures plus tard sur la Toile et qui ont causé de sérieux problèmes au responsable de cette fuite. Selon L’Express, le coupable, «un salarié en CDD à LCI va être suspendu de ses fonctions et convoqué à un entretien préalable». Dans les colonnes du Parisien, TF1 se justifie. «Il y a quelques jours, lorsque nous avons découvert cette affaire, explique la chaîne, nous avons réagi vivement. On considère qu’il relève du devoir déontologique des techniciens et des journalistes de respecter le plateau du journal. Tout ce qui se passe sur le plateau n’est public qu’à partir du moment où le réalisateur appuie sur le bouton rouge. Mais avant, cela relève de la sphère privée.» Le Parisien qui rappelle qu’en juin 2008, les huit minutes d’enregistrement du plateau du«19/20» de France3 (vues par 3 millions d’internautes), avaient valu à son auteur (un technicien de France 3) une mise en examen pour «vol et recel de vidéo».

EU names new US ambassador

EU names new US ambassador

David O’Sullivan, one of the EU’s top diplomats, given crucial post in Washington, DC.

By

David O’Sullivan, one of the top three officials in the European Union’s diplomatic service, was today named as the next EU ambassador to the United States.

The announcement, made today by the EU’s foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, confirms the long-standing expectation that O’Sullivan would take over the post.

European Voice reported in mid-January that the Irishman was all but certain to be given the post, which is currently occupied by João Vale de Almeida, a Portuguese.

Like Vale de Almeida, O’Sullivan has spent his career in European institutions, rather than in diplomatic service.

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The European Commission approved the shortlist of candidates for the post before Christmas, and Ashton was always thought likely to give the job to O’Sullivan, who, as chief operating officer of the European External Action Service (EEAS), was a key figure in the frequently painful establishment of the diplomatic service.

The EEAS, which was created by the Treaty of Lisbon in late 2009, was formally launched at the beginning of 2011.

During his 30 years in the European Commission, O’Sullivan served in four Commission departments and in the private offices of three European commissioners.

His last Commission role was as director-general of the trade department, from 2005-10, and trade is likely to feature prominently in his work in Washington, DC, as the EU and the US are currently one year into negotiations on striking the biggest free-trade agreement ever.

Authors:
Andrew Gardner 

Virus-fueled slowdown could cost airlines $113B, industry group says

A slowdown in flights due to the coronavirus outbreak could cost airlines as much as $113 billion, an industry group said Thursday.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) updated its expected financial impact on the airline industry as the coronavirus has spread to more than 80 countries, it announced. The group estimated that carriers’ 2020 revenue loss could range between $63 billion and $113 billion.

The IATA said the $63 billion estimate is for “a scenario where COVID-19 is contained in current markets with over 100 cases” as of March 2. The $113 billion loss could occur “in a scenario with a broader spreading” of the virus, according to the group. 

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The organization last month estimated a $29.3 billion loss for the industry if the virus was “largely confined to markets associated with China.”

The IATA recognized on Thursday’s announcement that flights had been “severely impacted on routes beyond China,” adding that its estimates do not take into account cargo operations. 

In the current worst-case scenario, global passenger revenues could drop 19 percent, the group said, which “would be on a scale equivalent” to what the industry went through in the global financial crisis.

IATA’s director general and CEO, Alexandre de Juniac, called “the turn of events” caused by the coronavirus “almost without precedent,” saying “governments must take note” of the airlines’ struggles.

“Airlines are doing their best to stay afloat as they perform the vital task of linking the world’s economies,” he said. “As governments look to stimulus measures, the airline industry will need consideration for relief on taxes, charges and slot allocation. These are extraordinary times.”

Since the beginning of the outbreak, airline share prices have dropped nearly 25 percent, which the IATA said is about 21 percentage points higher than the decrease during the SARS outbreak in 2003. 

United Airlines said on Wednesday that it is cutting 10 percent of its U.S. flights and 20 percent of international flights in response to reduced demand amid the coronavirus outbreak. 

