Vidéo- Rachida Dati choisit entre « fellation ou inflation »

Présente sur le plateau du Grand Journal lundi, a été une nouvelle fois interrogée sur son célèbre lapsus sur la fellation. Une séquence très drôle qui s’est terminée dans un immense éclat de rire.

Cette histoire risque de poursuivre Rachida Dati encore longtemps. Quasiment un an (c’était le dimanche 26 septembre) après avoir commis ce fameux lapsus, l’emploi du mot «fellation» à la place de celui d’ «inflation», l’histoire lui est resservie sur un plateau. Celui du Grand Journal, dont elle était l’invitée politique lundi soir. Pendant la chronique du Grand Oral (ça ne s’invente pas),

demande à Rachida Dati «Fellation ou inflation?».

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La maire du VIIe arrondissement de Paris se met alors à rire, mi gênée, mi offusquée, sous les applaudissements du public et devant un

et des chroniqueurs hilares. Fière de son petit effet comique, Ariane Massenet tente d’enchaîner, mais le présentateur du Grand Journal la coupe, relançant Rachida Dati en lui disant qu’elle n’a pas répondu à la question. Après un moment d’hésitation et de confusion, la jeune femme répond alors du bout des lèvres «les deux!» avant de partir dans un nouvel éclat de rire.

A l’époque, la vidéo du lapsus de Rachida Dati avait fait un buzz incroyable. La séquence de son passage au Grand Journal hier soir commence déjà à pas mal circuler sur le web et devrait assurer à l’eurodéputée un joli succès médiatique en cette rentrée politique.

Regardez le passage de Rachida Dati au Grand Journal lundi soir:

Jean-Christian Hay

Mardi 6 septembre 2011

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PROGRAMMATION

– Jeudi 6 septembre :

20.40, Police fédérale Los Angeles (1985) de William Friedkin

22.35, Police sur la ville (Madigan) (1968) de Don Siegel

– Jeudi 13 septembre :

20.40, Dans la chaleur de la nuit (1967) de Norman Jewison

22.30, Règlement de comptes (1953) de Fritz Lang

– Jeudi 20 septembre :

20.40, Copland (1997) de James Mangold

22.25, Les Flics ne dorment pas la nuit (1972) de Richard Fleischer

– Jeudi 27 septembre :

20.40, Colors (1988) de Dennis Hopper

22.40, Armored Car Robbery (1950) de Richard Fleischer

– Dimanche 30 septembre :

12.35, Armored Car Robbery (1950) de Richard Fleischer

13.40, Les Flics ne dorment pas la nuit (1972) de Richard Fleischer

15.25, Règlement de comptes (1953) de Fritz Lang

17.00, Copland (1997) de James Mangold

18.40, Colors (1988) de Dennis Hopper

20.40, Police fédérale, Los Angeles (1985) de William Friedkin

22.35, Dans la chaleur de la nuit (1967) de Norman Jewison

Le grand photographe Göksin Sipahioglu est mort

Grand reporter et photographe, Göksin Sipahioglu est mort mercredi à l’âge de 84 ans.

Il avait la photo et l’aventure dans la peau. Un bagout d’enfer et un appareil photo greffé à la main. Des vies, il en a vécu des dizaines, explorant plein de pistes, embrassant plusieurs carrières, parcourant le monde, un objectif à la main. Né en 1926 en Turquie, il crée à 17 ans un club de sport à Istanbul, qui deviendra le plus grand du pays. C’est donc logiquement avec le sport qu’il met le pied dans le journalisme. Il devient alors responsable de la rubrique sport du quotidien Istanbul Ekspress.

Et puis un jour il laisse les baskets à la maison et part en Israël faire son premier grand reportage. Il prend conscience du poids de l’image et se consacrera dorénavant tout entier à la photo, sans jamais oublier l’info. A 29 ans, il est rédacteur en chef. Peu de temps après il fonde son propre journal, et devient patron de presse. Il parcourt le monde: Albanie, Egypte, Hongrie, Pologne, Tchécoslovaquie, Cuba, Chine… Plus de 80 pays en 5 ans, pendant lesquels il débusque les scoops et fait la une avec ses photos. Göksin Sipahioglu se faufile partout. C’est le seul journaliste présent à Cuba lors de la crise des missiles en 1962. Le premier journaliste turc à entrer en Chine. Premier encore en Albanie de l’après-guerre.

