Judge Amy Coney Barrett, fresh off her confirmation to serve as an associate justice on the nation’s highest court, took her constitutional oath on Monday at the White House.

The Supreme Court said in a press release that Barrett will be able to start her new role after Chief Justice John Roberts administers her judicial oath on Tuesday. Justice Clarence Thomas administered the constitutional oath at Monday’s ceremony.

Thomas has long been considered one of the more conservative justices on the court, along with Barrett’s mentor, the late Justice Antonin Scalia. Echoing her mentor, Barrett underscored the need for a separation of powers between the judicial and legislative branches.

“It is the job of a senator to pursue her policy preferences,” Barrett said to an audience on the South Lawn of the White House. “In fact, it would be a dereliction of duty for her to put policy goals aside. By contrast, it is the job of a judge to resist her policy preferences. It would be a dereliction of duty for her to give into them. Federal judges don’t stand for election. Thus, they have no basis for claiming that their preferences reflect those of the people.”

CNN, MSNBC SKIP HISTORIC SENATE VOTE CONFIRMING AMY CONEY BARRETT TO SUPREME COURT

The separation of duty is what makes the judiciary distinct, she said.

“A judge declares independence not only from Congress and the president, but also from the private beliefs that might otherwise move her,” she said.

The Senate confirmed Barrett with a 52-48 vote. All 45 Democrats and two independents who caucus with the Democrats opposed her confirmation.

Controversial from the start, her confirmation prompted a wave of backlash on Monday. Almost immediately after the Senate voted, Democratic lawmakers panned the decision while some called demanded leaders “expand the court.”

SEN. JOHN KENNEDY LAUDS BARRETT SUPREME COURT CONFIRMATION AS ‘VICTORY FOR OUR FOUNDERS’

Barrett’s confirmation solidified a conservative majority on the nation’s highest court, and gave Trump another victory as he headed into election day.

Whoever wins on Nov. 3 will likely have major consequences on the Supreme Court as an American institution. Former Vice President Joe Biden has mostly refused to answer questions about whether he would pack the courts.

On Monday, Biden said that he might be open to shifting Supreme Court justices to lower courts if elected president, noting that he hadn’t made any judgment yet on the issue.

“There is some literature among constitutional scholars about the possibility of going from one court to another court, not just always staying the whole time in the Supreme Court but I have made no judgment,” Biden said at a campaign stop in Chester, Pa.

AMY CONEY BARRETT CONFIRMED TO SUPREME COURT, ‘SQUAD’ MEMBERS CALL FOR EXPANDING THE BENCH

He went on to say that “there are just a group of serious constitutional scholars, have a number of ideas how we should proceed from this point on.”

“That’s what we’re going to be doing. We’re going to give them 180 days God-willing if I’m elected, from the time I’m sworn in to be able to make such a recommendation.”

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During an interview with “60 Minutes,” Biden said he would set up a commission that would make recommendations for reforming the court system. 

“I will ask them to, over 180 days, come back to me with recommendations as to how to reform the court system because it’s getting out of whack,” he said.

Fox News’ Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/amy-coney-barrett-sworn-in-as-supreme-court-associated-justice-at-white-house-ceremony

POLITICO Dispatch: October 27

With just seven days until the election, Trump is facing a surge in coronavirus cases and an outbreak within his VP’s office, providing a new line of attacks from Joe Biden. POLITICO’s Nancy Cook breaks down both campaigns’ strategies for the final week.

Wall Street’s sharp drop lower on Monday as Covid-19 cases surge in the U.S. and Europe highlighted just how worried markets are about the trajectory of the virus and how dependent they’ve become on the prospect of trillions more in federal support for a struggling economy in which 23 million people remain on some type of unemployment assistance and some businesses face a grim winter from the coronavirus.

Investors could wind up seriously disappointed if the result next week produces even more bitterly divided government. And stocks could tank further if any of the results — including control of the Senate — remain unknown for days or even weeks.

“The market very much believes that Biden is going to win and the Senate is going to tip to Democrats,” said the CEO of one of the largest banks on Wall Street, speaking on the condition that he not be identified. “And the assumption is that we are going to have a very significant increase in stimulus very quickly and that’s very positive for markets. But the fact is there is still a tremendous amount of uncertainty around the outcome of the election and when stimulus might actually come, if it ever does.”

Enthusiasm for the idea of a Democratic sweep and huge new federal spending — cited in recent reports from Goldman Sachs and other major banks — has helped the stock market weather months of head fakes and political posturing from Washington on when more stimulus money may come.

While investors increasingly like the idea of a Democratic sweep, markets probably wouldn’t plunge if Trump defies national polls and pundits once again to pull off a reelection win. That would bring the promise of continued low tax rates on corporate profits, low regulation and a president eager to secure more stimulus by casting aside worries about debt.

It’s still possible that markets could initially sink on a Biden win much as they did in the initial hours after Trump’s victory became apparent four years ago. But interviews with traders and executives, as well as numerous analyst research notes, suggest Wall Street has learned to stop worrying and almost — kind of — love the idea of Democratic control in Washington.

What they probably won’t love is a divided result in which Biden wins the White House and Democrats fail to take the Senate, or Trump wins in a contested outcome and Congress becomes more divided, potentially leading to more Washington gridlock and far smaller — or even no — new fiscal stimulus.

Here are three scenarios that could play out next week and how Wall Street might react to each of them.

The Blue Wave

Under this scenario, Biden coasts to a clear victory next week that Trump cannot legitimately dispute, while Democrats hold the House and take enough Senate seats to gain effective control of the chamber.

Much of Wall Street — though not uniformly — now tends to embrace this idea because it would likely mean that the new administration would have a free hand to pass a giant stimulus bill in the early months of 2021. Such a measure, long desired on Wall Street, would likely include extended and expanded unemployment benefits, aid to cash-strapped states and fresh direct checks to Americans.

This kind of fire-hose approach totaling around $4 trillion helped drive a fairly robust recovery in late spring and early summer from the depths of the recession growing out of Covid-19 stay-at-home orders. But that began to reverse when the cash ran out at the end of August and consumer spending and job gains slowed. A large and well-tailored stimulus package — with at least some of it paid for to assuage deficit hawks — is essentially item No. 1 on Wall Street’s current wish list.

“If the stimulus leads to meaningful job creation and addresses the country’s infrastructure and competitiveness needs, then it could be very positive for the markets,” said Richard Bernstein, former chief investment strategist at Merrill Lynch and founder of RBAdvisors. “But the key here is that uncertainty would be reduced if Trump loses. One may not like all [Biden’s] policies, but there will be less uncertainty.”

