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Where patients traveled for abortions Number of patients 10,000 1,000 100 2023 171,300 patients traveled Alaska Wash. N.D. Hawaii Minn. Ore. N.Y . Number of patients 10,000 1,000 100 2023 171,300 patients traveled 2019 73,100 patients traveled Alaska Alaska Wash. Wash. Maine Mont. An exodus from Texas 10,000 1,000 100 Number of patients 2023 35,500 Texas patients traveled Wash. N.Y. Mass. Texas 10,000 1,000 100 Number of patients 2023 35,500 Texas patients traveled Wash. N.Y. Mass. Change in abortions by state State Abortions 2023 Change from 2019 Nonresident share Wyo.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Nev, S.C, W.Va Calif, , , , Amy Hagstrom Miller, “ We’re, John Seago, “ We’ve, Mia, Uber, Hagstrom Miller, Kelly Baden, Allison Cowett, Megan Jeyifo, Kelly Flynn Organizations: Nev . N.J ., Ind . Utah Colo, N.Y ., Ind . Utah W.Va, Guttmacher Institute Orange, La . Texas Fla, Md . Utah W.Va Colo, D.C, Alaska, W.Va, La . Texas, Ind . Utah D.C, La . Texas Texas, New York City, Texas Fla, Midwest, Mich . Iowa Ohio, ., Illinois Wis ., Illinois Wis . Iowa Ill, Guttmacher Institute, Republicans, Kan, Colo, Ill, Del, Utah, Hawaii, Iowa, Ohio, Maine, Family Planning, Chicago Abortion, N.Y, Tenn, California S.C Locations: Alaska, N.D, Hawaii Minn, Ore, N.Y, Idaho Wis, S.D . Mich, Pa, Nev . N.J, Nev . N.J . Ohio, Ill, Ind . Utah, W.Va Md, Calif, Kan . Va, Mo, Ky, N.C, Tenn, Ariz, ., N.M . Ala . Miss ., La . Texas Fla, N.Y . Idaho, S.D . Wis, Mich, Ind . Utah W.Va Md, Colo, Kan, Mo . Va . Ky, S.C . Ala . Miss ., Texas, New Mexico, Southern, Illinois, South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, Nev . N.J . Ohio Md, La . Texas, Alaska Wash . Maine, Minn, Mass, Wis, S.D . Idaho Mich, Wyo, Pa . Iowa, . Ohio Ind, Md . Utah, Va, Mo . Calif, Okla, S.C . Miss ., Ala, Hawaii, N.Y Idaho, La, Fla, N.Y Idaho Wis, Nev . Ohio Md, W.Va Colo . Va, N.M . Ala, Alaska Alaska, Wash . Maine, . Idaho, Nev Nev, N.J, Neb ., . Ohio Ohio, Ind, Ind . Utah Md . Utah, Kan . Va . Calif, S.C . Miss . Ala . Miss ., La . Texas Texas Fla, Wisconsin, Columbus , Ga, New York, ” Texas, Pa . N.J, Nev . Md, Colo . Va, N.M . Ga, N.M . Texas, Mich . Iowa, Okla ., Illinois Wis, Illinois Wis . Iowa, Miss . Texas, Maryland , Minnesota, Virginia, Conn, Houston, Albuquerque, States, ” Illinois, Chicago, N.Y Pa . N.J, Md, Va . N.C, California, Ala . Miss, . Pa . Md, Miss . Ala, Florida , Georgia, Florida, state’s, Florida , North Carolina
I was writing a novel about Mr. Kaczynski. I grew up in Missoula, about 80 miles from the Unabomber’s shack in the Montana wilderness and was 11 at the time of his capture. I didn’t know who the Unabomber was or what he had done, but I could tell it was important — and dark. So much so that my home state was suddenly the center of national attention. Western Montana in the 1990s was not a place that made the national news, save for an occasional environmental disaster and the annual Testicle Festival — a days-long debauch of fried steer genitals that attracted seedier press.
Persons: Ted Kaczynski, Kaczynski, I’d Locations: Butner, N.C, Missoula, Montana, Western Montana
Nine months ago, John Steenhuisen, who leads South Africa’s second-largest political party, the Democratic Alliance, stood before news cameras and signed an agreement not to work with the long-governing party, the African National Congress. “So help me God,” Mr. Steenhuisen said, raising his right hand and chuckling. He and the Democratic Alliance are now plowing ahead with the most important political negotiations in South Africa since the end of apartheid in 1994 and have drafted a document laying out their core principles for joining a government with the African National Congress, or A.N.C. The governing party’s slide — taking just 40 percent of the vote, ending three decades of dominance — has left Mr. Steenhuisen, 48, standing at the brink of his political dreams. As head of the party that took second place, with nearly 22 percent of the vote, Mr. Steenhuisen seems likely to get a leading role in the next government, political analysts say.
