Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Dred Scott"


10 mentions found


On Monday, Trump rejected leading anti-abortion groups' efforts to get him to endorse a nationwide abortion ban. I respectfully disagree with President Trump’s statement that abortion is a states’ rights issue. On Monday, the group's president, Marjorie Dannenfelser, said that it would work to defeat President Joe Biden. "We are deeply disappointed in President Trump's position," Dannenfelser said in a statement released by the organization. Ultimately, Trump's alliance with conservatives and anti-abortion groups was sealed by a vow to work to confirm Supreme Court justices to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, Sen, Lindsey Graham, Scott, Graham, Trump’s, Dobbs, , WloOJ0ImaW — Lindsey Graham, @LindseyGrahamSC, Ron DeSantis, Susan B, Anthony Pro, Marjorie Dannenfelser, Joe Biden, Trump's, Dannenfelser, Kristan Hawkins, Hawkins, Comstock, Kamala Harris, Roe, Wade, Mike Pence, hasn't Organizations: Service, Business, Black, Republican, White, Trump, Life, New York Times, The New York Times Locations: American, Florida, Minnesota
Ron DeSantis warned in a CNN town hall Tuesday night that Republicans are “going to lose” the 2024 election if they nominate former President Donald Trump. Nikki Haley – in Iowa’s caucuses, the Florida governor fielded questions in New Hampshire at a town hall moderated by CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. Here are five takeaways from DeSantis’ town hall:Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, left, participates in a CNN Republican presidential town hall moderated by Wolf Blitzer, right, at New England College in Henniker, New Hampshire, on January 16, 2024. DeSantis answers a question during the town hall in New Hampshire on January 16, 2024.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, Nikki Haley –, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, Haley, Trump, , ” DeSantis, “ We’re, , Wolf Blitzer, Will Lanzoni, CNN DeSantis, won’t, DeSantis, Ryan Binkley, it’s, DeSantis ’, That’s, Republicans DeSantis, lumping, Joe Biden, hadn’t, we’ve, Scott, , MSNBC’s Joy Reid, “ We’ve, — that’s Organizations: CNN, Florida Gov, Trump, South Carolina Gov, Republican, CNN Republican, New England College, ABC News, New, GOP, Nevada Republican, Republicans, Trump voters, College Board, Republican Party, defund, Fox, Disney Locations: Iowa’s, Florida, New Hampshire, DeSantis ’, Henniker , New Hampshire, South Carolina, Granite State, Nevada, Dallas, Iowa, DeSantis, United States, Covid, Orlando
Other Reconstruction-era laws are also in the center of debates today. That guarantee was ratified in 1868 to reverse the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision holding that African Americans were not citizens. And recently, our organization filed a voting rights lawsuit under the 1870 law that readmitted Virginia to the Union. Ian Bassin is a co-founder and the executive director of the group Protect Democracy and a former associate White House counsel. Kristy Parker is counsel at Protect Democracy and the former deputy chief of the criminal section of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.
Persons: Trump, Dred Scott, intransigence, Ian Bassin, Kristy Parker Organizations: Boys, Charlottesville Unite, Mr, Black, Capitol, Union . The, Union . The Virginia Readmission, Protect Democracy, White, Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division Locations: Charlottesville, United States, New Mexico, Virginia, Union . The Virginia
Nicole Hemmer Courtesy Nicole HemmerTheir new map is out, and it makes clear that the Republican-controlled legislature in Alabama has flouted the court order. That started to change in 1938, when the court began to lay the groundwork for the civil rights jurisprudence of the mid- 20th century. APAs the court came to embrace civil rights, racial conservatives began to defy it. Join us on Twitter and FacebookThe courts historically have faced White resistance whenever they have sided with Black civil rights. That tells us less about the court and more about the political power — and impunity — still wielded by pro-discrimination forces, decades after the Civil Rights Movement.
Persons: Nicole Hemmer, Carolyn T, Robert M, , Who, Kay Ivey, , Dred Scott, Sandford, Plessy, Ferguson, Harlan Stone, Brown, White, Organizations: Rogers Center, Vanderbilt University, “ Partisans, Conservative, CNN, Black, Republican, Republican Gov, Alabama Republicans, Civil, Graymont Elementary School, AP, National Guard, Twitter, Civil Rights Movement, Trump Republicans Locations: Alabama, , United States, Birmingham , Alabama, In Massachusetts
The bill already passed the Senate and now goes to President Joe Biden for his signature. “In removing Taney’s bust, I’m not asking that we would hold Taney to today’s moral standards,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said on Wednesday while advocating for the statue’s removal. Figures like Taney belong in history textbooks and classroom discussions, not in marbled bronze on public display of honor.”A similar effort in 2020 that passed the House aimed to remove Taney’s bust from the Capitol along with monuments honoring Confederates. That bill, however, was eventually stalled by Senate Republicans who argued that states should decide which statues they’d like to display in the Capitol. A statue of Taney was previously removed in 2017 from the grounds of the Maryland State House.
The House passed a bill Wednesday that would remove from public display at the U.S. Capitol a statue of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney, who wrote the 1857 Dred Scott decision that defended slavery and denied the citizenship of Black Americans. Roger B. Taney (1777-1864), former chief justice of the Supreme Court. The House overwhelmingly passed the measure a few months later in a 305-113 vote, but it did not advance in the Senate. A statue of Taney, who lived in Maryland, was removed from Maryland's State House grounds in 2017. Congress in recent years has taken similar actions to remove other statues from the Civil War era.
The House and Senate voted to remove a bust of the author of the Dred Scott decision from the Capitol. The bust of former Chief Justice Roger Taney will be replaced by a bust of Thurgood Marshall. Taney wrote in that decision that people of African descent were "beings of an inferior order." The bust of Taney is expected to be replaced with a bust of former Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, the high court's first Black justice. Taney wrote the majority opinion in the Supreme Court's infamous Dred Scott v. Sandford decision of 1856, which held that Black Americans could not be US citizens.
After the Capitol riot, some suggested the 14th Amendment could bar Trump from future office. The announcement has renewed interest in whether or not the 14th Amendment could be used to prevent Trump from running again. "The idea was that office holders of the United States will not be people who were treasonous to the United States," Doron Kalir, a professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, told Insider. "It is not clear who should make the determination that the person has engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United States," Kalir said. Therefore, some scholars don't think Congress alone can use the 14th Amendment to bar someone, like Trump, from holding office.
Philadelphia CNN —Tyrique Glasgow’s life has always revolved around his South Philadelphia neighborhood, and gun violence has always been a part of it. At 15, he got sucked into street life – selling drugs and eventually controlling a specific block of his neighborhood. Three years ago, Glasgow opened a community center that’s become a source of support for the whole neighborhood. Now, on the block where he once sold drugs, he provides food, necessities, and resources to hundreds of local residents every week. But there’s a coalition that’s trying to change the name.
Chief Justice John Roberts, one of the court’s six conservatives, pushed back against some of the criticism in a recent public appearance, saying people should not question the court’s legitimacy just because they disagree with its rulings. It is important that the public think the justices are reaching decisions in good faith based on the law, Girgis said. Sotomayor said at an event in California on Thursday that “there’s going to be some question about the court’s legitimacy” if people think the justices are acting based on politics, according to a Courthouse News Service report. But I don’t understand the connection between opinions people disagree with and the legitimacy of the court,” he said. Conversely, in 1954, Southern states resisted enforcing the landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling, which ended segregation in public schools.
Total: 10