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Azar contradicts Pence, says there's no coronavirus testing kit shortage

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar maintained that the administration is not in the midst of a coronavirus testing kit shortage, contradicting a warning issued by Vice President Pence earlier this week.

“There is no testing kit shortage, nor has there ever been,” Azar said on ABC News Friday. “We will have by the end of this weekend over 1.2 million tests around America in public health labs as well as in private and commercial labs, and that is scaling up by the millions, ramping up rapidly.” 

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The remark came a day after Pence said the U.S. does not have enough coronavirus tests to meet the expected demand.

“We don’t have enough tests today to meet what we anticipate will be the demand going forward,” Pence, who is overseeing the administration’s response to the virus, told reporters Thursday. “For those that we believe have been exposed, for those who are showing symptoms, we’ve been able to provide the testing.” 

Democrats have panned the Trump administration over what they say is a shortage of testing kits. Washington Sen. Patty MurrayPatricia (Patty) Lynn MurrayAzar contradicts Pence, says there’s no coronavirus testing kit shortage Overnight Health Care: Pence says 21 people on cruise ship tested positive for coronavirus | NY begs for more testing kits | Trump signs .3B emergency funding package | Experts say mortality rate likely to drop Democrats introduce bill to guarantee paid sick leave in response to coronavirus MORE (D), whose state has the most cases in the U.S., said the government has not been transparent enough in its kit distribution.

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“I am extremely frustrated by how the Trump administration has handled the deployment of such tests, including how it has communicated to Congress and the public about when, where, and to whom tests will be available,” Murray wrote in a letter to Pence.  

Pence on Friday defended the government’s handling of the test kits, saying at a press conference that 4 million will be shipped by the end of next week.

Azar said the administration is undergoing a “blend of containment, where we work to stop the introduction of the disease further into the United States or its spread in the United States” as well as “mitigation efforts” in areas experiencing outbreaks like Seattle.

Decisions, decisions…

Decisions, decisions…

All seven of the commissioners who stood for election to the Parliament won enough votes to be elected, but not all will take up their seats.

Karel De Gucht (liberal, Belgium, trade) definitely will not. Neven Mimica (centre-left, Croatia, consumer policy) wants to stay in the Commission. Maroš Šefčovič (centre-left, Slovakia, inter-institutional relations and administration) is lined up for a second term as commissioner.

That leaves three other commissioners who have to decide whether to forsake the Berlaymont for the joys of keeping company with Antonio Tajani. Viviane Reding (centre-right, Luxembourg, justice, fundamental rights and citizenship) has not yet declared her hand – the commissioners have until the Parliament meets in the first week of July to decide. Olli Rehn (liberal, Finland, economic and monetary affairs and the euro), intends to take up his seat, but will not say so publicly for the moment. Partly because next week he has to introduce the Commission’s country-specific prescriptions for the European Semester – and their credibility might be undermined if he announced that he was jumping ship. Partly because his political ambitions must play second-fiddle to those of Guy Verhofstadt, the ALDE group leader.

Janusz Lewandowski (centre-right, Poland, budget) is widely expected to return to the Parliament, whence he came. His work on the 2014-19 long-term budget is largely done and he is unlikely to be re-nominated as a commissioner.

Roberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case

The Supreme Court appeared split on Wednesday during arguments over a Louisiana abortion law that could see the court revisit the protections that emerged in the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.

In June Medical Services v. Russo, the first major abortion case since President TrumpDonald John TrumpAs Biden surges, GOP Ukraine probe moves to the forefront Republicans, rooting for Sanders, see Biden wins as setback Trump says Biden Ukraine dealings will be a ‘major’ campaign issue MORE shifted the court’s balance to the right, the justices weighed the constitutionality of a law requiring that Louisiana doctors who perform abortions be able to admit patients at a local hospital.

Chief Justice John Roberts, likely the crucial vote, offered no clear signal about whether the Louisiana regulation might face the same fate as a virtually identical Texas law the court struck down four years ago. 

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Supporters of the Louisiana law have painted it as a necessary regulation to guarantee the health and safety of patients. But critics of such laws, including the American Medical Association, say abortion is safe and the extra regulations are unnecessary. 

