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TOKYO — Lawmakers in Japan voted Monday to retain the embattled Shigeru Ishiba as prime minister despite his long-governing party’s dismal showing in parliamentary elections last month. Ishiba, a straight-talking former defense minister, received 221 votes compared with 160 for Yoshihiko Noda, leader of the opposition Constitutional Democratic Party. Many Japanese officials assume Trump is going to be “more straightforwardly anti-China,” and that Japan will be “somehow miraculously left off the hook,” he said. Though Japan has already pledged to double defense spending to 2% of gross domestic product by 2027, “that’s probably not going to be enough to satisfy Trump,” Boling said. While Abe was “extraordinarily skillful” in dealing with Trump, Ishiba has a different personality, Boling said.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Ishiba, Donald Trump, Yoshihiko Noda, ” Ishiba, Yuichi Yamazaki, Trump, Koichi Nakano, Shinzo Abe, ” Nakano, David Boling, “ that’s, ” Boling, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Takahiro Mori, Abe, Boling, , I’m, Jeff Kingston, ” Kingston, Arata Yamamoto, Jennifer Jett, Peter Guo Organizations: Lawmakers, Liberal Democratic Party, Constitutional Democratic Party, Getty, Trump, Japan Relations, NBC News, U.S, Eurasia Group, Nippon, Pittsburgh, . Steel, Democratic, Nippon Steel, United Steelworkers, , Japan Locations: TOKYO, Japan, Washington, Tokyo, China, Russia, North Korea, U.S, York, Japanese, Pittsburgh, ” Japan, United States, Temple, Hong Kong
Democrats are, meanwhile, coming to terms with the massive fallout of their failure to stop Trump’s return to power, even as they dissolve into self-recrimination. They lack a clear leader to revive their message or a platform of power if Republicans retain control of the House. Establishing dominance over Washington Republicans: Trump has been mostly behind closed doors since his victory rally last week. Trump is promising to return to the volatile foreign policy that defined his first term — and then some. The conundrum facing US allies was laid out by French President Emmanuel Macron, who rode the Trump first-term rollercoaster.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Mike Pompeo, Nikki Haley, Elise Stefanik, rouser Elon Musk, Volodymyr Zelensky —, Joe Biden —, Susie Wiles, Pompeo, Haley, Roger Stone, MAGA, , ” Trump, Tony Carrk, Elect Trump, Florida Sen, Rick Scott —, Vivek Ramaswamy —, Dakota Sen, John Thune, Texas Sen, John Cornyn, Thune, Cornyn, , Washington, trepidation, Jim Jordan, Dana Bash, Jordan, Jack Smith, Musk, Trump —, Vladimir Putin, Emmanuel Macron, Macron, ” Macron Organizations: CNN, White, Republicans, GOP, United, New York, Trump, Pentagon, Overseas, peerless, CIA, South Carolina governor’s, Washington Republicans, Republican, United States, Democrats, Union, Ohio Republican, SpaceX Locations: Florida, United Nations, Europe, Taiwan, Iran, Russia, United States, Arizona, Washington, South Carolina, New York, ., Dakota, Texas, “ State, China
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the chair of the House Judiciary Committee, on Sunday said that he and his House Republican colleagues are “not taking anything off the table” related to investigating special counsel Jack Smith. But all we’re saying is, ‘preserve everything,’ so we, the Congress, who have a constitutional duty to do oversight, can see everything,” Jordan added. Asked specifically multiple times whether Jordan would call on Smith to testify, Jordan repeatedly dodged the question, saying simply, “Maybe that’s been the norm, but we’re not taking anything off the table. Mr. Loudermilk and myself sent the letter saying, ‘Hey, Mr. Smith, preserve this information,’” Jordan told CNN on Sunday. If Democrats succeed in flipping the House, it is unlikely Jordan would remain as chair of the committee.