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Papillonnant au gré des flashes de ses photos, il finit par fonder en 1973 à Paris l’agence de photos Sipa, à laquelle il donne une partie de son nom (Sipahioglu), comme une partie de son âme. Pour l’amour de la photo. C’est l’époque des trois agences stars en «a». Gamma, Sygma… Sipa. Dénicheuse de talents, présente sur tous les fronts, l’agence reste celle de Göksin Sipahioglu jusqu’en 2001, quand les gestionnaires ont finalement raison de lui.

«Il a lancé un nombre de photographes faramineux, nous sommes nombreux à nous sentir orphelin, déclare aujourd’hui Jean-François Leroy, directeur du festival Visa pour l’image de Perpignan. Avant d’ajouter, «Il a eu une vie formidable. C’était un homme de coups, de scoops». Photographe et journaliste, jamais l’un sans l’autre.

Heidi Klum se met complètement à nu

Depuis son divorce d’avec Seal, Heidi Klum avait tenu à rester très discrète. Dans l’édition de mai du magazine Allure, le top allemand ouvre son cœur… Et pas seulement son coeur.

Trente-huit ans, quatre enfants et un corps de rêve. Heidi Klum est fière d’afficher sa plastique sans chirurgie aucune dans les pages d’un grand magazine. Pour Allure et sous prétexte de parler beauté, l’ex-ange de Victoria’s Secret en a profité pour parler autant de la beauté de son corps que celle de son âme. Elle confie qu’elle a parfois douté de sa capacité à devenir mannequin. «J’avais de trop gros seins, trop de hanches et j’étais trop lourde» confie Heidi Klum qui rêvait surtout d’être top pour la Haute couture, mes que les formes justement généreuses ont menée vers d’autre podiums.

Pas de Botox ni d’opération pour la jolie maman qui promet de ne pas y toucher «même à 65 ans». Mais autant dire qu’à l’aube de ses quarante ans, Heidi Klum a peu de soucis à se faire quant à la dégradation de son outil de travail. Les photos dans le magazine Allure l’attestent. Sans maquillage et sans retouche, la belle plante prouve qu’elle est loin d’être fanée.

Son cœur, lui, en a pris un sacré coup au moment de son divorce d’avec Seal. «Parfois la vie vous joue un mauvais tour alors que vous pensiez avoir conclu un marché avec elle» confesse-t-elle. Si dans la vie d’Heidi Klum «tout ne se passe pas comme prévu», aujourd’hui, sa seule priorité est de poursuivre son rêve «d’élever beaucoup d’enfants, d’avoir un grand jardin avec un trampoline et d’autres choses sympas du genre».

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Catalan report casts doubt on an accession veto by Spain

Catalan report casts doubt on an accession veto by Spain

It is “difficult to imagine” that Spain could successfully veto EU entry, a report by the Catalan government has concluded.

By

Updated

Catalonia would probably face a smooth transition to becoming a European Union member state if it were to become independent from Spain, according to a report by the Catalan government.  

The report, published yesterday (14 April) by the advisory council for national transition of the government of Catalonia, analyses whether a future Catalan state would automatically join the EU and, if not, what the possibilities would be for its re-admission. It examines the practical consequences of four possible scenarios: maintaining EU membership, a fast-track accession process, a normal accession process and exclusion from the EU.  

As regards the latter scenario, the report concludes that since Catalonia clearly meets the conditions for EU membership, the only possible block is a veto by a member state, possibly Spain. But it concludes that any attempt at a veto would not be sustainable under general pressure from other member states.  

“The hypothetical veto by the Spanish state could obstruct and delay the incorporation of the new state in the EU, but it would not cause a very significant delay, because the disadvantages for the EU and the other member states of a slow or postponed entry would be much more significant than the meagre benefits it might mean for them,” the report concludes.  

