Supreme court begins hearing major case on trans youth healthcare ban – live | Trump administration
Supreme court begins hearing major case on trans youth healthcare ban – live | Trump administration
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Bu içerikte, Yüksek Mahkeme’nin Tennessee’deki cinsiyet uyumlu bakım yasağını çocuklar için sorgulayan bir dava hakkında önemli bir duruşma başlatmaya başladığı belirtilmektedir. Kararın birkaç ay sonra alınması beklenmektedir, ancak muhafazakarların çoğunlukta olduğu mahkemenin nasıl karar vereceği ulusal düzeyde etkilere sahip olabilir. Şu anda 26 eyalet, trans bireyler tarafından kullanılan bakıma erişimi sınırlayan yasaları kabul etmiştir. Konu hakkında daha fazla bilgi verilmektedir. Ayrıca, diğer önemli olaylar ve gelişmeler de içerikte paylaşılmaktadır. Bu içerik, Hegseth’in kadınlara olan muamelesini eleştiren bir e-posta yazan annesinin, Fox News’a verdiği röportajda kayıtları düzeltmeyi vaat ettiği, Hegseth’in ise bugün Senato’da kaderini belirleyecek olan yasama organı üyeleri ile daha fazla görüşme yapacağı güne odaklanmaktadır. Ayrıca, yargıçların Tennessee’nin cinsiyet uyum tedavisi yasağı hakkında tartışmalara başladığı ve ABD Temsilciler Meclisi’ndeki gücün dengesinin belirlendiği diğer önemli olaylar da listelenmektedir. Bu içerikte, Biden yönetimini savunan Avukat Elizabeth Prelogar’ın, trans gençlerin sağlık hizmetlerine ilişkin Tennessee yasasını eleştirdiği bilgiler de yer almaktadır. Bu içerikte, ABD Yüksek Mahkemesi’nin trans genç sağlık vakasındaki duruşmalar hakkında daha fazla bilgi bulunmaktadır. Ayrıca, Senato’daki lider John Thune’un Donald Trump’ın Savunma Bakanı adayı Pete Hegseth ile ilgili görüşlerine ve Penelope Hegseth’in Fox News röportajındaki ifadelerine de yer verilmektedir. Hegseth’in New York Times’a eleştiri içeren bir e-posta göndermesiyle ilgili açıklamaları da içerikte yer almaktadır. Medyanın işleyişi ve gazetecilerin bilgi talepleri de ele alınmaktadır. Today, we discuss the threats that are not only dangerous but also have a significant impact on families. The story revolves around Pete Hegseth, who is facing allegations of mistreatment of women and excessive drinking that could jeopardize his nomination for the role of defense secretary. Despite these accusations, his mother, Penelope Hegseth, defends him, stating that he doesn’t misuse women. She also addresses an email she sent criticizing her son during his divorce, explaining that it was written in haste and retracted later. As Pete Hegseth faces a pivotal day of interviews, his nomination hangs in the balance, with reports suggesting that Trump may pull the nomination and consider Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, instead. Stay tuned for updates on this unfolding story. Bu içerik, bir ürün veya hizmet hakkında detaylı bilgi sağlamak amacıyla oluşturulmuştur. İçeriğin konusu, tanıtımı yapılan ürün veya hizmetin özellikleri, faydaları, kullanımı ve fiyatı gibi detaylar içerebilir. Okuyucuya ürün veya hizmet hakkında daha fazla bilgi edinme ve satın alma kararı verme konusunda yardımcı olmayı amaçlar. Bu içerik, içerik açıklaması oluşturulması için bir metindir. İçeriğin ana konusu belirtilerek, içeriğin ne hakkında olduğu, hangi konuları ele aldığı, kimler için faydalı olabileceği gibi bilgiler verilir. İçerik açıklaması, okuyucuların içeriği daha iyi anlamalarına ve içeriği okumaya karar vermelerine yardımcı olabilir. Bu içerik, içerik açıklaması oluşturmak için bir yapay zeka asistanı tarafından yazılmıştır. İçeriğin konusu belirtilmemiştir, ancak içeriğin açıklaması oluşturulmuştur. İçerik açıklaması, içeriğin özeti ve ana temasını okuyucuya özetleyerek içeriğin ne hakkında olduğunu anlatır. Bu şekilde okuyucular içeriğin içeriği hakkında daha iyi bir fikir edinebilirler. Bu içerik, içerik oluşturucuların içerik açıklaması oluşturmak için nasıl adımlar izleyebileceklerini ve içerik açıklamasının neden önemli olduğunu açıklamaktadır. İçerik açıklaması, içeriğin ne hakkında olduğunu, kimin hedef kitlesi olduğunu ve neden okunması gerektiğini net bir şekilde ifade etmek için kullanılır. İçerik açıklaması, içeriğin arama motorlarında daha iyi sıralanmasına ve okuyucuların içeriği daha hızlı anlamasına yardımcı olabilir. Bu içerik, içerik oluşturucuların içerik açıklamasını doğru bir şekilde oluşturmak için dikkat etmeleri gereken noktaları ele almaktadır.
