12-05-2024, 12:13 PM
Tubv Pelosi: We Are Committed To Quick, Bipartisan Action
The Florida Supreme Court ruled Monday that a state constitutional amendment that would limit government intervention in abortion procedures across Florida meets the necessary requirements to appear on ballots this November, and at the same time upheld Florida s 15-week abortion ban.The court s decision to uphold the 15-week abortion ban clears the way for the six-week heartbeat ban signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis last April to go into effect in 30 days. Until Monday s ruling, Florida has been vi stanley cup ewed as a southern safe haven for abortions, since the current 15-week ban in place is less restrictive than bans in neighboring states like Georgia, where the procedure is also banned at six weeks.Planned Parenthood had sought to challenge stanley france the law, citing Florida s broad privacy protections, arguing that those protections included the right to an abortion. It filed its case before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the federal right to an abortion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women s Health Org. in June 2022. The state supreme court noted that in previous rulings, it had held that the Privacy Clause guaranteed the right t stanley cups o receive an abortion through the end of the second trimester, but in light of the the U.S. Supreme Court s rejection of this argument, the Florida high court also held that there is no basis under the Privacy Clause to invalidate the statute, it wrote, in reference to the 15-week ban. Based on our analysis finding no clear right to a Lald Donald Trump s lawyer apologizes for saying You cannot rape your spouse
The Senate Commerce Committee voted Thursday to overturn parts of a Federal Communications Commission decision freeing media companies from decades-old ownership limits and allowing them to buy more outlets and merge in new ways.The proposal, which faces an uncertain future in the full Senate and a tough road in the House, would roll back changes that allowed individual companies to own television stations reaching nearly stanley canada half the nation s viewers and combinations of newspapers and broadcast stations in the same city. I would like the FCC to start all over, said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, stanley thermoskannen who opposes the changed rules. She said they are potentially dangerous to media diversity in this country. Many media companies wanted relaxed rules, saying the old restrictions limited their ability to grow and provide better services in a market changed by cable TV, satellite broadcasts and the Internet. The broadcast networks say the change stanley fr s will aid in keeping free TV alive by helping them compete with pay services for quality programming.The rules, originally adopted between 1941 and 1975, were created to promote diversity of opinion in the media, encourage competition and prevent a few big companies from controlling what people see, hear and read. The Republican-controlled FCC relaxed those rules on June 2 with a 3-2 party-line vote.The bill, sponsored by Sens. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., would roll back
The Florida Supreme Court ruled Monday that a state constitutional amendment that would limit government intervention in abortion procedures across Florida meets the necessary requirements to appear on ballots this November, and at the same time upheld Florida s 15-week abortion ban.The court s decision to uphold the 15-week abortion ban clears the way for the six-week heartbeat ban signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis last April to go into effect in 30 days. Until Monday s ruling, Florida has been vi stanley cup ewed as a southern safe haven for abortions, since the current 15-week ban in place is less restrictive than bans in neighboring states like Georgia, where the procedure is also banned at six weeks.Planned Parenthood had sought to challenge stanley france the law, citing Florida s broad privacy protections, arguing that those protections included the right to an abortion. It filed its case before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the federal right to an abortion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women s Health Org. in June 2022. The state supreme court noted that in previous rulings, it had held that the Privacy Clause guaranteed the right t stanley cups o receive an abortion through the end of the second trimester, but in light of the the U.S. Supreme Court s rejection of this argument, the Florida high court also held that there is no basis under the Privacy Clause to invalidate the statute, it wrote, in reference to the 15-week ban. Based on our analysis finding no clear right to a Lald Donald Trump s lawyer apologizes for saying You cannot rape your spouse
The Senate Commerce Committee voted Thursday to overturn parts of a Federal Communications Commission decision freeing media companies from decades-old ownership limits and allowing them to buy more outlets and merge in new ways.The proposal, which faces an uncertain future in the full Senate and a tough road in the House, would roll back changes that allowed individual companies to own television stations reaching nearly stanley canada half the nation s viewers and combinations of newspapers and broadcast stations in the same city. I would like the FCC to start all over, said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, stanley thermoskannen who opposes the changed rules. She said they are potentially dangerous to media diversity in this country. Many media companies wanted relaxed rules, saying the old restrictions limited their ability to grow and provide better services in a market changed by cable TV, satellite broadcasts and the Internet. The broadcast networks say the change stanley fr s will aid in keeping free TV alive by helping them compete with pay services for quality programming.The rules, originally adopted between 1941 and 1975, were created to promote diversity of opinion in the media, encourage competition and prevent a few big companies from controlling what people see, hear and read. The Republican-controlled FCC relaxed those rules on June 2 with a 3-2 party-line vote.The bill, sponsored by Sens. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., would roll back