“It is difficult to imagine Catalonia as a sort of island, between France and Spain, outside the Union. The dilemma, in fact, is not therefore whether or not Catalonia will ever come to form part of the EU, but when and how it will do so.”

José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission, has suggested that Spain is likely to veto the EU accession of Scotland should it vote for independence in September. He has also said that any region that seceeded from a member state would have to apply for new admission to the EU.

The report goes into greater detail on the possibility of being denied entry than a similar report conducted by the Scottish government last year.

The Catalan government, controlled by a pro-independence coalition, has set a referendum on independence for 9 November. However the national government in Madrid has said this referendum will be illegal.

Authors:
Dave Keating 

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Calls to stop funding for abortion-related research

Calls to stop funding for abortion-related research

Second citizens’ initiative to be subject of a hearing in the European Parliament.

By

4/1/14, 11:53 AM CET

Updated 6/4/14, 5:27 PM CET

The second-ever European Citizens’ Initiative, which seeks to ban European Union funding for abortion-related research and foreign aid, will be the subject of a hearing at the European Parliament next week.

Martin Schulz, the president of the Parliament, has backed a plan to give the legal-affairs committee a lead role in the hearing on the controversial initiative, which was signed by 1.7 million Europeans. The committee is thought to be more sympathetic to the initiative than the other two committees dealing with it, on industry, research and energy and on development.

Schulz approved a proposal from Doris Pack, a centre-right German MEP, in her capacity as chair of the conference of committee chairs. Pack proposed that the two aspects of the European Citizens’ Initiative, ‘One of Us’ – research and foreign aid – should be treated in two sections, with the legal-affairs committee involved in both. The Parliament’s industry committee would manage the section on medical research involving human stem cells, while the development committee would manage the section on foreign aid.

The development committee is thought to be hostile to the initiative – the aim of which is to ban activities in development aid, public health and research that involve the destruction of human embryos – because it would undo a decades-old focus on reproductive health as a core element of foreign aid. The research committee, meanwhile, is reluctant to re-open debates that complicated the adoption of the EU’s multi-annual research programme, Horizon 2020.

The European Commission’s initial proposal of November 2011 allowed EU funding from Horizon 2020 for research involving human stem cells, provided that a project received “the necessary approvals from the member states” and respected “fundamental ethical principles”.

“The use of human stem cells, be they adult or embryonic, if any, depends on the judgement of the scientists in view of the objectives they want to achieve and is subject to stringent Ethics Review,” the proposal said. That language was approved by the European Parliament last November in a plenary vote on the regulation establishing Horizon 2020.

In its opinion on the programme, the legal-affairs committee, by contrast, recommended “that research which either involves the destruction of human embryos or which uses human embryonic stem cells should be completely excluded from EU funding”. This would mean that it is “up to individual member states to decide, in line with their ethical rules, whether to fund such research from their own budgets”. It also demanded that the Commission “actively support research aimed at developing alternatives to embryonic stem cells”.

The European Commission has until 28 May to present its response to the initiative, either recommending legislative or other action, or explaining why it does not recommend action. The Parliament has no formal say in the Commission’s response.

Fact File

One of us
The hearing on the ‘One of Us’ citizens’ initiative, on 10 April, is being prepared just as close ties between the organisers and two centre-right MEPs are coming under scrutiny. Carlo Casini, the chair of the constitutional-affairs committee, is president the Italian Movement for Life. That organisation set up the ‘Vita Nova’ foundation, source of €120,581 of the €159,219 cost of the launch of the initiative.
According to the organisers, the ‘Vita Nova’ contribution was used to pay the rent and running costs of the organisers’ office from 2012 until earlier this year, and to set up its website. Casini’s Movement for Life is listed as a
national contact point for Italy on the ‘One of Us’ website.
   A Spanish organisation, ‘Valores y Sociedad’, paid €33,000 for the salary of one person between December 2012 and February 2014. The organisation’s president is Jaime Mayor Oreja, a Spaniard who is a vice-chair of the European People’s Party group in the European Parliament and a member of the constitutional-affairs committee. The balance of funding came from the ‘Fundación Provida de Cataluña’, according to the organisers.

Authors:
Toby Vogel 

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.