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Supreme court begins hearing major case on trans youth healthcare ban
The supreme court just started hearing oral arguments in a lawsuit challenging Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors.
No decision is expected for several months, but how the conservative-dominated court rules could have impacts nationwide. Twenty-six states have passed laws limiting access to the care used by transgender people. Here’s more on the case:
Key events
The first questions were from conservative justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and John Roberts who signaled skepticism with Elizabeth Prelogar’s arguments.
The solicitor general got a more understanding reception from liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor, who focused on the law’s impacts on transgender youths.
“One of the petitioners in this case describe throwing up every day, going almost mute … because of their inability to speak in a voice that they could live with. These are physically challenging situations as well, too,” Sotomayor said.
The observation gave Prelogar an opening to state that the Biden administration doesn’t disagree with the need to regulate gender-affirming care, but rather objects to the blanket nature of Tennessee’s ban on minors:
We don’t think that that means the states are entirely barred from regulating in this space. Obviously, they are grappling with these issues in a variety of contexts, but you’re right to say that when the state is using sex-based line drawing, a court needs to look at that. And the problem with Tennessee’s law here is not that it’s just a little bit over inclusive or a little bit under inclusive, but that it’s a sweeping, categorical ban where the legislature didn’t even take into account the significant health benefits that can come from providing gender-affirming care, including reduced suicidal ideation and suicide attempts, and where the state leaves unregulated entirely access to these treatments in all of their pediatric contexts, where there’s a similar risk-benefit trade off and for the families affected by this, Justice Sotomayor, these are difficult decisions.
Obviously, anytime you’re thinking about a medical intervention, you need to weigh risks and benefits, but the state has come in here, and in a sharp departure from how it normally addresses this issue, it has completely decided to override the views of the parents, the patients, the doctors who are grappling with these decisions and trying to make those trade offs.
Arguing for the Biden administration, solicitor general Elizabeth Prelogar began by saying the Tennessee law, known as SB 1, unfairly singles out gender-affirming care in a way similar procedures are not.
“To be clear, states have leeway to regulate gender-affirming care, but here, Tennessee made no attempt to tailor its law to its stated health concerns. Rather than impose measured guardrails, SB 1 bans the care outright, no matter how critical it is for an individual patient, and that approach is a stark departure from the state’s regulation of pediatric care in all other contexts,” Prelogar said.
“SB 1 leaves the same medications and many others entirely unrestricted when used for any other purpose, even when those uses present similar risks.”
Supreme court begins hearing major case on trans youth healthcare ban
The supreme court just started hearing oral arguments in a lawsuit challenging Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors.
No decision is expected for several months, but how the conservative-dominated court rules could have impacts nationwide. Twenty-six states have passed laws limiting access to the care used by transgender people. Here’s more on the case:
Top Senate Republican says Hegseth is ‘going to have to answer some hard questions’
The incoming Senate majority leader, John Thune, said Donald Trump’s defense secretary nominee, Pete Hegseth, can expect to face “hard questions” as he meets with senators today.
“At the end of the day, these nominees need to have the opportunity to make their case,” said Thune, who is one of the senators Hegseth is scheduled to meet with today.
“And I think the readouts from these meetings are, he’s very smart, and he’s got, you know, great experience, obviously, as a combat veteran. So, we’re going to give him the chance to make his argument, make this case. Clearly, he’s going to have to answer some hard questions, which he is, based on the reports I’m getting from the meetings he’s attended so far, but that that is part of our process.”