Some on Wall Street still fear that full Democratic control in Washington would lead to higher taxes and regulations that could crimp corporate profits and thus undermine stock prices beyond early next year. “Certain sectors, mainly natural resources, will see this as close to a disaster,” said Stephen Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Equity Management. “I believe this outcome leads to the worst market. The real fear will be if progressive policies get implemented.”

That remains mostly a minority view, however. “The market is embracing the stimulus concept a blue wave would bring,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer and founding partner at Cresset Capital. “Perhaps investors are not fully assessing the impact of an incrementally higher corporate tax rate and increased taxes on foreign income.”

Biden wins, but the GOP holds the Senate

This is one of two potentially negative outcomes for the stock market, largely because it could mean that a Biden White House would be unable to push a giant stimulus through a GOP Senate. At the same time, Biden could still install regulators in top jobs unfriendly to big business, rolling back some of Trump’s efforts to ease restrictions on multiple industries including oil and gas and financial services.

This would be a scenario under which the corporate tax rate could remain at the lowered 21 percent enacted under the 2017 tax bill from Trump and the congressional GOP. Individual tax rates also would likely not rise, given Republican opposition.

While these facts might prevent big losses on Wall Street, the lack of another huge economy-boosting stimulus could trigger a major near-term disappointment among investors.

“Mitch McConnell is a patient warrior,” David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors, said of the Senate majority leader. “He will look at his declaration to stymie Obama and likely try to repeat it with Biden.”

The market correction could be sharp in this scenario given that investors have gotten spooked for months when talks over another stimulus package fell off track in Washington. The massive stimulus provided by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s easy-money policies in the wake of Covid-19 helped keep a floor under markets. But Wall Street analysts and traders still want another big fiscal stimulus package to push the economy through the winter and spring until a vaccine emerges.

“I’d say this is the worst scenario because Washington will become like sclerotic Europe and get nothing done,” said Bernstein. “Uncertainty will remain an investment theme. And deregulation likely reverses.”

Trump wins, and Congress remains split

A clear and legitimate Trump victory might depress Democrats across the country, but it’s not likely to cause a giant collapse on Wall Street. While investors are clearly pricing in a Biden win, Trump holding onto office would end the threat of significantly higher tax rates on corporations and high-income individuals.

McConnell might also be more likely to embrace a bigger stimulus number if Trump remains in the White House. And House Democrats would have a hard time stopping it, given the real threats to the economy and their desire to send as much aid out from Washington as possible.

The initial reaction could in fact be a sharp snap higher on Wall Street. But it may not be one that lasts forever, given the uncertainty about whether an emboldened Trump would likely push even harder on his agenda of tariffs and ongoing battles with America’s biggest trading partners like China.

In this scenario, the market “screams higher initially as this will be a surprise,” Massocca said of a Trump win and continued split control in Congress. “Trump is very pro-business and markets like that. However, restrictive trade policies are not liked and the market figures these go away under Biden.”

Some on Wall Street embrace the idea of more gridlock in Washington, should either Biden or Trump win and face at least one chamber of Congress controlled by the opposition party. That would be seen as a check on extreme moves in either direction.

“The thing I’m concerned about with the blue wave is that we go too far on fiscal support and we don’t act responsibly,” said the Wall Street CEO. “A Biden win and the GOP holding the Senate would temper a lot of that. And everybody actually agrees that we need more stimulus.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/27/wall-street-biden-blue-wave-432710

The Supreme Court on Monday night voted against reinstating an order by a Wisconsin federal court judge that said absentee ballots could be counted if received within six days after the election as long as they were postmarked by Election Day. The final vote was 5-3.

The ruling came down as the Senate voted to confirm Amy Coney Barrett as the newest justice to the Supreme Court, solidifying the conservative majority to 6-3. 

Wisconsin is one of about 30 states that require absentee ballots be received by Election Day to be counted. A federal district judge previously concluded the deadline violated Wisconsin voters’ rights in light of the coronavirus pandemic, and agreed to extend it by six days, until November 9.

A Chicago-based federal appeals court then blocked the judge’s order, saying it violated Supreme Court precedent by changing state election rules too close to an election and usurping state legislative authority to change the state’s rules.

An election worker drops a voter’s completed ballot into a ballot box inside City Hall on the first day of in-person early voting for the November 3rd elections in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on October 20, 2020.

KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images


In Monday’s order, a majority of the justices agreed with the appeals court, with John Roberts, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh writing separately to emphasize that federal courts should not be making last-minute changes to state election rules.

Monday’s decision is in line with previous Supreme Court orders during the pandemic. The conservatives generally reject efforts by lower court judges to change election rules or extend deadlines in the run up to the election, saying such decisions are for state election officials and legislatures.

The Wisconsin decision comes one week after the Supreme Court allowed Pennsylvania to accept mail ballots that are received up to three days after Election Day. In that case, Roberts sided with the liberal justices to keep the extension in place.

“While the Pennsylvania applications implicated the authority of state courts to apply their own constitutions to election regulations, this case involves federal intrusion on state lawmaking processes,” Roberts wrote in a concurring opinion Monday. “Different bodies of law and different precedents govern these two situations and require, in these particular circumstances, that we allow the modification of election rules in Pennsylvania but not Wisconsin.”

Kavanaugh said the federal judge changed the rules too close to Election Day and wrote in his concurring opinion that the Supreme Court has “repeatedly emphasized that federal courts ordinarily should not alter state election laws in the period close to the election.” 

Justice Elena Kagan wrote the dissent, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor, arguing the Court’s decision will disenfranchise large numbers of voters in the midst of a pandemic. This is also a familiar position in these cases — the liberal justices generally agree that federal judges should be free to impose changes to state election rules if they believe it’s necessary to protect the fundamental right to vote.

Democrats and other challengers argued that the extended deadline was necessary due to the massive increase in absentee voting during the COVID-19 pandemic. They also argued even if voters follow the state’s deadlines for requesting a ballot, they still may not be able to return it by the time polls close on Election Day. Republicans opposed the extension, arguing that there were plenty of options for voters to cast ballots ahead of Election Day. 

Ahead of Wisconsin’s April election, the Supreme Court did allow for absentee ballots to arrive up to six days after polls closed. A report from the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) issued in May found that 79,054 ballots arrived during that time period and were counted as a result of the extension. 

Kagan pointed to the number of ballots that arrived during the extended window in April in her dissent.

“The Court’s decision will disenfranchise large numbers of responsible voters in the midst of hazardous pandemic conditions,” Kagan wrote. “As the COVID pandemic rages, the Court has failed to adequately protect the Nation’s voters.”

In a statement, Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chair Ben Wikler criticized the Court’s decision and said Democrats will “double down on making sure that every Wisconsin voter knows how to exercise their sacred right to vote in the final eight days of this election.” 