Facebook says it will remove misleading Trump 'census' ads

Facebook will remove misleading “census” ads from President TrumpDonald John TrumpSurveillance deal elusive as deadline looms Coronavirus fears disrupt daily life The Memo: Biden poised for gains in next waves of primaries MORE‘s reelection campaign after criticism, a spokesperson told The Hill on Thursday.

“There are policies in place to prevent confusion around the official U.S. Census and this is an example of those being enforced,” the spokesperson said.

The ads, run more than a thousand times on Trump’s and Vice President Pence’s accounts, urge supporters to fill out an “Official 2020 Congressional District Census.” The link attached to the post redirects users to the Trump campaign website, where they are asked to take a survey and then make a donation.

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Facebook came under fire Thursday from Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiSurveillance deal elusive as deadline looms Hillicon Valley: Barr offers principles to prevent online child exploitation | Facebook removes misleading Trump census ads | House passes bill banning TSA use of TikTok Women ask ‘if not now when?’ after Warren exits presidential race MORE (D-Calif.) and one of the architects of the platform’s policy designed to combat census misinformation for permitting the ads.

“This is, on the part of Facebook, a robust, unacceptable interference in the census,” Pelosi said at her weekly press conference.

Facebook must take the ads down immediately and actually enforce its own policy moving forward,” said Vanita Gupta, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, an organization representing 200 civil rights groups which helped Facebook create its census policy.

After Facebook pledged to take down the ads, Gupta said in a statement, “While we’re gratified that Facebook shut down Trump’s attempt to sow confusion about how and when to participate in the 2020 Census, it’s disturbing that the ads weren’t immediately removed.”

Also on Thursday, the House Oversight and Reform Committee called on the Republican National Committee to stop sending out campaign mailers labeled as a “census.”

Facebook in December announced it would start banning posts with misleading information about the census.

The policy bans ads that “portray census participation as useless or meaningless or advise people not to participate in the census,” even if they come from political figures, which are normally exempt from ad fact-checking.

The census, conducted once every 10 years, is used to allocate federal funding and determine congressional districts.

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Vulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit

 

Vulnerable Senate Republicans are dodging questions about whether they support a lawsuit seeking to overturn the Affordable Care Act. 

The Supreme Court said this week it would take up the case, thrusting the issue to the forefront and posing a headache for Republicans in tough races this year.

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President TrumpDonald John TrumpSurveillance deal elusive as deadline looms Coronavirus fears disrupt daily life The Memo: Biden poised for gains in next waves of primaries MORE supports the lawsuit, which would strike down the entire health law, but ObamaCare’s popularity has risen to a record high, posing a danger for Republicans in seeking to strike it down. 

“I’m not saying whether I support it or not, it’s in the hands of the Supreme Court now so we’ll see,” Sen. Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit The Hill’s Campaign Report: Sanders top target at CPAC Trump creates new headaches for GOP with top intelligence pick MORE (R-Iowa) told The Hill on Thursday. Ernst is up for reelection this year.

The lawsuit threatens coverage for roughly 20 million people and would also take away the law’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions, which are particularly popular.

Sen. Martha McSallyMartha Elizabeth McSallyVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Senators urge Americans to ‘wake up’ to security threats of Chinese-made metros, buses Poll: Kelly leads GOP incumbent McSally by five points in Arizona Senate race MORE (R-Ariz.), who faces a difficult reelection race this fall, said the issue is a “judicial proceeding” so she would not weigh in. 

Sen. Kelly LoefflerKelly LoefflerVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden riding wave of momentum after stunning Super Tuesday Nikki Haley expected to endorse Loeffler in Senate race MORE (Ga.), who like McSally was appointed to her seat and will face voters this fall, said to contact her office when asked if she supported the lawsuit.

In a follow-up email, a Loeffler spokeswoman did not directly answer if the senator supports the lawsuit.

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“Regardless of what the courts do or do not decide, there is no question Congress needs to address healthcare issues facing Americans,” a Loeffler spokeswoman wrote in the email, saying the senator wants action that “lowers insurance costs” and “expands coverage options.”

Democrats are seizing on the issue, after the party’s strategy of focusing on the House GOP’s efforts to repeal ObamaCare helped it win back the House in 2018. 