Persons: Jim Jordan, , Jack Smith, ” Jordan, CNN’s, Smith, Donald Trump, Jordan, that’s, we’re, I’m, , Trump, Chip Somodevilla, Barry Loudermilk, Trump’s, Loudermilk, ‘ Hey, ’ ” Jordan, Tanya Chutkan Organizations: Republican, Union, Justice Department, Rep, CNN, Committee, NBC News, Department Locations: Ohio, CNN’s “ State
Meet the Press – November 10, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +56 min
ANNOUNCER:From NBC News in Washington, the longest-running show in television history, this is Meet the Press with Kristen Welker. In a Meet the Press interview during his 2016 run, he suggested that his insurgent bid could generate cross-party appeal. AMY WALTER:Yeah, and the other thing that, you know, Democrats have been dining off the anti-Trump coalition now since 2017. RAMESH PONNURU:I think Democrats wildly overestimated the power of the abortion issue to drive candidate choice as opposed to referendum. There would be pressure on the president, President Biden, to not run for reelection.
Persons: KRISTEN WELKER, DONALD TRUMP, PRES, JD VANCE, Donald Trump, KAMALA HARRIS, Kamala Harris, JOE BIDEN, John Barrasso of, Bernie Sanders, Garrett Haake, Amy Walter, Ramesh Ponnuru, María Teresa Kumar, it’s, Kristen Welker, Trump, SEN, TED, JOHN MORENO, JD Vance, MIKE JOHNSON, Biden, they've, NANCY PELOSI, Kamala, DEBBIE DINGELL, RITCHIE TORRES, DAVID AXELROD, ALEXANDRIA OCASIO, unquote, JON FAVREAU, Joe Biden's, JON LOVETT, Joe Biden, , “ It's, … they're, I'm, Steve Kornacki, STEVE KORNACKI, Kristen, , Trump's, That's, You've, Donald Trump's, Harris, Barack Obama, John McCain, it's, Steve, They're, you've, Barrasso, Press . SEN, JOHN BARRASSO, Bill Clinton “, ” Donald Trump, JOHN, We've, He's, we've, that's, Lindsey Graham, He'll, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Trump hasn't, Susie Wiles, we're, President Trump, John Kennedy, Bobby, Sanders, BERNIE SANDERS, Let's, Nancy Pelosi, I’m, James Carville, JAMES CARVILLE, I've, Sotomayor, Garrett, he's, GARRETT HAAKE, John Barrasso, Paul Ryan's, Amy, AMY WALTER, – KRISTEN WELKER, It's, , María Teresa, David Noriega, Mario, DAVID NORIEGA, MIREYA ALVAREZ, MARIO ALVAREZ, MARÍA TERESA KUMAR, Ramesh, RAMESH PONNURU, Richard Nixon, Aaron Burr, didn't, he'd, They've, TERESA KUMAR, María, – MARIA TERESA KUMAR, Dobbs, should've, Harris would've, ” KRISTEN WELKER, We'll Organizations: Republicans, Senate, Vermont, NBC, Capitol Hill, National, Press, NBC News, Arizona, Democratic, Republican, REP, Twitter, Trump, Republican Senate, Supreme, White, National Political, Republican Party, Democratic Party, Biden, Senate Republican, Press ., Trump's, United States Senate, Justice Department, Democrat Party, Security, Social Security, FDR, they're, California, Mr, Trump swiped, Democrats, , Veterans Locations: United States of America, United States, John Barrasso of Wyoming, Washington, American, ALEXANDRIA, CORTEZ, USA, America, California, New York, Wisconsin, Madison , Wisconsin, Milwaukee County, Harris, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Mexico, Vermont, Nancy, Congress, U.S, Texas –, Texas, Philadelphia
Attorneys for some defendants also suggested Trump’s victory was unfair in light of the fact that rioters are still being prosecuted and sentenced. Talk of potential presidential pardons permeated at least one violent rioter’s sentencing Thursday, when Zachary Alam told a judge he had no remorse for his actions. I want a full pardon.”“Instead of pardons of innocence, some January 6ers should receive pardons of patriotism,” Alam added. US District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee, later said Alam was “delusional” to think that his actions on January 6 were patriotic. Alam was convicted on multiple felony and misdemeanor counts stemming from his participation in the Capitol attack.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Elizabeth Mullin, Jaimee Avery, Zachary Alam, ” Alam, Alam, , Dabney Friedrich, Ashli Babbitt, Friedrich, Nicholas Fuller, ” Michelle Peterson, Fuller, Peterson, , ” Peterson, Colleen Kollar, Bill Clinton, “ Mr, Joe Biden, Christopher Cooper, Cooper, Obama Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Prosecutors, US, US Justice Department, DC Locations: Washington ,, Minnesota