Wisconsin Republican Party Chair Andrew Hitt praised the decision, saying in a statement, “last minute attempts to change election laws only cause more voter confusion and erode the integrity of our elections.” 

Wisconsin has already seen a record number of absentee ballots cast in the general election. More than 1.4 million Wisconsinites have requested mail ballots for the election and only 1 million have been returned. The deadline to request a mail absentee ballot is Thursday, but WEC administrator Meagan Wolfe warned voters not to wait. 

“Please do not wait for the legal deadline – which is 5 p.m. on Thursday, October 29 – for your clerk to receive your request for an absentee ballot by mail,” Wolfe said in a statement. “If you wait until the deadline, you risk not getting your ballot in time to vote it and return it by 8 p.m. on Election Day.”

It can take up to seven days for a ballot to travel through the United States Postal Service, but voters can also hand deliver their completed ballots to a local clerk’s office or drop box before Election Day..

The latest CBS News Battleground Tracker poll in Wisconsin shows Democratic nominee Joe Biden leading President Trump 51% to 46% among likely voters. President Trump won Wisconsin in 2016 by 22,748 votes. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-quashes-wisconsin-court-order-that-said-absentee-ballots-could-be-counted-up-to-6-days-after-election-day/

President Trump has promised to protect patients with preexisting conditions at campaign rallies, but he has not explained how he plans to do that.

Evan Vucci/AP


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Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump has promised to protect patients with preexisting conditions at campaign rallies, but he has not explained how he plans to do that.

Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump has tried to get rid of the Affordable Care Act since the first day of his presidency, but there’s one part of Obamacare that he wants to preserve.

“We will always protect patients with preexisting conditions — always,” Trump told a campaign crowd on Sunday in Londonderry, N.H. — a message he’s shared repeatedly in the final days and weeks before the presidential election.

He said it again in an interview with CBS’ Lesley Stahl that aired Sunday on 60 minutes: “We won’t do anything — and no plan — unless we have preexisting conditions covered.”

A “preexisting condition” refers to any health issue someone has before they sign up for a health insurance policy — from high blood pressure to pregnancy to allergies. Before the Affordable Care Act, it was perfectly legal for health insurers to deny coverage to people with such conditions.

An estimate from the Kaiser Family Foundation suggests that around 54 million people have conditions that — without legal protections — could prompt health insurers to deny them policies. Polls show this is one of the most popular provisions of the law, across the political spectrum.

Although Republicans failed to repeal the ACA in 2017, Trump now has another chance to strike it down: his administration will argue that the law must “fall” at the Supreme Court on November 10, just one week after the election. The addition of Justice Amy Coney Barrett to the court could make this Supreme court challenge more likely to succeed than two previous attempts.

If the law does fall, Congress and the administration would have to act fast to protect people with preexisting conditions. But actually making a law that does that is harder than it sounds. Here’s why it’s so tricky, and how Trump may look to address the problem if he’s elected for a second term.

How things worked, pre ACA

To understand this problem, you have to time travel to pre-ACA times, says Sabrina Corlette, co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University.

Before the ACA, “one of the essential business models for health insurance companies was to discourage risky people from buying into their plans and get as [many] healthy people as they could,” she explains. That way, “they could get the premium revenue and not have to pay out as much in medical claims.”

When you applied for a private private health plan as an individual — as opposed to getting insurance through your job or a public plan like Medicare — insurers would usually require you to fill out a questionnaire and ask for permission to look through your medical records.

If they found a health condition that concerned them, Corlette explains, there were three things they could do.

The first tool they could use was to “simply deny you a policy and just say, ‘I’m sorry, we can’t cover you.’ ” The second tool was to issue you a policy but to say, “‘We won’t cover any care related to your preexisting condition — we see that you have asthma, so we won’t cover anything related to an upper respiratory condition.’ “

“A third tool would be to simply say, ‘We will cover you, but we’re going to essentially charge you a higher premium because we think you’re a riskier person — we normally charge people $100 a month, we’re going to charge you $150 a month,’ ” Corlette explains.

The ACA fix

To stop insurance companies from doing this, the Affordable Care Act needed to come up with a way to keep enough healthy people in the market to balance out the cost of covering more expensive, sick people.

Think about fire insurance, says Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “If you let people insure their house once it’s already on fire, everyone’s going to wait until their house is on fire to buy insurance. It’s a similar problem in health care: If you tell people with preexisting conditions that they’re guaranteed access to insurance, people who are healthy will tend to wait to buy insurance until they get sick.”

If the insurance market is made up of sick people who need lots of medical care, “premiums skyrocket into what’s known as a death spiral,” he says.

So, the people who crafted the Affordable Care Act came up with incentives to get more healthy people into the insurance pool. “The ACA had a carrot and stick,” says Levitt. “The carrot was subsidies provided to low- and middle-income people that made insurance a good value, and the stick was the individual mandate.”

In 2017, Republicans in Congress changed the individual mandate’s penalty to $0 as part of the tax bill. (The fact that the penalty is zero dollars is the basis for the legal challenge soon to be argued before the Supreme Court.)

Even without the threat of a fine for not having insurance, though, “the carrot of the subsidies is still in place and has been very effective at keeping premiums stable,” Levitt says.

As President Trump pointed out during Thursday’s debate, “premiums are down, everything’s down.” Enough healthy people are buying plans in the private market to keep premiums from skyrocketing, although critics still argue that high plan costs price people out of the market.

The challenges of alternate solutions

So without the ACA, how would President Trump and his allies prefer to approach the problem?

“We don’t know where the president is on this,” says Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum, a conservative think tank. Trump did sign an executive order related to preexisting conditions in September, but all it did, Holtz-Eakin says, “was to say very firmly that the [health] secretary is going to have to figure this out.”

There are other ways to incentivize healthy people to pay for health insurance. For Republicans, “the leading alternative approach has been continuous coverage provisions,” Holtz-Aiken says. This idea has been part of Republican ACA replacement bills before — people could be charged a fee and potentially be locked out of the market if they have a break in coverage, thus presumably motivating the young and healthy to stay consistently insured.

Holtz-Aiken says the promise of this model is that “an insurer has a stake in more than one year of your life — so there are now incentives to cover prevention more than there would be otherwise.” Critics have argued that could actually disincentivize healthy people who don’t have coverage from joining the market, and hurt low-income people who already have trouble finding and maintaining health insurance.

Another Republican idea is to go back to “high risk pools,” which were common before the ACA. This divides the market into healthy people and sick people. That way, healthy people can pay lower premiums, but the pool for sick people gets expensive fast. Monthly premiums — even if they’re very high — from the limited pool of sick people would not pay for all their care, meaning the government and insurance companies would have to step in to cover costs.

