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12 w

Chuck Todd Lays Out Big ‘Problem’ Facing Democratic Party 
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Chuck Todd Lays Out Big ‘Problem’ Facing Democratic Party 

'Rip a hole in the middle'
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12 w

Pentagon Renames Ship Donning Harvey Milk’s Name To Honor World War II Hero
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Pentagon Renames Ship Donning Harvey Milk’s Name To Honor World War II Hero

'Taking the politics out of ship naming'
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12 w

‘One-Stop Shop’: Ron DeSantis Shows Off New Alligator-Friendly Facility For Illegals
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‘One-Stop Shop’: Ron DeSantis Shows Off New Alligator-Friendly Facility For Illegals

'This is not our first rodeo'
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12 w

Supreme Court Keeps Obamacare Task Force Alive
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Supreme Court Keeps Obamacare Task Force Alive

U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
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12 w

LOFTUS: The Quotes From Politico’s Latest Kamala Story Are Devastating
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LOFTUS: The Quotes From Politico’s Latest Kamala Story Are Devastating

'We’re living in a nightmare'
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12 w

Editor Daily Rundown: Rep. Comer Subpoena’s Jill Biden’s Alleged ‘Work Husband’ Over Autopen Probe
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Editor Daily Rundown: Rep. Comer Subpoena’s Jill Biden’s Alleged ‘Work Husband’ Over Autopen Probe

CONGRESS SLAPS DR. JILL'S ALLEGED 'WORK HUSBAND' WITH SUBPOENA OVER AUTOPEN PROBE ... SET TO APPEAR JULY 16 ... Oversight Slaps Jill Biden Aide Anthony Bernal With Subpoena After He Dodges Testimony On Biden’s Mental Decline House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer subpoenaed Jill Biden's former aide, Anthony Bernal, after he refused to testify in the Biden cognitive decline probe. [...]
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12 w

Gavin Newsom Sues Fox News
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Gavin Newsom Sues Fox News

'I will keep fighting against their propaganda machine'
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12 w

Kids Shouldn’t Be Forced To Read LGBTQ Storybooks, Supreme Court Rules
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Kids Shouldn’t Be Forced To Read LGBTQ Storybooks, Supreme Court Rules

Montgomery County Board of Education
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12 w

BREAKING: Supreme Court Strikes Down Courts Applying Universal Injunctions
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BREAKING: Supreme Court Strikes Down Courts Applying Universal Injunctions