Roberts’ questions Wednesday seemed focused on the extent to which the court is bound to follow the 2016 decision in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt. In that case, a 5-3 court struck down Texas’ admitting-privilege law — which served as a model for the Louisiana law — as unconstitutional, finding its burdens outweighed its benefits. Roberts joined a dissent from that ruling.

“Counsel, do you agree that the inquiry under Hellerstedt is a factual one that has to proceed state-by-state?” Roberts asked an attorney representing Louisiana abortion clinics and doctors who sued on behalf of their patients. “Could the results be different in different states?” he added.

Justice Brett KavanaughBrett Michael KavanaughGOP senator to try to censure Schumer over SCOTUS remark Trump slams Schumer statement on Kavanaugh, Gorsuch: ‘Serious action MUST be taken NOW’ Schumer’s office says he was referencing justices paying ‘political price’ MORE, one of Trump’s two nominees to the high court, also asked if the benefits-versus-burdens legal test could be a state-by-state evaluation that produced varying results.

“Assume all the doctors who currently perform abortions can obtain admitting privileges,” he said, “could you say that the law still imposes an undue burden, even if there were no effect?”

The four liberal justices appeared inclined to view the Louisiana statute, which requires admitting-privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of a clinic, as serving no medical purpose and placing a substantial burden on women’s right to abortions.

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“Most of these abortions don’t have any complications and the patient never gets near a hospital, but if she needs a hospital, it’s certainly not going to be the one near the clinic. She will be home,” said Justice Ruth Bader GinsburgRuth Bader GinsburgRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices spar over fate of consumer agency Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era MORE, citing a statistic showing that fewer than 1 percent of abortions require hospitalizations.

Justice Samuel AlitoSamuel AlitoRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era The Hill’s Morning Report – Sanders takes incoming during intense SC debate MORE seemed unconvinced that abortion access would be significantly obstructed because of the Louisiana law, a view likely shared by fellow conservative Justices Clarence ThomasClarence ThomasRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era Justices bar Mexican parents from suing over fatal cross-border shooting of teen MORE and Neil GorsuchNeil GorsuchGOP senator to try to censure Schumer over SCOTUS remark Trump slams Schumer statement on Kavanaugh, Gorsuch: ‘Serious action MUST be taken NOW’ Schumer’s office says he was referencing justices paying ‘political price’ MORE, neither of whom spoke during arguments.

In addition to the merits of the Louisiana law, oral arguments also saw debate over whether abortion providers had the legal right to sue on behalf of patients. 

Alito wondered whether one of the plaintiffs, a Louisiana doctor who was unable to gain admitting privileges, had made a good faith effort to obtain the required credentials, since doing so might have undermined the lawsuit.

“It would be counter to his own interests for him to make a super effort to get admitting privileges, wouldn’t it, because he’d be defeating his own claim?” Alito asked the doctors’ attorney, one of several questions about possible conflicts of interest between doctors and patients. 

Justice Sonia SotomayorSonia SotomayorRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices divided over Trump push to speed up deportations Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era MORE, one of the court’s reliably liberal votes, was adamant that abortion providers’ interests were aligned with those of patients.

“What sane woman who’s a plaintiff is going to have a conflict with a doctor who wants to protect her rights by doing what they can to comply with the law?” she asked Jeffrey Wall, a Department of Justice (DOJ) attorney.

The DOJ argued in support of Louisiana, urging the justices to narrow or even overturn its 2016 ruling that struck down the Texas abortion law.

The case is before the justices in an election year, with high stakes for both sides in the debate.

Over 200 members of Congress who oppose abortion rights, including two Democrats, signed on to a brief asking the court to “revisit” the decision in Roe v. Wade. One signatory, Rep. Mike JohnsonJames (Mike) Michael JohnsonRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case White House, Republicans blast Pelosi for ripping up copy of Trump speech Jordan says he will support McCarthy for Speaker if majority flips next year MORE (R-La.), occupied a front row seat in the courtroom at Wednesday’s oral arguments.  

“The argument of the state of Louisiana, and the one we made early on in this case, is that the abortion industry’s interests are in profits, not patients,” Johnson said following the arguments.

Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerCharles (Chuck) Ellis SchumerTrump slams Schumer statement on Kavanaugh, Gorsuch: ‘Serious action MUST be taken NOW’ Montana’s Democratic governor plans last-minute run for Senate Schumer’s office says he was referencing justices paying ‘political price’ MORE (D-N.Y.), meanwhile, joined a rally outside the court to urge the justices to protect abortion rights.

The case arose from a challenge to a law known as Act 620, which Louisiana’s Republican-led legislature passed in 2014. The law required physicians who perform abortions to hold “active admitting privileges” at a hospital within 30 miles of their facility.

In practice, this meant physicians who performed abortions had to be members of the nearby hospital’s medical staff, have the authority to admit patients there and perform relevant diagnoses and surgery. 

A federal district court ruled that Louisiana’s admitting privilege was unconstitutional, saying it would “cripple women’s ability to have an abortion in Louisiana.” 

The court found the law provided “no significant health benefits,” while saddling doctors with burdensome requirements that would force the closure of two of the three abortion clinics in the state. Applying the Supreme Court’s guidance in Hellerstedt, the district court ruled the law placed an undue burden on the roughly 10,000 women who seek abortions in Louisiana each year. 

But the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that decision. The Fifth Circuit said that under Hellerstedt’s benefits-versus-burdens test, the Louisiana law “does not impose a substantial burden on a large fraction of women,” prompting an appeal to the Supreme Court.

Wednesday’s arguments contained numerous references to the Hellerstedt decision, in which the court’s since-retired swing vote, Justice Anthony Kennedy, joined the four liberals to strike down Texas’ admitting-privilege law.

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The liberal justices, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Elena KaganElena KaganRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era Justices bar Mexican parents from suing over fatal cross-border shooting of teen MORE as well as Stephen BreyerStephen BreyerRoberts wrestles with abortion law in high-stakes Louisiana case Justices to hear first major abortion case of Trump era Justices bar Mexican parents from suing over fatal cross-border shooting of teen MORE, who wrote the Hellerstedt opinion, are expected to oppose the Louisiana law, with Alito and Thomas, who dissented in the Texas opinion, likely to uphold it.

Since 2016, however, Trump has steered the court in a more conservative direction, with Kavanaugh, who replaced Kennedy, and Gorsuch on the bench.

The case will also test Roberts’ role as the court’s new ideological center, likely placing the deciding vote in his hands.

As a testament to the high political stakes, throngs of anti-abortion protestors and defenders of Roe gathered outside the Supreme Court hours before arguments began.

Court watchers from across the political spectrum on Wednesday parsed the justices’ questions for signs on how they would vote.

Julie Rikelman, who represented the Louisiana abortion providers, used the opening lines of her argument to remind the court of its recent decision. 

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“This case is about respect for the Court’s precedent. Just four years ago, the Court held in Whole Woman’s Health that the Texas admitting privileges law imposed an undue burden on women seeking abortions,” she said. “The Louisiana law at issue here, Act 620, is identical to the Texas law and was expressly modeled on it.”

The liberal wing of the court embraced that argument.

Kagan leaned on precedent to push back against an assertion that admitting privileges served an important credentialing function. Critics say the claim is dubious and point to the state’s medical licensing protocol, which they argue is adequate without the additional regulation.

“It seems that Whole Woman’s Health precludes you from making this credentialing argument, doesn’t it?” Kagan asked Elizabeth Murrill, Louisiana’s solicitor general.

It is unclear though how the arguments about precedent will land with Roberts. Legal experts say the striking similarities between the Louisiana and Texas laws may make it difficult for him to break with recent precedent.

“Roberts has as much if not more of an interest as anyone in the public face and integrity of the court,” said Steven Schwinn, a law professor at the University of Illinois Chicago. “He is acutely aware that if the court were to take dramatic actions in the Louisiana case, like overturning Hellerstedt, it would widely be seen as a sheer political move.”

A ruling in the case is expected in late June, just months before the 2020 vote.

Updated at 3:15 p.m.

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