At one point in her interview on Fox News, Penelope Hegseth directly addressed Donald Trump, who is known for watching the network.
“I want to say thank you for your belief in my son. We all believe in him. We really believe that he is not that man he was seven years ago. I’m not that mother, and I hope people will hear that story today and the truth of that story,” she said.
Despite email being one of the more traceable forms of communication, Penelope Hegseth said she did not know how the New York Times obtained her message to her son criticizing his treatment of women.
“You know, I haven’t been able to track that, like, like my blind copy or my copy,” Hegseth replied, when asked who else received the email. “I don’t think that’s important right now. I think what’s important is that the truth be told about that email and that we look at Pete today, not then.”
She also repeatedly criticized the New York Times for contacting her for comment about the email, which is something typical of journalists to do:
I want to say something about the media, and part of today is to discredit the media and how they operate. When they contact you, I let a few phone calls go, but then they call you and say, they threaten you. That’s the first thing they do. They say, unless you make a statement, we will publish it as is, and I think that’s a despicable way to treat anyone. Threats are dangerous and they’re hard on families.
Pete Hegseth’s mother defends son, saying ‘he doesn’t misuse women’
In an interview with Fox News, Pete Hegseth’s mother said she stood by her son, as he faces allegations of mistreatment of women and excessive drinking that could derail his nomination for the role of defense secretary.
“He doesn’t misuse women,” Penelope Hegseth told the network, where her son worked as a host until recently. “He’s been through some difficult things. I’m not going to list them by name, but I would just say that some of those attachments or descriptions are just not true, especially any more.”
Last week, the New York Times reported that Penelope Hegseth had sent her son an email in 2018 criticizing his treatment of women, saying: “I have no respect for any man that belittles, lies, cheats, sleeps around and uses women for his own power and ego. You are that man (and have been for years) and as your mother, it pains me and embarrasses me to say that, but it is the sad, sad truth.”
Speaking to Fox, Penelope Hegseth said she sent that email in the midst of her son’s divorce and retracted it hours later:
Pete and his wife at the time were going through a very difficult divorce. It was a very emotional time, and I’m sure many of you across the country understand how difficult divorce is on a family. There’s emotions. We say things, and I wrote that in haste. I wrote that with deep emotions. I wrote that as a parent, and about two hours later … my husband tells me I should think through things a little bit more, but Pete and I are both very passionate people. I wrote that out of love, and about two hours later I retracted it with an apology email. But nobody’s seen that.
Asked about reports that her son is known for drinking excessively, cheated on his partners, mismanaged the finances of two charities and faced an allegation of sexual assault, Hegseth replied:
I don’t believe any of that is true.
Hegseth faces pivotal day of interviews as defense secretary nomination reportedly teeters
Good morning, US politics blog readers. Things are not looking great for the prospect of the Senate confirming Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth,to the job. The former Fox News host was one of the first picks Trump made after winning re-election, but in the weeks since, news broke that Hegseth was accused of sexual assault, which he denies, is known to drink excessively and allegedly financially mismanaged two charities. Over the past few hours, reportshave emerged that it’s all becoming too much for the Republican senators tasked with confirming him, and that Trump is considering pulling the nomination and instead asking Florida’s governor and one-time rival Ron DeSantis to lead the Pentagon.
But it’s not over yet for Hegseth. His mother, who wrote an email criticizing him for his treatment of women, gave an interview to Fox News this morning billed as setting the record straight, while Hegseth will today be on Capitol Hill for further meetings with lawmakers who will decide his fate. We’ll see if his nomination survives the day.
Here’s what else is going on:
The supreme court will at 10am ET begin hearing arguments in a case concerning Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming treatment for minors, which could have implications nationwide.
The precise balance of power in the House of Representatives has been determined. With ballot counting finally finished in a tight race in central California, Republicans will control the chamber with 220 seats to the Democrats’ 215 – but the GOP’s majority will immediately shrink as several lawmakers head for jobs in Trump’s cabinet.
Joe Biden continues his trip to Angola, and will be heading back to the US later today.
Supreme court begins hearing major case on trans youth healthcare ban – live | Trump administration
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