Sanders added it is “problematic” if schedule F is being used to reinforce and maintain political loyalty. The spoils system was replaced by the current merit-based system where career employees serve multiple administrations, carrying out their jobs independent of politics. The Biden administration erected temporary roadblocks at the federal Office of Personnel Management – rules aimed at protecting federal workers from retaliatory mass firings. The District of Columbia itself has the largest individual chunk of federal workers in any state or territory, with more than 162,000. But it could also be devastating to employment in states that went to Trump, where roughly 967,000 federal workers live.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Ronald Sanders –, Trump’s, , Sanders, Max Stier, , ” Stier, didn’t, Karoline Leavitt, Biden, Will Lanzoni, Elon Musk, Mandy Gunasekara, Everett Kelley –, Joyce Howell, “ They’re, Marie Owens Powell, Sunlen Serfaty, Tierney Sneed Organizations: CNN, Trump, Energy Department, Environmental Protection Agency, Partnership for Public Service, Management, DC, of Columbia, Convention Center, Land Management, EPA, Unions, American Federation of Government Employees, AFGE, , American Civil Liberties Union, Democracy Locations: Maryland, Virginia, Beach, West Palm Beach , Florida, Washington, Colorado
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump’s ambitious agenda could face pushback from an institution he has done much to shape: the Supreme Court. With a 6-3 conservative majority including three Trump appointees, the court has spent the last few years buffeted by criticism from the left. The Trump administration also suffered a big loss when in 2020 the court ruled 6-3 to extend workplace discrimination protections to LGBTQ employees, a decision that angered conservatives. During the Biden years, the court has set new precedents while ruling against the administration that in theory apply to Trump too. “The Supreme Court supermajority has given us no reason to expect that it will be anything other than be a rubber stamp for his worse impulses,” said Alex Aronson, who runs Court Accountability, a left-leaning legal group.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Biden, , John Malcolm, Brianne, “ Trump, Trump, Jonathan Adler, Amy Coney Barrett, Joe Biden, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Stephen Breyer, wasn’t, Adler, , Alex Aronson, “ They’ve Organizations: WASHINGTON, Trump, Heritage Foundation, Case Western Reserve University School of Law, Congress
“We’re going to be asking everyone who sells drugs, gets caught, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts,” he added. President Joe Biden had campaigned on passing legislation to eliminate the death penalty at the federal level, but pulled back on that in office. Biden’s aides say he supports death row inmates serving life sentences without probation or parole. Meanwhile, the Justice Department under Biden and Garland has not sought the death penalty in federal cases that could have warranted it, and has even withdrawn death penalty sentences in about two dozen cases that it had inherited. There are currently 40 inmates, all men, on federal death row, according to the nonpartisan Death Penalty Information Center.
Persons: Donald Trump, ” Trump, “ We’re, , Trump, Yasmin Cader, Grover Cleveland, William Barr, , Joe Biden, General Merrick Garland, Biden’s, Garland, Lee Kovarsky, Biden, Kovarsky, “ they’re, can’t, Ruth Friedman, ” Friedman, Friedman, Robert Roberson, Robert Dunham, ” Dunham, Dunham Organizations: Center for Justice, Equality, U.S, Department, Biden, Boston Marathon, University of Texas School of Law, Punishment, Trump, Trump’s, Federal, Habeas, Republican, Democratic, National Registry, ACLU Locations: Alabama, South Carolina, Pittsburgh, Texas
Landlords, realtors, and some pro-housing groups opposed the measure, but the California Democratic Party, tenant groups, and some unions supported it. California voters did, however, vote to enshrine a state constitutional right to marry regardless of sex or race and to issue bonds for natural resource conservation. Related storiesThough Lurie is a Democrat, he received the support of some Republican groups in San Francisco who have criticized Breed's handling of crime, drug use, and homelessness in the city. AdvertisementOther signs California was turning more redBefore Election Day, there were some signs the state's electorate had shifted to the right. California is still tallying its votes, so exactly how much the presidential vote changed from 2020 to 2024 is unclear.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom's, Voters, Allen J, Incumbent San Francisco Mayor London Breed, Daniel Lurie, Lurie, Levi Strauss, Mark Farrell, George Gascón, Gascón, Nathan Hochman, Harris, Joe Biden Organizations: Service, Democratic, SpaceX, Republican, Trump, State, Democratic Gov, realtors, California Democratic Party, Los Angeles Times, Getty, Incumbent San Francisco Mayor London, Democrat, The San Francisco Republican, Los, Public, Institute of California Locations: California, Texas, Coachella, San Francisco, The, Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, Illinois , New Jersey , New York , Connecticut, Maryland