Persons: John Steenhuisen, ” Mr, Steenhuisen, Organizations: South, Democratic Alliance, African National Congress Locations: South Africa
Days after his African National Congress party faced historic losses at the polls, President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa said on Thursday that he will seek to form a government that includes a wide range of parties, some with starkly opposing views. since the fall of apartheid, South Africa has been in limbo since the watershed election on May 29 when voters punished the ruling party for failing to address issues like skyrocketing unemployment, regular power outages and high rates of crime. Over the next few days, a weakened A.N.C. “We invite political parties to form a government of national unity as the best option to move our country forward,” Mr. Ramaphosa said in a news conference late on Thursday night. “This moment calls for the broadest unity of the people of South Africa.”
Persons: Cyril Ramaphosa of, , Mr, Ramaphosa, Organizations: African National Congress Locations: Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa, South Africa, Africa’s
Lara Trump, the Republican National Committee co-chair and Mr. Trump’s daughter-in-law, strongly denounced him on CNN. Mr. Hogan has also said he would not be going to the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee next month, where Mr. Trump will officially receive the nomination. Mr. Hogan remains personally popular in Maryland, something Mr. Trump is not. “We don’t want to alienate Trump voters,” Mr. Hogan told The Associated Press in April. “But Larry Hogan is running for Senate in Maryland, not Mississippi,” a nod to the needle Mr. Hogan must thread.
Persons: Donald J, Larry Hogan’s, Hogan, Trump, , , Chis LaCivita, Lara Trump, Trump’s, Hogan’s, Michael Whatley, Larry Hogan, Biden, Republicans —, , Ben Cardin, ” Mr, Mr, Whatley didn’t, Steve Daines, Angela Alsobrooks, George Santos, Lou Dobbs, Chaya Raichik, aren’t, John Cornyn, Lindsay Reilly Organizations: Senate, Democratic, Mr, Trump, Republican, Republican National Committee, CNN, Republican Party, Trump Republican, Republican National Convention, Washington , D.C, Republicans, Democrat, Associated Press, Biden voters, Maryland, National Republican Senatorial Committee, Republican leadership’s, Fund, Hogan’s Democratic, Prince, Maryland Democrats, Maryland Democratic Party Locations: Maryland, Manhattan, America, Milwaukee, Washington ,, Montana, Mississippi, Prince George’s County, Washington, Texas
Former President Donald J. Trump and the Republican National Committee collected a combined $141 million in May, campaign officials said on Monday, an enormous haul fueled in part by his criminal conviction last week. That sum should help Mr. Trump continue his quest to close his yawning financial gap with President Biden and his own allied groups. The $141 million figure matches what Mr. Biden and the Democratic Party raised in March and April combined. The fund-raising was powered by what Lara Trump, the Republican National Committee co-chairwoman and the former president’s daughter-in-law, said on Sunday was $70 million raised by Mr. Trump and the R.N.C. in the 48 hours after Mr. Trump’s conviction.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Biden, Mr, Trump’s, Lara Trump Organizations: Republican National Committee, Democratic Party, Mr
Jacob Zuma’s political career could have ended when he was forced to resign six years ago as South Africa’s president over corruption allegations. But Mr. Zuma, 82, has improbably bounced back after every threat to his political survival, and now has significant power to determine who will lead the country. The political party that Mr. Zuma began six months ago — umKhonto weSizwe, or M.K. — finished third in last week’s national election, upending South Africa’s political landscape. The showing helped to bring about the stunning collapse of the party he once led — the African National Congress, or A.N.C., which failed to win an outright majority for the first time since the country’s democracy began in 1994.
Persons: Jacob Zuma’s, Zuma, improbably, Organizations: African National Congress, upending Locations: South
South Africa is headed for big change. — which has governed with sizable electoral majorities since the start of democracy in South Africa in 1994 — won only about 40 percent of the vote in last week’s election. “In their desperation, I wonder what kind of choices they will make,” said Bhekindlela Cebekhulu, 40, a theater performer in Soweto. Will South Africa have a white president soon, or might parties promoting socialism seize ownership of his home, asked Mr. Cebekhulu, who said he voted for the A.N.C. Most of all, he said, he worried about former President Jacob Zuma’s threats to change the Constitution.