Stewart Boss, a spokesman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, called the ACA lawsuit the “single most important issue in Senate battlegrounds across the country.”

Vulnerable Senate Republicans are trying to focus on other health care issues, such as lowering drug prices, which polls extremely well with voters. 

McSally and Ernst, for example, in recent weeks signed onto a bipartisan bill to lower drug prices from Sens. Chuck GrassleyCharles (Chuck) Ernest GrassleyVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit The Hill’s 12:30 Report: Warren drops out of 2020 race As Biden surges, GOP Ukraine probe moves to the forefront MORE (R-Iowa) and Ron WydenRonald (Ron) Lee WydenVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Overnight Energy: BLM exodus | Agency loses half of DC staff slated for relocation | Lawmakers search for deal on measure stalling energy bill Lawmakers weigh walking back amendment stalling energy bill votes MORE (D-Ore.). McSally also put forward her own bill to lower drug prices this week. 

Republicans don’t have their own alternative plan to ObamaCare, which makes them even more vulnerable to the attacks.

Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar said in January there is “not a need” for the Trump administration to put forward a replacement plan until the Supreme Court issues a ruling.

Some vulnerable Senate Republicans are pointing to a bill from Sen. Thom TillisThomas (Thom) Roland TillisVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit The Hill’s Campaign Report: Biden riding wave of momentum after stunning Super Tuesday NC Democrat Cal Cunningham set to face Tillis in November MORE (R-N.C.), called the Protect Act, that would reinstate some of the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions if the law is struck down. 

That bill, though, does not address other core parts of the health law that could be struck down, such as its Medicaid expansion or financial assistance to help people afford coverage.

Tillis did not directly answer when asked if he supports the lawsuit, but did point to his legislation. 

“What I’m more focused on is how we get back to a rational discussion about protecting pre-existing conditions, the kinds of things that are potentially at risk that for the life of me I can’t understand why anyone would be opposed to, providing some certainty by just voting those provisions into law independent of the lawsuit,” he said. 

Sen. Steve DainesSteven (Steve) David DainesVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Republicans, rooting for Sanders, see Biden wins as setback Montana’s Democratic governor plans last-minute run for Senate MORE (R-Mont.), who could face a challenge from his state’s governor, Steve BullockSteve BullockVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by the APTA – Biden riding high as Sanders laments Super Tuesday Republicans, rooting for Sanders, see Biden wins as setback MORE, did not directly answer when asked if he supports the lawsuit, simply saying “we’re going to be talking about a lot between now and next year” before walking into the Senate chamber. 

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Daines spokeswoman Katie Schoettler later added in an email: “Obamacare has been disastrous for Montana and dramatically increased healthcare costs for Montanans. The Senator thinks that regardless of the outcome, Congress must protect people with preexisting conditions.”

The office of Sen. Cory GardnerCory Scott GardnerVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Overnight Energy: Senate seeks massive boost in conservation funding | White House raises objections over plan to reduce heat-trapping chemicals | Interior chief defends budget amid heated criticism Senate seeks massive permanent boost in conservation funding MORE (R-Colo.) did not respond to a request for comment on if he supports the lawsuit. Gardner told The Hill in August that the issue is “the court’s decision,” but added: “If the Democrats want to stand for an unconstitutional law, I guess that’s their choice.”

Gardner may be the most endangered Senate Republican facing reelection this year.

Republicans point to Democratic calls for Medicare for All, which would take away private health insurance and replace it with a government plan, in pushing back on Democrats.

But that counterattack is getting more complicated as former Vice President Joe BidenJoe Biden’Easy access’ to Biden allowed protester to rush stage at rally The Memo: Biden poised for gains in next waves of primaries Vulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit MORE becomes the frontrunner for his party’s presidential nomination. Biden, unlike Sen. Bernie SandersBernie Sanders’Easy access’ to Biden allowed protester to rush stage at rally The Memo: Biden poised for gains in next waves of primaries Vulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit MORE (I-Vt.) does not support Medicare for All.