Of course, on the other side of the political spectrum, there’s the idea of Medicare-for-all, where everyone is covered in a government-funded plan. That would ensure people with preexisting conditions can be covered, says Levitt, but that’s an idea the Trump administration would never go for.

What could happen?

If the Affordable Care Act is fully struck down by the Supreme Court without a replacement, “the preexisting condition protections go away,” Corlette says, along with the insurance marketplaces, Medicaid expansion, premium subsidies, and more. As a result, a recent Urban Institute analysis projected that 21.1 million could lose health coverage, a nearly 70% increase in the number of uninsured.

Another concern: COVID-19 might be considered a preexisting condition by insurance companies. That could mean millions more people affected by changes to these rules because of the pandemic.

There are a lot of outstanding questions. Would the Supreme Court justices give Congress a few months to come up with a fix to the ACA or pass a new law to prevent the coverage losses? Would the court make a narrow ruling that kept most of the law intact? Would it rule against the challengers, keeping the ACA as it is?

Without the ACA or another federal law requiring insurance companies to cover everyone regardless of their health, they would almost certainly “revert back to their business model of yore,” says Corlette. “The incentives for them to start underwriting again and getting rid of high cost, high risk people are too strong.”

As an example, if you’re an insurance company in a city with two competing insurers, “and you’re the only one that is still taking sick people and enrolling them, you will quickly find yourself with the highest premiums, the fewest enrollees, and and you’ll be losing money compared to your competitors,” she says.

This is not what insurance companies want. Insurance industry group Americans Health Insurance Plans submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court arguing that the ACA should not be struck down.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/10/27/927968274/if-the-aca-falls-protecting-preexisting-conditions-could-be-harder-than-it-sound

The US Senate has confirmed Amy Coney Barrett to the supreme court, delivering Donald Trump a huge but partisan victory just eight days before the election and locking in rightwing domination of the nation’s highest court for years to come.


Amy Coney Barrett takes oath after being confirmed to US supreme court – video

The vote was a formality, with senators divided almost entirely along party lines, voting 52 to 48 with just one Republican breaking ranks. But it still marked a seismic moment for Trump, for the supreme court and for American democracy.

For the president, it meant his legacy on judicial appointees is secure whatever the outcome of next week’s election. Trump will have placed three conservative justices on the court, albeit in highly contentious circumstances.

For the supreme court, it sealed an unassailable six to three balance between conservatives and liberal justices. The oldest of those conservatives, Clarence Thomas, is 72 and still has potentially many years to serve within his lifetime appointment.

Mitch McConnell, the Republican majority leader, underlined the political importance of the moment when he said on Sunday: “A lot of what we’ve done over the last four years will be undone sooner or later by the next election. They won’t be able to do much about this for a long time to come.”

For US democracy, the confirmation gives the conservative justices the upper hand on such hot-button issues as abortion, same-sex marriage and the climate crisis – areas where public opinion is firmly in favor of progressive change.


Amy Coney Barrett: key moments from the supreme court confirmation hearings – video

Following the vote, a swearing-in ceremony was held at the White House. Trump introduced Barrett saying that her addition to the court carried forward “the cause of freedom”. In her speech, Barrett said she would conduct her new job “independently of both branches [of government] and of my own preferences”.

She thanked the senate for “the confidence you have placed in me”, ignoring the inconvenient truth that half the political composition of the chamber had turned its back on her.

The sole rebel from party ranks was the Republican senator Susan Collins who voted against Barrett’s confirmation. Earlier in the day Collins said she had based her decision not on the judge’s qualifications but on a sense of fairness, though Collins’s tough re-election fight in Maine no doubt focused her attention.

The confirmation will leave a residue of bitter partisan rancor given the Republican rush to push Barrett through days before the election – the closest confirmation to a presidential election in US history – having refused four years ago to countenance Barack Obama’s pick for the supreme court on grounds that the people should decide.

Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate cast Barrett’s confirmation as one of the “darkest days in the 231-year history” of the Senate in his party’s closing arguments. Addressing his Republican peers, he said: “You may get Amy Coney Barrett on to the supreme court but you will never, never get your credibility back.”

Joe Biden also protested the confirmation. During a campaign stop in Pennsylvania, he tweeted: “More than 60 million Americans have already voted. They deserve to have their voices heard on who replaced justice Ginsburg.”

McConnell was dismissive of Democratic laments, deriding them as a 50-year-old tactic. “What they want is activist judges, a small panel of lawyers with elite education to reason backwards from outcomes and enlighten all the rest of us,” he said shortly before the Senate vote was called.

Barrett, 48, becomes only the fifth woman to sit on the supreme court. Trump moved quickly to nominate her to succeed the liberal justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died on 18 September at age 87.



Melania Trump, Donald Trump, Amy Coney Barrett and Jesse Barrett stand on the balcony following the swearing-in ceremony. Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP

Barrett, a favorite of Christian conservatives, signed a 2006 newspaper ad that called for the overturning of Roe v Wade, the 1973 ruling that legalized abortion, and called its legacy “barbaric”. She did not disclose the ad to the Senate.

Trump has also said he expects the court to decide the outcome of a disputed election, as it did in 2000, and wants Barrett on the bench for any election-related cases. There are major voting rights disputes already lodged with lower courts in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin that could come before Barrett and her new colleagues on the court within days of next week’s ballot.

By the end of this month Barrett could also be asked to rule on the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare. The healthcare protections of millions of Americans, including those with pre-existing conditions, hang in the balance.

As soon as Monday’s confirmation vote was completed, some 150 guests began to assemble on the South Lawn of the White House to celebrate Barrett’s arrival at the pinnacle of US justice. She was sworn in at an outdoor ceremony with the constitutional oath given by Justice Thomas, a stalwart of the court’s conservative wing which she now joins.

The decision to go ahead with the ceremony was in itself contentious. Last month Barrett’s nomination was marked at a similar event in the White House Rose Garden, and promptly turned into a “superspreader” incident linked to an outbreak of infection among officials including the president.

Despite that chilling prequel, Barrett was seen talking to Thomas within a couple of feet of each other, both without masks. In the front row of the audience, first lady Melania Trump and the new justice’s husband Jesse Barrett also went ostentatiously unmasked.

Adding to the controversy around Monday night’s proceedings, the swearing in came just days after five people in the inner circle of the vice-president, Mike Pence, also tested positive. Pence has continued to campaign in the election despite being exposed to the virus, having been declared exempt from the need to quarantine by dint of being an “essential worker”.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/oct/26/amy-coney-barrett-confirmed-supreme-court-justice-vote

President Donald Trump railed against “suppression polls” showing him either losing or tied with former Vice President Joe Biden in reliably red states, with Trump saying the Texas governor called and assured him Monday he won’t lose.