Persons: , , Bhekindlela Cebekhulu, Mr, Cebekhulu, Jacob Zuma’s Organizations: African National Congress, Locations: Africa, South Africa, Soweto, Will South Africa
From their home in northern Johannesburg, the Mathivha family celebrated the latest update: with the majority of votes counted, the African National Congress had earned a mere 41 percent. For the first time since the end of apartheid in 1994, the party once led by Nelson Mandela failed to win an outright majority of the votes in a national election. In the last election, in 2019, the A.N.C. The drop to 41 percent in this election has cost the party its majority in Parliament, which elects the country’s president. Now, it will have to work with smaller opposition parties, like those the Mathivhas voted for instead of the A.N.C.
Persons: , Buhle, Khathu Mathivha, Ms, Mathivha, Nelson Mandela Organizations: African National Congress Locations: Johannesburg, South Africa
Opinion | Election Security, Trump-Style
  + stars: | 2024-05-30 | by ( Katherine Miller | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
building — are dedicated to one cause: election integrity.”She was sitting between her husband, Eric, and Jason Simmons, who is the new North Carolina G.O.P. “Election integrity,” in Donald Trump’s telling, tends to be about the past; party co-chairs like Ms. Trump usually talk about the present. The three sat onstage, motionless, as Mr. Trump talked about the border, then eventually, came to North Carolina. Theoretically, that Mr. Trump won while a Democrat won the governorship offers the best proof of all that the election was not stolen. But perhaps because to concede his own success in one place would render his failure elsewhere unbearable, Mr. Trump must instead believe that fraud took place there as well, and that Michael Whatley defeated it.
Persons: Lara Trump, Eric, Jason Simmons, Donald Trump’s, Trump, , Michael Whatley Organizations: Republican National Committee, North Carolina G.O.P, Democrat Locations: North Carolina, Greensboro, N.C, Pennsylvania, Georgia
The Trump Verdict: Americans React
  + stars: | 2024-05-30 | by ( The New York Times | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Americans were still digesting the news on Thursday evening that the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee had just become the first former president to be found guilty of a felony. But Donald J. Trump’s conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up an alleged sexual encounter with a porn star was reverberating quickly. Here’s what people had to say across the country. John Balazy, 60, ManhattanHe’s a businessman and “hush money happens all the time,” he said. “It’s what people in these offices do all the time, so why didn’t it happen to them?”Malcolm Jake, 23, Durham, N.C.
Persons: Donald J, reverberating, John Balazy, , , Malcolm Jake Organizations: Republican, Manhattan Locations: Durham, N.C
South Africans were on edge Thursday as votes trickled in from a tight national election, with early returns showing poor results for the African National Congress, the party that has governed the country for three decades. — for the first time — would need to form a coalition with one or more rival parties in order to stay in power. In South Africa’s parliamentary system, President Cyril Ramaphosa, the leader of the African National Congress, would need the support of members of the opposition in order to serve a second term. would significantly change South African politics, and also its policies, shifting the country away from a government dominated by a single party to one held together by fragile coalitions. in small municipalities, but has been fraught in large cities like Johannesburg, where it has led to political infighting.
Persons: , Cyril Ramaphosa Organizations: African National Congress Locations: Africa’s, Johannesburg
Cyril Ramaphosa ascended to the presidency of South Africa several years ago carrying the excitement and optimism of the country’s rising Black professionals, who saw themselves in him: a measured businessman with intellectual gravitas. He seemed an antidote to the previous administration, which had blasted Black professionals as elitists complicit in the continued white domination of the economy. And Black professionals could play a significant role in the A.N.C.’s demise. during the scandal-plagued tenure of Mr. Ramaphosa’s predecessor, Jacob Zuma, many professionals returned to the party in the 2019 election. They believed that Mr. Ramaphosa could clean up corruption and turn around the sluggish economy, according to interviews with political analysts and Black professionals.
Persons: Cyril Ramaphosa, Ramaphosa, Ramaphosa’s, Jacob Zuma Organizations: South, African National Congress Locations: South Africa
Can South Africa’s Opposition Parties Break Through?