Sen. Todd YoungTodd Christopher YoungVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Lobbying World Republican Senate campaign arm hauled in over million in January MORE (R-Ind.), the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, told reporters Thursday that Biden “supports a variant of Medicare for All, which is the public option.”

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Asked if Democrats seizing on the lawsuit posed a problem for Republicans in Senate races, Young countered by pointing to the strength of the economy. 

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“We’re dealing with a period of American history in which wages are rising across income groups, across demographics, across racial and ethnic groups, people are optimistic about the future,” Young said. “They like what President Trump and this Republican-controlled Senate has accomplished.”

McSally, while not directly taking a position on the lawsuit, did criticize the Affordable Care Act, saying that “ObamaCare is not working” for some people who have pre-existing conditions and still struggle to afford the high cost of health care. 

“There are better ways for us to provide insurance options to people while protecting pre-existing conditions,” she said. 

Asked if that criticism meant she supports the lawsuit to overturn the law, McSally responded: “That’s not what I said, that’s a judicial proceeding.”

Ernst sounded a somewhat more positive note about the law when asked if she thought it would be good from a policy perspective for the ACA to go away.

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“Well, I think we have a lot of Iowans that are expressing support for it, but what we would like to see is more health care opportunities out there,” she said. 

Ernst added in a statement that she is a co-sponsor of Tillis’s Protect Act and said she “will always fight to protect those with pre-existing conditions.”

Legal experts in both parties have said they think the lawsuit’s legal arguments are weak, and expect that the Supreme Court will uphold the law, but that is not certain. 

Sen. Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsVulnerable Republicans dodge questions on support for ObamaCare lawsuit Poll: Democrat Gideon leads GOP incumbent Collins by 4 points in Maine Senate race Republicans, rooting for Sanders, see Biden wins as setback MORE (R-Maine) is a rare Republican to outright oppose the lawsuit, writing to Attorney General Bill Barr last year expressing her “profound disagreement” with the Trump administration’s decision to call for the courts to strike down the ACA. 

“Rather than seeking to have the courts invalidate the ACA, the proper route for the Administration to pursue would be to propose changes to the ACA or to once again seek its repeal,” wrote Collins, who is also up for reelection this fall.

Collins is one of three Senate Republicans who voted against the ObamaCare repeal bill in 2017, killing it. “The Administration should not attempt to use the courts to bypass Congress,” she said.  

 

Ministers on collision course with MEPs over telecoms proposal

Ministers on collision course with MEPs over telecoms proposal

Member states to complete their overview of the European Commission’s telecoms overhaul.

By

4/23/14, 9:55 PM CET

Updated 5/14/14, 10:09 AM CET

Member states will meet on Tuesday (29 April) to examine potential rules on net neutrality, as they complete their overview of the European Commission’s proposal to overhaul Europe’s telecoms markets. That will open the way to debates on the proposal, and the aim is to present a progress report by June and amendments by September.

Germany and the United Kingdom, which have two of the European Union’s largest telecoms companies – Deutsche Telekom and Vodafone – have already circulated a position paper calling on the other member states to remove large parts of the Commission’s proposal. “Some elements of the [proposal] are complex and present significant challenges to reaching swift agreement,” the paper reads.

But broadly in line with the proposal, the paper advocates setting a clear end date for mobile roaming charges and introducing only some form of net neutrality rules, which aim to ensure that telecoms providers do not manage internet traffic to discriminate against certain internet services.

This approach would set ministers on a collision course with MEPs, who in April backed far stricter net neutrality rules that would prevent any discrimination by telecoms operators between consumer internet traffic and traffic linked to their own business services.

Germany and the UK also argue for removing all the proposal’s provisions on wholesale access products, harmonising spectrum auctions and regulating international calls. “No clear case has been made” in favour of these provisions, nor on several others, according to the two countries. They would also rather see changes made to consumer protection rules by amending existing legislation on universal services.

MEPs voted to end roaming charges by December 2015 and to reduce member states’ control over spectrum auctions, although they also removed key elements of the Commission’s proposal.

Neelie Kroes, the European commissioner for the digital agenda, proposed the rules in September 2013 with the principal aim of closer integration of Europe’s fragmented telecoms market.

Authors:
Nicholas Hirst