Trump told rallygoers in Martinsburg, Pennsylvania, Monday that his support of oil, energy companies and fracking will lead him to victory over Biden in the Democratic nominee’s home state—as well as in Texas. Trump said Texas Governor Greg Abbott responded to polls and increasing hype that the state may turn blue by calling and telling him Monday that data is simply wrong.

Biden’s running mate, Kamala Harris, is set to become the highest-profile representative from the Biden campaign to visit the Lone Star State this Friday. This follows several polls which show the Democratic ticket may be in position to win Texas for the first time since 1976. Harris would also become the first Democratic vice presidential candidate to campaign in Texas since 1988, when Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen toured his home state while on the ticket with presidential candidate Michael Dukakis.

Trump repeatedly told the raucous Pennsylvania rally attendees Monday evening that Biden doesn’t support “guns, oil or God” and he scoffed at the idea he could lose Texas.

“And then they say, ‘President Trump is up four points in Texas’ and the governor calls me from Texas, great guy Greg [Abbott], and he says, ‘sir, that’s not true, you are up a lot’ but of course the polls won’t say that. But think about it, [Biden] is against oil, he’s against guns and against God – and you’re in Texas!”

“You know we have polls too because the fake news is always giving fake numbers, they’re really called suppression polls,” Trump continued.

The Trump campaign issued a statement Sunday that the president will not make a campaign stop in Texas because they do not view it as even slightly competitive. Former Secretary of Energy and former Texas Governor Rick Perry bluntly told supporters in a Sunday call, “Texas is not a battleground state.”

“Then the polls claim ‘Trump is up four points, it’s a very close race,’ because you [in Pennsylvania] have the same thing, almost to a little bit lesser extent but Texas was just amazing, Texas and Pennsylvania I hope you’re looking,” he added claiming Biden will “eradicate” the state’s energy production.

Biden has had mixed messages about his stance on fracking. Biden on Saturday told rallygoers in Pennsylvania flatly, “I’m not banning fracking, period.” But in previous Democratic primary debates and campaign stops he has said he’s open to restrictions being placed on fracking and the fossil fuel industry.

A pair of polls over the weekend showed Trump barely leading Biden, but a Dallas Morning News and University of Texas at Tyler poll released Sunday showed Biden actually ahead of Trump among likely voters, 48 to 45 percent. Although within the margin of error, a Biden win in Texas would almost guarantee he hits the necessary Electoral College votes to win, FiveThirtyEight, noted.

More Texas residents have already done early voting and cast their ballots prior to Election Day than did throughout the entire 2016 process. Trump won the state over Hillary Clinton four years ago by 9 percentage points, 52.2 to 43.2 percent.

Based solely upon Texas voting history, a Democratic candidate has not won the presidential race there since Jimmy Carter did so in 1976. Trump said California “doesn’t matter” in next week’s election, adding that he’d vote for himself if he lived there or in New York due to “high taxes, high crime.”

Citing a Rasmussen poll, Trump said it’s “hard to lose when you’re at 52 or 53 percent” over Biden. “Hillary [Clinton] used to campaign in California and it doesn’t matter.”

The #TurnTexasBlue movement was reinvigorated by Texas Democrats during the 2018 primaries in which state representative Beto O’Rourke – like most “blue wave” candidates that year – narrowly lost to Republican Senator Ted Cruz. Governor Abbott easily won re-election over his Democratic challenger in 2018 but Democrats picked up several U.S. house seats in Dallas and Houston.

Newsweek reached out to both the Biden and Trump campaigns for additional remarks Monday evening.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-says-texas-governor-assured-him-polls-all-wrong-hell-win-state-youre-lot-1542279

LOS ANGELES — Southern California Edison said its equipment may have sparked a fast-moving wildfire that forced evacuation orders for some 100,000 people and seriously injured two firefighters on Monday as powerful winds across the state prompted power to be cut to hundreds of thousands to prevent just such a possibility.

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A smoky fire exploded in size to over 11 square miles (29 square kilometers) after breaking out around dawn in Orange County, south of Los Angeles. Gusts pushed flames along brushy ridges in Silverado Canyon and near houses in the sprawling city of Irvine, home to about 280,000 residents. There was no containment.

Two firefighters, one 26 and the other 31 years old, were critically injured while battling the blaze, according to the county’s Fire Authority, which didn’t provide details on how the injuries occurred. They each suffered second- and third-degree burns over large portions of their bodies and were intubated at a hospital, officials said.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES RESULT IN INSURANCE COMPANIES DROPPING HOMEOWNERS AT FASTER RATE

In a report to the state Public Utilities Commission, Southern California Edison said it was investigating whether its electrical equipment caused the blaze. The brief report said it appeared that a “lashing wire” that tied a telecommunications line to a support cable may have struck a 12,000-volt conducting line above it, and an investigation was under way.

The report came as SCE shut off power to some 38,000 customers in five counties — including the fire areas — as a safety precuation against gusts knocking down equipment or hurling tree branches or other vegetation into power lines.

A firefighter braves gusty winds as heavy smoke from the Silverado Fire fills the air, Monday, Oct. 26, 2020, in Irvine, Calif. A fast-moving wildfire forced evacuation orders for 60,000 people in Southern California on Monday as powerful winds acros

More than 90,000 people in the fire area were under evacuation orders. Nearby, a fire in the Yorba Linda area had grown to nearly 4.7 square miles (12.2 square kilometers) and prompted the evacuation of at least 10,000 people, officials said.

At the Irvine-area fire, Kelsey Brewer and her three roommates decided to leave their townhouse before the evacuation order came in. The question was where to go in the pandemic. They decided on the home of her girlfriend’s mother, who has ample space and lives alone.

CALIFORNIA TO CUT OFF POWER FOR 1 MILLION PEOPLE TO AVOID SPARKING MORE WILDFIRES

“We literally talked about it this morning,” Brewer said, adding that she feels lucky to have a safe place to go. “We can only imagine how screwed everyone else feels. There’s nowhere you can go to feel safe.”

Helicopters dropping water and fire retardant were grounded for much of the afternoon because strong winds made it unsafe to fly. However, a large air tanker and other aircraft began making drops again several hours before sunset.

In the northern part of the state, Pacific Gas & Electric began restoring power to some of the 350,000 customers — an estimated 1 million people — in 34 counties that were left in the dark Sunday because of some of the fiercest winds of the fire season.

PG&E said it had restored power to nearly 100,000 customers as winds eased in some areas, with electricity to be back on at the other homes and buildings by Tuesday night after crews make air and ground inspections to make repairs and ensure it’s safe.