The total bill for ad spending in the 2024 election hit almost $11 billion, a new record and a substantial increase from the $9 billion spent in 2020. That's according to AdImpact, a firm that tracks political ad spending. The total is in line with the firm's 2023 projection that 2024 would see more ad spending than ever before. Overall, the Democratic campaign and pro-Democratic outside groups spent almost $1.8 billion, while the Trump campaign and pro-Republican outside groups spent $1.4 billion. A relatively short list of competitive gubernatorial races this election cycle drew almost $530 million, including races held in 2023.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Donald Trump's, Republican Bernie Moreno, Josh Riley, Marc Molinaro, Josh Stein, Mark Robinson, Robinson Organizations: outspent Republicans, Democratic National Committee, Democratic, Trump, Republican, Senate, Republicans, New York's, NBC, North, gubernatorial, Gov
By December 2, 2024, the Government shall file a status report indicating its proposed course for this case going forward," the judge wrote. Trump was indicted in the case in August 2023, but significant delays have kept it from going to trial. He's tentatively scheduled to be sentenced in the New York case on Nov. 26 after he was convicted earlier this year on 34 counts of falsifying business records, a low-level felony. The Georgia election interference case has been on hold as Trump and some of his co-defendants are asking an appeals court to remove the prosecutor in the case because of conflict of interest allegations. Trump has denied any wrongdoing in the Georgia case as well.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald, Jack Smith, Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, ” Trump, He's, Juan Merchan, Letitia James, E, Jean Carroll Organizations: U.S, Department, DOJ, Trump, NBC News, NBC, New York Locations: Florida, New York, Georgia, York, New
If he wins the election in November, he has pledged to follow a similar course on another contentious policy proposal: ending birthright citizenship. Under Trump’s proposal, at least one parent would need to be a citizen or legal resident for a child to receive birthright citizenship. Trump had pledged to end birthright citizenship when first running for president in 2015 and he raised it again in 2018. Opponents of birthright citizenship say that language means citizenship is denied to anyone whose parents are not legally in the country. Sometimes relevant information could be hard to determine, such as if the immigration status of an absent parent is not known to the other.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Trump, ” Trump, , Omar Jadwat, “ It’s, Mark Krikorian, Paul Ryan, Ken Cuccinelli, Cuccinelli, Christopher Hajec, James Ho, Ho, Wong Kim Ark, ” Hajec, , Emma Winger Organizations: Supreme, American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Immigration Studies, American Immigration Council, . Citizenship, Immigration Services, Republican, of Homeland, Trump, Heritage Foundation, Immigration Reform Law Institute, Circuit, Appeals, Social Security Administration, State Department, Department of Homeland Security, Social Locations: U.S, United States, New Orleans, States, San Francisco, China
WASHINGTON — A Jan. 6 rioter who was the subject of right-wing conspiracy theories suggesting he was a plant who worked with law enforcement was sentenced to eight years in prison Thursday, among the longest prison sentences given in connection with the U.S. Capitol attack. In court Thursday, Alam said his fellow Jan. 6 inmates saw the segment in the jail in Washington when it aired on the local Sinclair station, WJLA. “They came to the conclusion that I was a confidential human source,” Alam said of his fellow Jan. 6 defendants. (President-elect Trump has called Capitol rioters “political prisoners” and “hostages” and said he would “absolutely” consider pardoning every one of them). Even after he saw fellow rioter Ashli Babbitt get shot and killed, Alam was still calling for violence, Lederer said.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Zachary Alam, Donald Trump, Alam, Trump's, Trump, Sharyl Attkisson, Attkisson, , ” Alam, , President Trump, Dabney L, Friedrich, Steven A, Metcalf, Rebekah Lederer, Alam’s, ” Friedrich, Lederer, Ashli Babbitt, ” Lederer Organizations: U.S . Capitol, Sinclair Broadcast Group, Justice Department, Capitol, Sinclair, U.S, District of Columbia, Federal, FBI, Trump, Alam Locations: Washington, , Jan, U.S
MELBOURNE, Australia — A self-described Nazi became the first person in Australia to be sentenced to prison for performing an outlawed salute when he was ordered by a magistrate on Friday to spend one month behind bars. Jacob Hersant, 25, is also the first person in the state of Victoria to be convicted of performing the Nazi salute. He was convicted in the Melbourne Magistrates Court last month of performing the salute before news cameras outside the Victoria County Court on Oct. 27, 2023. Hersant had just avoided a prison sentence on a conviction for causing violent disorder. Performing a Nazi salute had been outlawed by the state parliament days earlier.