  + stars: | 2024-05-29 | by ( John Eligon | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Papi Mazibuko, a 50-year-old library assistant, decided it was time to switch teams and vote for the Democratic Alliance, the leading opposition party in the national elections in South Africa on Wednesday. The neighboring municipality, run by the Democratic Alliance, had a good record of delivering basic utilities. South Africa’s opposition has long failed to inspire voters, political analysts say. will fall below 50 percent of the national vote. A record 51 opposition parties on the national ballot are trying to sell South Africans on the idea that the country would be better off without the A.N.C.
Persons: Papi Mazibuko, Mazibuko, John Steenhuisen, , Andile Organizations: Democratic Alliance, African National Congress, Fighters Locations: South Africa, Evaton, Johannesburg
College sports bring in billions of dollars in revenue every year, but until very recently virtually none of it went to athletes. v. Alston that student athletes should be able to profit from their names, images or likenesses, known as NIL. That settlement, which is not yet finalized, will likely change college sports, but many questions about the details of that future remain unclear. Senator Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican, has been trying to help create a solution for college sports. I spoke with him about why he believes preserving competitiveness in college sports is a job for the federal government.
Persons: Alston, Brett Kavanaugh, Ted Cruz, Organizations: Texas Republican Locations: N.C.A.A, America
At the dawn of South Africa’s democracy after the fall of the racist apartheid government, millions lined up before sunrise to cast their ballots in the country’s first free and fair election in 1994. South Africa is now heading into a pivotal election on Wednesday, in which voters will determine which party — or alliance — will pick the president. This downward curve has mirrored the support for South Africa’s governing party, the African National Congress, or A.N.C., which was a liberation movement before becoming a political machine. A new generation of voters do not have the lived experience of apartheid nor the emotional connection that their parents and grandparents had to the party. as a governing party is all young people know, and they blame it for their joblessness, rampant crime and an economy blighted by electricity blackouts.
Persons: Nelson Mandela Organizations: South, African National Congress Locations: South Africa
On an overcast April day in South Africa’s administrative capital, Pretoria, President Cyril Ramaphosa delivered a lackluster speech commemorating the end of white-minority rule in South Africa. On several occasions, the former South African president Jacob Zuma proclaimed that the A.N.C. would rule “until Jesus comes back.” Now Mr. Zuma is hoping to unseat the party that enabled his notorious graft. The party’s emergence is one of the many morbid symptoms in South Africa today. Thirty years on from apartheid’s end, South Africa is in the midst of another complex transformation.
Persons: Cyril Ramaphosa, Nelson Mandela, Ramaphosa’s, Jacob Zuma, , Jesus, Zuma, uMkhonto, , , Ramaphosa Organizations: African National Congress, South, Mr Locations: South Africa’s, Pretoria, South Africa, South
Bill Walton, a basketball center whose extraordinary passing and rebounding skills helped him win two national college championships with U.C.L.A. A redheaded hippie and devoted Grateful Dead fan, Walton was a 6-foot-11 acolyte of the renowned U.C.L.A. He was named the national college player of the year three times. Walton’s greatest game was the 1973 national championship against Memphis State, played in St. Louis. Walton — not yet known for his often hyperbolic, stream-of-consciousness speaking manner — refused to say much after the game.
Persons: Bill Walton, Walton, John Wooden, St . Louis, Walton —, , Organizations: Portland Trail Blazers, Boston Celtics, Bruins, Memphis State Locations: San Diego, St ., U.C.L.A
The immediate takeaway from the landmark $2.8 billion settlement that the N.C.A.A. and the major athletic conferences accepted on Thursday was that it cut straight at the heart of the organization’s cherished model of amateurism: Schools can now pay their athletes directly. But another bedrock principle remains intact, and maintaining it is likely to be a priority for the N.C.A.A. : that players who are paid by the universities are not employed by them, and therefore do not have the right to collectively bargain. That stance came under greater legal and political scrutiny in recent years, leading to the settlement, which still requires approval by a judge.
Persons: ” John I, Jenkins Organizations: University of Notre Dame
As a child in Bolivia, Mateo De La Rocha told his family he wanted to work as a garbage man when he grew up. In La Paz, his home city at the time, trash piles were everywhere. In Mr. De La Rocha’s eyes, the local sanitation worker was the only person cleaning up pollution. As many as 3.9 million abandoned and aging oil and gas wells dot the United States, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. estimates that abandoned wells collectively released 303,000 metric tons of methane in 2022, roughly equivalent to how much carbon dioxide 23 gas-burning power plants might release in one year.