A dozen reports of damage had been received, PG&E said.

However, the fire threat was far from over in many parts of PG&E’s vast service area.

“We’re already starting to see winds pick back up,” hitting 50 mph (80.4 kph) in some regions with bone-dry humidity leading to extreme fire danger Monday evening, said Scott Strenfel, PG&E’s head of meteorology.

The winds were expected to calm Monday night before renewing again Tuesday, the National Weather Service warned. Officials extended a red flag extreme fire danger warning through 5 p.m. Tuesday for the region’s eastern and northern mountainous areas.

CALIFORNIA FACES MOST DANGEROUS FIRE WEATHER OF YEAR; PG&E LOWERS WILDFIRE SAFETY BLACKOUTS

The safety shut-offs “probably did prevent dangerous fires last night. It’s almost impossible to imagine that winds of this magnitude would not have sparked major conflagrations in years past,” Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with UCLA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research, said on Twitter.

A second round of gusts is predicted to sweep through the same areas Monday night,

Scientists have said climate change has made California much drier, meaning trees and other plants are more flammable. October and November are traditionally the worst months for fires, but already this year 8,600 wildfires in the state have scorched a record 6,400 square miles (16,600 square kilometers) and destroyed about 9,200 homes, businesses and other buildings. There have been 31 deaths.

The electricity shutdowns marked the fifth time this year that Pacific Gas & Electric, the nation’s largest utility, has cut power to customers to reduce the risk of downed or fouled power lines or other equipment that could ignite blazes amid bone-dry weather conditions and gusty winds.

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The conditions could equal those during devastating fires in California’s wine country in 2017 and last year’s Kincade Fire that devastated Sonoma County north of San Francisco last October, the National Weather Service said. Fire officials said PG&E transmission lines sparked that fire, which destroyed hundreds of homes and caused nearly 100,000 people to flee.

Many of this year’s devastating fires were started by thousands of dry lightning strikes, but some remain under investigation for potential electrical causes. While the biggest fires in California have been fully or significantly contained, more than 5,000 firefighters remain committed to 20 blazes, state fire officials said.

___

Rodriguez reported from San Francisco. Associated Press writer Amy Taxin in Orange County, California contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/energy/southern-california-edison-says-its-equipment-may-have-caused-orange-county-fire

A storm-weary Louisiana is bracing for yet another pummeling from wind, rain and waves on Wednesday evening, when Hurricane Zeta is set to break the state record for storm strikes in a single season.

Update: Hurricane Zeta nears Yucatan Peninsula as Cat 1 storm; here’s how it will impact Louisiana

Zeta’s winds intensified to 80 mph, Category 1 strength, as the storm passed Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on Monday, and Zeta was expected to make landfall with similar intensity at around 7 p.m. on Wednesday between Cocodrie and Port Fourchon in southeast Louisiana. Zeta would be the fifth named storm to make landfall in Louisiana this season, a state record.

Storm surges are possible from Intracoastal City to Navarre, Florida. Hurricane conditions are possible from Morgan City to the Mississippi and Alabama border, forecasters said Monday afternoon.

One of the four main turbines that power many of the Sewerage & Water Board’s massive drainage pumps is offline as Hurricane Zeta menaces …

A hurricane watch was issued for New Orleans and a voluntary evacuation was called for areas outside the city’s levee system, where storm surge could be an issue.

Gov. John Bel Edwards issued an emergency declaration on Monday – his eighth of the year – in anticipation of the storm.

He expected Zeta to be mostly be a wind event. Winds of at least 30 mph and gusts of up to 70 mph are predicted for much of southeast Louisiana. Between 2 and 4 inches of rain is expected, and possibly more in some areas.

“The biggest threat as of now is damage from the wind,” he told reporters. “We all need to be weather ready.”



image via NOAA


But in New Orleans, rain may be a bigger concern due to a breakdown of a key power source for the city’s drainage system. Turbine 4 “unexpectedly went offline” on Sunday, according to the Sewerage & Water Board. It was undergoing inspection on Monday but would not be repaired in time for the hurricane, officials said. 

The S&WB’s turbines and generators are needed to power about half the pumps in the system, while the rest draw their power from Entergy. Turbine 4 is one of the largest power sources the utility has, providing up to about 18 megawatts of power.

Without it, the system can still generate enough electricity to run the pumps at full capacity and have some breathing room. But a breakdown in another turbine could mean power would have to be rationed during a severe storm, and areas that normally flood during heavy rain could take longer to drain.

Some neighborhoods flooded under 3 feet of water when Turbine 4 last failed, during a rain storm in June.

In a press briefing Monday evening, New Orleans Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness Director Collin Arnold acknowledged the extreme activity of the season, saying “hopefully this is the last one, but I said that three hurricanes ago.”

Still, he said he saw no signs that residents and emergency workers were letting weariness keep them from being ready.

Hurricane Zeta formed Monday, prompting some parish officials in southeast Louisiana to issue evacuation orders.

“We’ve asked them to do this so many times and surely we’re going to go through this again but people are listening,” Arnold said.

“It’s been a pretty unprecedented hurricane season in the midst of a pandemic so people are hanging tough and we’re asking them to continue to do that through the end of hurricane season,” he added.

New Orleans plans to lift parking restrictions at 6 p.m. on Tuesday to allow residents to park their vehicles on neutral grounds and sidewalks.

Sandbags will be distributed on Tuesday morning at the Dryades YMCA at 2220 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd., the Arthur Monday Center at 1111 Newton St., at the intersection of Desire Street and Law Street and at the Maria Goretti Church at 7300 Crowder Blvd. Sandbags are distributed on a first-come, first-served basis until each location runs out.



image via NOAA


No governmental closures in New Orleans have been announced, and trash collection is expected to continue as usual on Tuesday.

Mandatory evacuations orders along the coast got started with Grand Isle, which on Monday called for all campers, RVs and boats to leave the island as of 11 a.m. An island-wide voluntary evacuation goes into effect Tuesday morning.

Grand Isle’s storm protection levee was damaged by Tropical Storm Cristobal in June. The levee has been patched with large sand sacks but not yet repaired.

Plaquemines Parish, which was at the center of Zeta’s forecasted path on Monday, began urging residents to prepare for storm threats and a possible evacuation.

“We’re looking like we might be close to the bullseye,” Plaquemines Parish President Kirk Lepine said. “Sad to say, but this has almost become routine for us. We’ve had so many storms this season.”

Ahead of Hurricane Zeta affecting Louisiana, local officials are putting out sandbag materials for the public to prepare.