The Supreme Court struck down a lower court injunction blocking the Trump administration’s executive order on birthright citizenship, laying out clear rules for courts utilizing universal injunctions going forward. The case, Trump v. CASA, concerns universal injunctions that lower court judges have ordered pausing President Donald Trump’s order interpreting the 14th Amendment as not guaranteeing what is known as “birthright citizenship.”  The court ruled, 6-3, that “universal injunctions likely exceed the equitable authority that Congress has given to federal courts.” Justice Amy Coney Barrett delivered the opinion of the court, which Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaugh joined. Thomas filed a concurring opinion, which Gorsuch joined. Alito filed another concurring opinion, which Thomas joined. Kavanaugh also wrote a concurring opinion. Justice Sonia Sotomayor write a dissenting opinion, which Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson joined. Jackson also filed a dissenting opinion. “Traditionally, courts issued injunctions prohibiting executive officials from enforcing a challenged law or policy only against the plaintiffs in the lawsuit,” Justice Barrett wrote. “The injunctions before us today reflect a more recent development: district courts asserting the power to prohibit enforcement of a law or policy against anyone.” Barrett wrote that “the universal injunction was conspicuously nonexistent for most of our nation’s history.” Justice Sotomayor’s dissenting opinion focused on what Barrett described as “conventional legal terrain,” but Barrett targeted Jackson’s dissent for special scorn. Jackson “chooses a startling line of attack that is tethered neither to these sources nor, frankly, to any doctrine whatsoever,” Barrett wrote. “Waving away attention to the limits on judicial power as a ‘mind-numbingly technical query,’ … she offers a vision of the judicial role that would make even the most ardent defender of judicial supremacy blush.” “In her telling, the fundamental role of courts is to ‘order everyone (including the executive) to follow the law—full stop,'” Barrett added. “Jackson appears to believe that the reasoning behind any court order demands ‘universal adherence,’ at least where the executive is concerned.” Birthright citizenship is the idea that if someone is born in the U.S. to alien parents (who are not foreign diplomats or enemies in a hostile occupation), he or she is immediately a U.S. citizen. Immigration groups brought a lawsuit against Trump’s order, and the state of New Jersey also opposed it in court. Lower courts have been repeatedly issuing “universal” injunctions to temporarily stop the execution of Trump’s executive orders nationwide rather than only limiting the injunctions to the specific cases they are hearing or to a court’s geographic area of jurisdiction. Critics of birthright citizenship note that the 14th Amendment states, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside” (emphasis added). “Subject to the jurisdiction thereof” does not apply to aliens who enter the U.S. and then give birth in America, they say, because non-Americans are subject to the jurisdiction of their home countries, not the U.S. Supporters of birthright citizenship note that the U.S. has extended citizenship to children of aliens born in the U.S. for more than 100 years. The Supreme Court case did not focus on the birthright citizenship issue but rather the legality of lower courts issuing injunctions that apply to the entire country. Many of the groups filing the lawsuits that have led to the injunctions had a great deal of influence in the Biden administration, as noted in my book, “The Woketopus: The Dark Money Cabal Manipulating the Federal Government.” While judges have the authority to issue temporary injunctions to protect one of the parties in a case from harm while the court considers the case, the Trump administration claims the judges have abused this power, claiming to protect people across the country who aren’t parties to the suit. During oral arguments at the Supreme Court, Solicitor General D. John Sauer noted that courts had issued 40 universal injunctions against the federal government, including 35 from the same five judicial districts. He argued that these injunctions “prevent the percolation of novel and difficult legal questions” through the normal legal process and that they “encourage forum shopping,” that is, parties filing lawsuits in certain areas, seeking friendly judges who they believe will issue injunctions on their behalf. He also argued that such universal injunctions circumvent Rule 23, the process by which plaintiffs apply for class action. Sauer also argued that universal injunctions are a relatively recent phenomenon, first appearing in the 1960s. New Jersey Solicitor General Jeremy Feigenbaum, a Democrat, insisted that universal injunctions have a longer history in U.S. and English courts. He cited the English common law practice of a “bill of peace,” which judges used to settle multiple related claims against a defendant in a single lawsuit. The practice allowed the court to bind all members of a “multitude” with the outcome, even if they didn’t directly participate in the lawsuit. Sauer argued that a “bill of peace” most resembles class-action lawsuits, not universal injunctions. Feigenbaum also cited cases from before the 1960s, which Sauer claimed did not represent universal injunctions. Kelsi Corkran, Supreme Court director at the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University, represented immigration groups. She argued that if the court ruled in Trump’s favor, it would reject “the status quo all three branches of government have ratified and operated under for over a century,” warning that “catastrophic consequences would result for the plaintiffs and our country” if the government can “execute an unconstitutional citizenship-stripping scheme simply because the court challenges take time.” The post BREAKING: Supreme Court Strikes Down Courts Applying Universal Injunctions appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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12 w

Supreme Court Rules on Parents’ Religious Freedom in LGBTQ School Book Opt-Out Case
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Supreme Court Rules on Parents’ Religious Freedom in LGBTQ School Book Opt-Out Case

The Supreme Court upheld the religious freedom of Maryland parents who challenged a school district policy that prevented them from opting their children out of lessons involving LGBTQ books. The court ruled, 6-3, that the Maryland parents were entitled to a preliminary injunction. The case, Mahmoud v. Taylor, involved Maryland parents of various faith backgrounds—Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, and Muslim—asking the court for a temporary injunction, allowing them to opt their kids out of instruction that utilize LGBTQ books that Montgomery County Public Schools has mandated schools teach. Although Maryland law requires schools to allow parents to opt their children out of “all sexuality instruction” and to provide advanced notice for such lessons, the policy excluded any opt-out right. The school district initially granted the opt-out but later revoked it, saying that too many parents requested to opt out and that the LGBTQ books are exempt from the law because they are taught as literature. The school district defended the policy as advancing the cause of inclusion. “These books are, in fact, teaching explicit sexual orientation and gender identity issues as early as pre-K,” Will Haun, senior counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, previously told The Daily Signal. The associated reading instructions he said, “Require teachers to make dismissive statements about a student’s religious beliefs, to shame children who disagree, and to teach as facts things that some would not agree are facts.”  The Pride storybooks include selections such as “My Rainbow,” which tells the story of a mother who creates a rainbow-colored wig for a child the book presents as “transgender.” “Born Ready: The True Story of a Boy Named Penelope” recounts the tale of a biological girl who identifies as a boy and who struggles to convince the world that she is male. “Prince & Knight” and “Love, Violet” tell same-sex romance stories. During a Montgomery County school board meeting, board member Lynne Harris said, “Because saying that a kindergartener can’t be present when you read a book about a rainbow unicorn because it offends your religious rights or your family values or your core beliefs is just telling that kid, ‘Here’s another reason to hate another person.’” Harris also insisted that “transgender, LGBTQ individuals are not an ideology, they’re a reality.” The post Supreme Court Rules on Parents’ Religious Freedom in LGBTQ School Book Opt-Out Case appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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