Persons: Jacob Hersant, Hersant, Brett Sonnet, Tim Smartt, Smartt, “ It’s, ” Smartt, Sonnet, ” Sonnet, , Adolf Hitler, “ We’re, ” Hersant, Organizations: Victoria County Court, Nazi, National Socialist Network Locations: MELBOURNE, Australia, Nazi, Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria County
CNN —Pentagon officials are holding informal discussions about how the Department of Defense would respond if Donald Trump issues orders to deploy active-duty troops domestically and fire large swaths of apolitical staffers, defense officials told CNN. “Troops are compelled by law to disobey unlawful orders,” said another defense official. “But the question is what happens then – do we see resignations from senior military leaders? At the time, defense officials tried to include as few civilian employees as possible to limit the impact to the workforce, sources said. But “there are still ways a new administration could work around these protections,” a defense official said, even if it might take several months to do so.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Mark Milley, , Defense Lloyd Austin, Milley, John Kelly, Trump’s, Kelly, Hitler’s, Biden, , George Floyd, , Austin, ” CNN’s Oren Liebermann Organizations: CNN, Pentagon, Department of Defense, Joint Chiefs, Staff, , “ Troops, Trump, White, DoD, Defense, National Guard, White House, Defense Department, Customs, Reserves, Army, Congress, United States, Civilian, National Security and Intelligence, Management Locations: , , Hitler’s Nazi, United States
Immune, immune, immune.”Justice Department ‘problem’But just how far that immunity extends is murky. The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision left many questions unanswered and lower courts have not yet wrestled with them. But the Supreme Court majority ruled that a president’s power to direct the Justice Department’s investigative and prosecutorial work is within his exclusive constitutional authority. While the Supreme Court granted former presidents wide immunity, the ruling made no such promises to aides in the White House or Justice Department. Even the conservative Supreme Court and several lower courts repeatedly blocked Trump, who according to a study last year had the worst win rate at the high court of any modern president.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith “, Joe Biden, , , Neil Eggleston, Obama, John Roberts, Biden, chafed, Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, Smith, It’s, Smith’s, Trump’s, Richard Painter, George W, Bush, Painter, ” Biden, Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Mark Meadows, ” Rod Rosenstein Organizations: CNN, White, , Navy, Department, Trump, Justice Department, Supreme Court Locations: Georgia
CNN —Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett stands apart. And that is why Barrett has become the best hope for what remains of the liberal wing, particularly after Trump’s election victory. As Trump returns to the White House, the Supreme Court may be even more positioned to check the balance of powers. Nonetheless, progressives have few options, and an uncertain horizon, and cannot help but imbue Barrett with hope. “As Justice Barrett said…,” is a common Kagan refrain, too.