Persons: Mateo De La Rocha, De, , De La Rocha Organizations: Paz, Environmental Protection Agency Locations: Bolivia, United States, Cary, N.C, Ohio
Since the constitutional right to abortion was taken away in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization in 2022, Democratic spending on abortion-related ads has jumped. Line chart showing the percentage of television ad spending devoted to abortion from 2018 to 2024. Democratic spending jumped up to around one-third in 2022 after the Dobbs ruling and has stayed high. In the first four months of this year alone, 48 percent of Democratic ad spending on broadcast networks in Pennsylvania centered on abortion. Democrats are seizing the moment, devoting two-thirds of their ad spending to abortion there.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Dobbs, Emily Holzknecht, Adam Westbrook, Trump, overperformed, , N.M, Andy Beshear’s, Daniel Cameron’s, Mr, Biden Organizations: Democratic, Republican, Republicans, Jackson, Health Organization, Democrats, Republicans Pennsylvania, Arizona, Michigan, Georgia, Wisconsin, Supreme Court, Data, Pew Research, Ore ., Nev . Ohio Ill, Conn . Iowa Pa, Ind, Del . Utah Colo, Religion Research Locations: Dobbs v, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, . Arizona, . Maine, Mont, Minn . Vt, Ore, Ore . Idaho, Wis, N.Y, S.D . Mich, R.I, Wyo, Conn . Iowa Pa . N.J, Nev . Ohio, Del . Ind . Utah Md, Colo, W.Va . Va . Calif, Kan, Mo, Ky, N.C, Tenn, Okla, ., N.M . Miss ., Ala . Texas, Fla . Alaska Hawaii, Conn . Iowa, Neb . N.J, Del . Utah, W.Va . Md . Va . Calif, United States, Nevada , Arizona , Montana , Colorado, South Dakota , Nebraska , Missouri , Arkansas, Florida , New York, Maryland, Nevada , Arizona , Wisconsin , Michigan, Kentucky, Gaza, Ukraine
: That college sports association just agreed to a $2.8 billion class-action settlement that, if approved by a judge in California, would pay student athletes after a century of deeming them amateurs. and its member institutions allowing athletes to make money from sports programs that have made millions for their schools. Starting in the fall of 2025, schools could have about $20 million a year to pay their student athletes. payments, giving student athletes a big stream of revenue. And in March, the Dartmouth men’s basketball team voted to unionize, adding potentially more pressure on universities to pay athletes.
Persons: It’s Organizations: Dartmouth men’s Locations: California, Southeastern, Atlantic Coast ,
Brent Jacquette knows a thing or two about college sports. A former collegiate soccer player and coach in Pennsylvania who is now an executive at a consulting firm for athletic recruiting, he’s well aware of issues surrounding pay for college athletes. But even for an industry veteran like Mr. Jacquette, the news of the N.C.A.A.’s staggering settlement in a class-action antitrust lawsuit on Thursday came as a surprise, with more than a little anxiety. The first words that came to mind, he said, were “trepidation” and “confusion.”And he was not alone in feeling unsettled. Interviews, statements and social media posts mere hours after the settlement was announced showed that many were uncertain and concerned about what the future of collegiate sports holds.
Persons: Brent Jacquette, Jacquette, , Phil DiStefano, Rick George Organizations: University of Colorado Locations: Pennsylvania, University of Colorado Boulder
and the major athletic conferences agreed on Thursday night to a $2.8 billion settlement of a class-action antitrust lawsuit by college athletes, it was a pivotal moment in the long history of college sports. agreed to allow colleges and universities to pay athletes directly for playing sports, through revenue sharing plans. Here’s what we know about the settlement and its possible impact. How is this settlement different from other lawsuits and decisions over pay for student athletes? An earlier decision three years ago permitted college athletes to make money on their own by marketing their names and images individually.
Persons: Organizations: Division
Since its founding, the N.C.A.A. has operated with a business model that defined the college athlete as an amateur. But the N.C.A.A.’s $2.8 billion settlement on Thursday night in a class-action antitrust lawsuit represents the heaviest blow — and perhaps a decisive one — to that system. If approved by a U.S. district judge in California, the settlement would allow for the creation of the first revenue-sharing plan for college athletics, a landmark shift in which schools would directly pay their athletes for playing. This sea change, though, also carries its own questions, according to critics.
Organizations: U.S Locations: California
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