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The Supreme Court will mark its last day with decisions on several cases, including the dispute of citizenship of birth law. A meeting of the CDC panel refers to the management of the agency under the direction of Robert F. Kennedy. And why the social media campaign of the candidate for the town hall of New York Zohran Mamdani was more effective than the memes of Kamala Harris.
Here’s what you need to know today.
Today marks on the last day of the nine -month mandate of the Supreme Court – and this means that the court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, is preparing to make decisions in six pending cases.
Among these, the most watched case concerns President Donald Trump’s attempt to put an end to the automatic citizenship of the right of birth, which is guaranteed under the 14th amendment to the Constitution. The long -standing interpretation of the provision is that anyone born on American soil is an American citizen with some minor exceptions.
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The case before the Supreme Court does not focus on the legality of the proposal itself, but rather on the question of whether the federal judges have the power to block it nationally while the disputes continue. This is a decision that could have large -scale impacts, because federal judges have often ruled against the general use of executive power by Trump.
The other five cases on which the court has not yet ruled is:
→ If conservative religious parents can opt for their primary children from books on the theme of LGBTQ in class
→ If the Congress districts in Louisiana are legal
→ A law adopted in Texas which requires age restrictions for the use of adult websites
→ A challenge to the working group on preventive care of the Act respecting affordable care
→ A federal program of the Communications Commission which subsidizes telephone and internet services in poorly served areas
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The Senate referee held yesterday that a series of health care and savings discounts in the major bill for the Donald Trump agenda are not eligible for the “budget reconciliation” process that the Republicans use to bypass the 60 voting of the Chamber. The setback calls into question if the senators will be able to begin to vote on the bill today, as the head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, had hoped, in order to send legislation to the office of President Donald Trump by July 4.
Elizabeth Macdonough, a parliamentarian of the Senate, who would rule the procedural disputes between Republicans and Democrats, has disqualified several provisions, including Medicaid rules prohibiting funds without verification of immigration status, new limitations surrounding the admissibility for the financing of the Act respecting affordable care and even more. The disqualified arrangements total $ 200 billion to $ 300 billion in a decade, an expert said.
So, now what? Republican collaborators have said that decisions are not fatal for the global bill. The Senate Republicans will return to the drawing board on certain questions and will accept the results of the provisions revoked in other cases. But some conservatives angry by Macdonough’s decisions have suggested that it should be dismissed. Read the full story here.
A preservative based on mercury called Thimeralal – which is the subject of largely demystified complaints connecting the ingredient to autism and has not been used in almost all vaccines made in the United States since 2001 – has been the subject of a presentation at the meeting of the CDC’s advisory committee. The presentation on a problem that has long been considered an established science indicated how panel meetings have already changed considerably under the direction of the Secretary of Health and Social Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
During the meeting, the advisory committee for vaccination practices heard Lyn Redwood, emeritus president of defense of health of the anti-vaccine group based on Kennedy vaccine on Thimeralal. Subsequently, the committee voted 5-1 to recommend that children, adults and pregnant women obtain vaccines against flu without dose dose.
A pediatrician who represented the only dissident vote said: “This is an old problem that has been addressed in the past.” Medical experts who also participated in the meeting questioned the veracity of Redwood claims.
During a separate vote, the Committee reaffirmed the existing recommendation that people aged 6 months or more should obtain annual flu vaccines. The Committee also voted in favor of recommending an RSV medication for infants under 8 months of age. Read the full story here.
Although the final results are not known for a few more days, Zohran Mamdani, a 33 -year -old legislator, seems to have succeeded in the upheaval in the primary of the New York Democrat. I say “upset” because each time a candidate’s victory seems to be a surprise, there are almost always missed signs that victory was likely.
In this story, journalists Angela Yang and Bruna Horvath explain How the presence of Mamdani’s social media predicted its apparent main victory. What really struck me in their report was not only that he had built an important monitoring of social media, but also how he did it with substance and how he transformed his virality on social networks into money, political commitment and votes. And they explain how its online success was key from the success of early social media of the failed presidential campaign of Kamala Harris. In the end, it is a beautiful snapshot of the character and the strategic know-how of a man who could end up directing the largest city in the country. – Richie DuchonAssistant Platform Editor
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