Persons: Amy Coney Barrett, Donald Trump’s, Barrett, Trump, imbue Barrett, Sandra Day O’Connor, Reagan, Anthony Kennedy, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Barrett homed, Sotomayor, , Kagan, Kagan interjected, , Richard Glossip, Brett Kavanaugh, Thomas, Roberts, Kavanaugh, Adam Feldman, Jake Truscott, Republican centrists O’Connor, Kennedy, Lewis Powell, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Dobbs, Antonin Scalia, Scalia’s, Scalia, Jesse, Warren Burger, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, they’ve, Gorsuch, ” Barrett, Jackson, Alito, ” Alito, Biden, Justice Roberts, CNN Kagan, Barrett’s, Roe, Wade, , ’ Barrett, Adrian Zackheim, Justice Barrett, ” Zackheim, Sentinel publicists, Sen, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Barack Obama’s, Merrick Garland, Ginsburg Organizations: CNN, Republican, White, Republicans, Representatives, Notre Dame, Trump, Democratic, Glossip, Jackson, Health Organization, New York, Association, Harvard, ., Biden, Capitol, of Education, Ronald Reagan, Sentinel, Penguin Random, Wall Street, University of Louisville McConnell Center Locations: America, Oklahoma, , . United States, New Orleans, Washington, Haiti, Idaho, California, Louisville
Voters in seven out of 10 states approved ballot measures this week to safeguard abortion rights, a hot-button issue that helped drive Americans to the polls. Trump has waffled considerably on his position on abortion, most recently saying he would not support a federal ban and wants to leave the issue up to the states. "The more restrictions we see on abortion over the next four years, the worse health outcomes are going to be. People are suffering and dying unnecessarily," said Katie O'Connor, senior director of federal abortion policy at the National Women's Law Center. At least 70% of Americans oppose a federal ban on abortion or a ban on the procedure at six weeks.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's, Trump, Katie O'Connor, Roe, Wade, O'Connor Organizations: Washington , D.C, National Women's Law, PBS, Associated Press, NORC, for Public Affairs Research, Guttmacher Institute Locations: Washington ,, U.S, telehealth
Jim Watson | Afp | Getty ImagesAs Donald Trump celebrated his presidential victory early Wednesday morning, Elon Musk was right there with him. Elon," Trump said onstage at his Mar-a-Lago resort, thanking the world's richest person for spending two weeks campaigning in Pennsylvania. Musk's investment in Trump is already paying off, even though Trump doesn't take office until Jan. 20. Musk was introduced by Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick, who called the Tesla CEO the "greatest capitalist" in U.S. history. Having a role in a bespoke commission could give Musk power over federal agencies' budgets, staffing and the ability to push for the elimination of inconvenient regulations.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Jim Watson, Elon, Trump, Musk's SpaceX, Musk, surrogates, Tony, Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, Lutnick, Biden, Tesla, Sergio Flores, Geoff Orazem, Orazem, Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Bill Nelson, Putin, Tenet, JD Vance Organizations: Republican, Afp, Getty, Trump, U.S, Tesla, SpaceX, Twitter, Department of Government, SEC, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Aviation Administration, IRS, Microsoft, Meta, U.S . Army, National Security Agency, FedScout, NASA, U.S . Air Force, Space Force, Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Labor Relations Board, Street Journal, NBC News, Tenet Media, Department of Justice, Putin, Kremlin, PAC Locations: Butler , Pennsylvania, Lago, Pennsylvania, China, Hurricane, New, Puerto Rico, Meta, U.S, Taiwan, Russian, Ukraine
CNN —Germany’s governing coalition has collapsed after disagreements over the country’s weak economy led Chancellor Olaf Scholz to sack his finance minister. The coalition has been at loggerheads over how to revive Germany’s economy. What problems is Germany’s economy facing? Germany’s economy, Europe’s largest, shrank last year for the first time since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Party leader Alice Weidel has already hailed the coalition’s collapse as a “liberation” for Germany.