Earlier this season, Hurricane Laura, Hurricane Delta, Tropical Storm Cristobal and Tropical Storm Marco all made landfall in Louisiana.

Zeta is the 27th named storm to form in the Atlantic this season. That ties 2020 with 2005, the record-setting year of storms that included hurricanes Katrina and Rita, for the most storms in a season. But 2020 likely isn’t done yet. Up to three more storms are possible before the hurricane season ends in late November.

Coastal communities are fatigued but well-rehearsed in their hurricane preparations.

“We’re doing what we know how to do so well now, and that’s to be prepared,” said Chett Chaison, executive director of the Greater Lafourche Port Commission. The commission manages Port Fouchon, the service hub for most of the offshore oil and gas production in the northern Gulf of Mexico. For the first time this hurricane season, Fourchon looks like it may take a direct hit. But a Catagory 1 shouldn’t trouble the port too much, Chaison said.

“We expect some surge, but nothing catastrophic,” he said.

The port may evacuate, but its nearly 200 vessels will remain staffed in case of mooring breaks and other emergencies.

Edwards said he is grateful Zeta is not headed for southwest Louisiana, especially after powerful hurricanes Laura and Delta struck less than 20 miles apart.

Restoration projects along Louisiana’s coastline were mostly spared by the six different hurricanes that have threatened the state so far this…

Laura upended the lives of thousands of citizens, with widespread power outages and the loss of running water.

The New Orleans area was squarely in the line of Hurricane Sally until it veered east and struck Alabama in mid-September.

Edwards said Louisiana residents should keep a close eye on Zeta’s path in case it, too, takes an unexpected swerve.

“Please don’t let your guard down,” he said.

-Staff writers Jeff Adelson and Will Sentell contributed to this report.

Just as Louisiana begins an ambitious slate of projects to rebuild its crumbling coastline, the essential ingredients — sea sand and river sil…



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Kavanaugh also quoted a prominent law professor’s caution that allowing the election to drag out could fuel claims of foul play.

“Late-arriving ballots open up one of the greatest risks of what might, in our era of hyperpolarized political parties and existential politics, destabilize the election result,” New York University Professor Richard Pildes wrote in a June law review article about the challenges posed by this year’s election. “If the apparent winner the morning after the election ends up losing due to late-arriving ballots, charges of a rigged election could explode. The longer after Election Day any significant changes in vote totals take place, the greater the risk that the losing side will cry that the election has been stolen.”

Kavanaugh, an appointee of President Donald Trump, did not mention any prominent politicians already stoking such fears. But one is Trump himself.

Indeed, just about 10 minutes after the justices issued their decision in the Wisconsin dispute, Trump tweeted out his latest warning that any results that come in after election night should be considered illegitimate.

“Big problems and discrepancies with Mail In Ballots all over the USA,” Trump wrote, without offering evidence for his assertion. “Must have final total on November 3rd.” (Twitter labeled the post “disputed,” saying it “might be misleading about how to participate in an election or another civic process.”)

Republicans and Trump’s campaign have taken a series of legal actions to enforce ballot-receipt deadlines and are even arguing that federal law requires that every ballot counted come in by Election Day. Democrats and civil rights groups have pressed for extensions of the deadlines in various states, citing postal delays and the massive surge in people seeking to use mail-in ballots because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Justice Elena Kagan used her dissenting opinion in the Wisconsin case on Monday to deliver a tart reply to Kavanaugh’s stated fears about a drawn-out vote-counting process. She also signaled that if a legal fight erupted after Election Day, the court’s liberals would be inclined to make sure every vote was counted and would look with disfavor on arbitrary deadlines that nullify some votes.

“Justice Kavanaugh alleges that ‘suspicions of impropriety’ will result if ‘absentee ballots flow in after election day and potentially flip the results of an election,’” Kagan wrote, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor.

“But there are no results to ‘flip’ until all valid votes are counted. And nothing could be more ‘suspicio[us]’ or ‘improp[er]’ than refusing to tally votes once the clock strikes 12 on election night. To suggest otherwise, especially in these fractious times, is to disserve the electoral process.”

Zach Montellaro contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/26/in-wisconsin-ruling-supreme-court-foreshadows-election-night-cliffhanger-432725

President Trump watches as Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas administers the constitutional oath to Amy Coney Barrett during a ceremony at the White House Monday evening.

Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images


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President Trump watches as Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas administers the constitutional oath to Amy Coney Barrett during a ceremony at the White House Monday evening.

Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images

The Senate has voted 52-48 to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, just about a week before Election Day and 30 days after she was nominated by President Trump to fill the seat of the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

In a White House ceremony following the vote Monday evening, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas administered the constitutional oath to Coney Barrett.

President Trump spoke at the event, thanking Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and calling today a “momentous day” for America, the constitution and the rule of law. He also praised Barrett’s intellect and poise during the confirmation process. Several Republican senators were also in attendance.

Barrett must still take the judicial oath.

While Senate Democrats tried to slow down the confirmation process of Trump’s third Supreme Court nominee with various procedural maneuvers, the fact that Republicans control the Senate has always meant a Barrett confirmation was all but promised.

“The Senate is doing the right thing. We’re moving this nomination forward, and, colleagues, by tomorrow night we’ll have a new member of the United States Supreme Court,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said on Sunday.

Democrats railed against the advancement of Barrett’s nomination so close to Election Day, after the Republican-led Senate in 2016 refused to hold hearings for then-President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, nearly eight months before that year’s election.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., labeled the nomination process a “cynical power grab.”

“Nearly every Republican in this chamber led by the majority leader four years ago refused to even consider the Supreme Court nomination of a Democratic president on the grounds … that we should wait until after the presidential election because the American people deserved a voice in the selection of their next justice,” he said on Sunday.

“My colleagues, there is no escaping this glaring hypocrisy. As I said before, no tit-for-tat convoluted, distorted version of history will wipe away the stain that will exist forever with this Republican majority and with this Republican leader.”

Barrett’s nomination cleared a procedural hurdle Sunday afternoon when the Senate voted to end debate on the nomination, days after Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee boycotted a vote to advance Barrett’s nomination.

The only Republicans who voted against the cloture motion on Sunday were Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.

On Saturday, Murkowski previewed her intentions, saying she planned to vote against moving the nomination forward procedurally but would vote to confirm Barrett on Monday.

“While I oppose the process that led us to this point, I do not hold it against her, as an individual who has navigated the gauntlet with grace, skill and humility,” she said.

Collins faces a tough reelection battle and said after Ginsburg’s death in September that whoever wins the presidential election should fill the Supreme Court vacancy.

The 48-year-old judge’s confirmation solidifies the court’s conservative majority, potentially shaping the future of abortion rights and health care law for generations.