Persons: Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Christian Lindner’s, Scholz, Donald Trump, Europe’s, Angela Merkel, Gerhard Schröder, Merkel, Christian Lindner, Christoph Soeder, Friedrich Merz, Lindner, Liesa Johannssen, “ Lindner, ” Lindner, , Carsten Brzeski, , Robert Habeck, Annegret Hilse, Merz, Alice Weidel, ” Weidel Organizations: CNN, Free Democrats Party, Scholz’s Social Democratic Party, SPD, Green Party, CDU, Trump, Social Democratic Party, Greens, ING, Volkswagen, CDU –, Christian Democratic Union, Party Locations: Germany, Germany’s, Nazi, Thuringia, France, Italy, Ukraine, China,
CNN —Donald Trump believes presidents have almost absolute power. In his second term, there will be few political or legal restraints to check him. It’s not guaranteed that just because Trump has massive power he will spurn constitutional checks and balances. No other president has come into office armed with a Supreme Court ruling that grants significant immunity to presidents for official acts. Attempts to prosecute Trump’s political foes on spurious grounds, meanwhile, could theoretically see mass resignations of Justice Department staff.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, he’ll, It’s, , Adam Kinzinger, Arizona Sen, John McCain, Marjorie Taylor Greene, , scoffed, CNN’s Dana Bash, ” Trump, Jack Smith, Elie Honig, Corey Brettschneider, ” Brettschneider, Patrick Henry’s disquiet, George Washington, Brettschneider, Henry, , Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Viktor Orbán, he’s, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Don McGahn, John Kelly, Mark Esper, That’s Organizations: CNN, White, Republican Party, GOP, Republican, Trump, Capitol, Electoral College, , Affordable, Georgia Republican, Justice Department, Trump —, Brown University, Citizens, Democratic House, Department, Constitutional Convention Locations: Washington, , Ohio, Ukraine, Arizona, Illinois, Georgia, New York, America, Hungarian, New Hampshire, Trump
Constitutional amendments to protect or expand abortion passed in seven of the 10 states where they appeared on the ballot Tuesday, NBC News projects. Voters in Arizona and Missouri approved ballot initiatives that will effectively protect abortion rights until fetal viability and undo existing abortion laws on the books. But voters in Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota rejected proposed amendments that would have done the same — becoming the first pro-abortion-rights ballot measures to fail since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022. The other amendment, that would have enshrined abortion rights until fetal viability in the conservative state’s constitution, was rejected. The defeats of the amendments in Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota ended what had been an unbroken winning streak for ballot measures backing abortion rights in the 2½ years since the fall of Roe.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Organizations: NBC, Voters, Locations: Arizona, Missouri, Florida , Nebraska, South Dakota, Maryland , Montana , Nevada, New York, Colorado, In Nebraska, In Florida, Florida
Nebraska voters approved a ballot measure enshrining current abortion restrictions in the state's constitution, NBC News projects, a setback for reproductive rights advocates in the red state. Unlike most states where the abortion issue was put directly before voters this year, the Nebraska ballot pitted two competing abortion measures against each other. The other, called “Protect Women and Children,” which sought to codify the state’s 12-week ban in the constitution while keeping the door open for additional restrictions. For a ballot measure to pass in the state, it needs a majority of the vote and at least 35% of the total votes cast in the election in favor of it. The amendment to codify the current abortion restrictions in the state was receiving 55% support with 92% of the vote in, while the measure to add constitutional protections for abortion received 49% support.
Persons: Organizations: NBC News Locations: Nebraska
Montana voters approved a ballot measure enshrining abortion in the state constitution, NBC News projects, delivering a victory to advocates for reproductive rights in a Western red state. The amendment will not change current law on abortion in Montana: Abortion is legal in the state until fetal viability, around the 23rd or 24th week of pregnancy, backed up by a 1999 ruling by the state Supreme Court. But advocates for the ballot measure wanted to guard against potential changes by the Legislature or state Supreme Court justices in the heavily Republican state. The measure also prevents the government from “penalizing patients, healthcare providers, or anyone who assists in exercising their right to make and carry out voluntary decisions about their pregnancy.”The ballot measure required a simple majority to pass. Nine other states considered constitutional amendments concerning abortion rights in this election: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New York and South Dakota.
Organizations: NBC News Locations: Montana, , , Arizona , Colorado , Florida , Maryland , Missouri , Nebraska , Nevada , New York, South Dakota
Missouri voters approved a ballot measure enshrining abortion rights in the state constitution, NBC News projects, effectively undoing the state’s near-total abortion ban and delivering a victory to abortion rights activists. In early September, a circuit court judge ruled that the campaign did not meet legal requirements to qualify for the ballot. But the state Supreme Court soon stepped in, reversing that judgment and clearing the way for the amendment to go before voters. Missouri joins a string of red states where voters have acted to expand abortion rights after state legislatures passed bans following the 2022 Dobbs decision. Nine other states considered constitutional amendments concerning abortion rights in this election, including Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York and South Dakota.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Dobbs Organizations: NBC News, U.S, Supreme, Missouri Locations: Missouri, Arizona , Colorado , Florida , Maryland , Montana , Nebraska , Nevada , New York, South Dakota
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