During a campaign event in Tallahassee, Fla., on Saturday, Vice President Pence said he wanted to return to Capitol Hill in time for Monday’s vote.

“As vice president, I’m president of the Senate,” Pence said. “And I’m gonna be in the chair because I wouldn’t miss that vote for the world.”

He ultimately did not attend the vote in person. His presence would have been purely symbolic anyway, as it was not expected that Pence would have needed to cast a tie-breaking vote.

Democrats had pushed back against Pence’s plan in light of recent positive coronavirus tests of two top staffers in Pence’s orbit, and they had similar concerns about Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., two of whose staffers have tested positive for the coronavirus.

Loeffler’s spokesperson on Saturday said the senator had tested negative for the coronavirus on Friday.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/26/927640619/senate-confirms-amy-coney-barrett-to-the-supreme-court

In a separate concurrence, Justice Kavanaugh wrote that “the Constitution principally entrusts politically accountable state legislatures, not unelected federal judges, with the responsibility to address the health and safety of the people during the Covid-19 pandemic.”

In earlier litigation concerning Wisconsin’s primary elections in April, the court required that ballots be mailed and postmarked by Election Day. But it did not disturb a similar six-day extension for receipt of the ballots, which had not been challenged in the case then before it.

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In dissent on Monday, Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justices Stephen G. Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor, said the state’s experience in April was telling.

“That extension of Wisconsin’s ballot-receipt deadline ensured that Covid-related delays in the delivery and processing of mail ballots would not disenfranchise citizens fearful of voting in person,” Justice Kagan wrote. “Because of the court’s ruling, state officials counted 80,000 ballots — about 5 percent of the total cast — that were postmarked by Election Day but would have been discarded for arriving a few days later.”

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. filed a brief concurring opinion explaining why the Wisconsin case differed from the one from Pennsylvania in which the justices deadlocked over whether the state’s Supreme Court could extend the deadline for mailed ballots by three days.

“While the Pennsylvania applications implicated the authority of state courts to apply their own constitutions to election regulations, this case involves federal intrusion on state lawmaking processes,” the chief justice wrote. “Different bodies of law and different precedents govern these two situations and require, in these particular circumstances, that we allow the modification of election rules in Pennsylvania but not Wisconsin.”

A divided three-judge panel of the federal appeals court in Chicago had blocked the trial court’s ruling in the Wisconsin case, saying it came too close to the election and amounted to judicial interference in “a task for the elected branches of government.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/26/us/supreme-court-wisconsin-ballots.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/10/26/jared-kushner-criticized-saying-black-people-need-want-successful/6043088002/

Between the new Silverado fire in Orange County and the still-burning El Dorado fire in San Bernardino and Riverside counties and Bobcat fire in Los Angeles County, high winds Monday were kicking up enough dust and smoke to make the air quality hazardous in some areas of Southern California.

Crews battle the Silverado Fire along The 133 Freeway near Irvine Boulevard in Irvine, CA, on Monday, October 26, 2020. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

RELATED: 60,000 told to evacuate as Silverado fire quickly swells to 2,000 acres

On Sunday, the South Coast Air Quality Management District issued a windblown dust advisory for portions of Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties that is set to last through Tuesday evening.

The advisory says that inhalable particles known as PM10 — those that measure 10 micrometers in diameter and smaller — will be present in quantities that will make the air quality unhealthy for sensitive persons in many areas of the three counties.

That was before the Silverado fire broke out. The Orange County blaze grew to 2,000 acres by Monday afternoon. Along with the winds and smoke from other fires, it took air quality in much of Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties — and Los Angeles County as well — into the hazardous range.

As of 1:30 p.m. Monday, AQMD readings showed the following air quality:

  • Moderate in northern San Bernardino County and portions of Riverside County
  • Unhealthy for sensitive persons in eastern LA County, the Angeles National Forest and portions of northern LA County
  • Unhealthy in greater Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley and the South Bay
  • Very unhealthy in metropolitan San Bernardino County, the San Gorgonio and Banning passes and the Coachella Valley
  • Hazardous in the Ontario and Pomona areas, Orange County, Long Beach and the Murrieta, Perris, Temecula and Lake Elsinore areas

For the latest air quality readings, check the interactive map at AQMD.gov.

Fires sprout up off Portola Parkway in Irvine where smoke from the Silverado fire fills the sky on Monday, October 26, 2020. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Source Article from https://www.ocregister.com/is-it-safe-to-go-outside-southern-california-fires-dust-winds-torpedo-air-quality-in-your-area

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas will administer the official constitutional oath to Judge Amy Coney Barrett on Monday night if she is confirmed by the Senate, a senior White House official told Fox News. 

Thomas has long been considered one of the more conservative justices on the Court, along with Barrett’s mentor, the late Justice Antonin Scalia. The would-be celebration of her confirmation won’t be a large affair, President Trump said, noting that it will be “just a very nice event.”

Trump made those comments to reporters on Monday at Lehigh Valley International Airport in Pennsylvania, Politico reported. The president has been holding rallies in the swing state as part of a final push to win support for next week’s election.

Barrett’s confirmation, which is expected to take place on Monday evening, will mark his third successful appointment to the high court within his first term. The highly contentious process has provoked backlash from Democrats, who claim Republicans hypocritically jammed her nomination through after rejecting Judge Merrick Garland’s in 2016. 

In a video retweeted by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., he accused Republicans of committing “one of the greatest acts of hypocrisy that has ever occurred in the Senate.”

ROMNEY PRAISES SUPREME COURT NOMINEE BARRETT’S ‘INTEGRITY,’ SLAMS ‘DIVISION AND CONTEMPT FOR OTHERS’ IN US

“This is something to be really proud of and feel good about,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said during a rare weekend session Sunday ahead of voting. He scoffed at the “apocalyptic” warnings from critics that the judicial branch was becoming mired in partisan politics, even as he declared that “they won’t be able to do much about this for a long time to come.”

Trump will also likely have to ward off criticism surrounding the ceremony he holds while the coronavirus continues to spread throughout the U.S. Like Barrett’s nominating ceremony, Monday’s would-be celebration will take place outdoors, although it’s unclear whether attendees will refrain from wearing masks like they did during the former.

“We’re doing tonight the best we can to encourage as much social distancing as possible,” White House chief of staff Mark Meadows reportedly said of a potential swearing-in ceremony.

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Vice President Mike Pence, who also serves as president of the Senate, won’t be presiding over the vote after members of his staff tested positive for the virus. Both he and his wife, Karen, have tested negative.

Schumer  and his leadership team said that Pence’s attendance would not only violate virus guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but “it would also be a violation of common decency and courtesy.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/barrett-confirmation-celebration-white-house