Karoline Leavitt Spirals When Asked About Trump’s White Genocide Video
Donald Trump continues to insist that white farmers are under attack in South Africa.
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Senate overturns California EPA waiver in defiance of parliamentarian
Senate Republicans voted to overturn California’s electric-vehicle mandate via the Congressional Review Act, defying the GAO and the Senate parliamentarian.
Senate Republicans voted 51-44 to overturn California’s electric-vehicle mandate via the Congressional Review Act on Thursday, defying the Government Accountability Office and the Senate parliamentarian.
Elizabeth MacDonough, the Senate’s parliamentarian, said the chamber could not use the Congressional Review Act — a maneuver that permits a 50-vote threshold for overturning agency rules in the Senate, rather than 60 — to remove California’s emissions waivers from the Environmental Protection Agency.
But Senate Republicans were adamant that MacDonough’s deferral to the GAO, which also said the CRA was inappropriate for overturning California’s EPA waivers, justified moving ahead with the vote anyway. (Republicans also pointed out that the parliamentarian had not made a formal ruling on the matter.)
“We’re going to assert the authority of the Senate today to use the Congressional Review Act on rules that have been submitted to Congress,” Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso told NOTUS on Wednesday. “The GAO does not have a veto power.”
The vote required some corralling from Republican leaders. To begin with, a handful of moderate GOP senators appeared hesitant to support the measure, including Sens. Susan Collins, John Curtis and Lisa Murkowski. Leadership worked to persuade the holdouts, including with a closed-door presentation at the Senate GOP’s lunch last week.
By Wednesday, the holdouts came around. Ahead of the vote, Collins said she was “likely” to support the measure, noting she supports the underlying effort to nix the California waivers.
Senators then squabbled overnight in a series of wonky procedural votes. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer repeatedly sought to adjourn or break for recess, pushing back hours. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, meanwhile, forced a point of order asserting the Senate’s right to move ahead as they see fit on the CRA.
“The effort here is to ensure that you’re not overruling the parliamentarian,” Murkowski said. “To have the agency determine it’s a rule and then to have GAO counteract that, we haven’t had that before. And so there really is no precedent for the parliamentarian here.”
Collins and Murkowski ultimately voted in favor of the resolution. Curtis — who prior to the vote told NOTUS he was not making any comments on the matter — also supported the resolution.
There are three California waivers, each voted on individually. This was the first, which addressed California’s plan to phase out gas-powered cars. The other two address tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks, including one focused specifically on smog-forming pollutants.
Senate Democrats — who delayed the vote overnight Wednesday via repeated procedural votes — said ignoring MacDonough could have implications for the future of the 60-vote filibuster, calling the vote the “nuclear option.” The parliamentarian is responsible for deciding which parts of the coming reconciliation bill must be subject to the 60-vote process under Senate rules, decisions that historically limit what the majority can accomplish during the reconciliation process.
“Republicans just overruled the Parliamentarian, violated the plain text of the Congressional Review Act, changed the Clean Air Act, and broke the filibuster. They falsely claimed that the waivers were exceptional,” Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse said in a late-night statement Wednesday after Republicans voted on the motion to proceed.
Thune called such concerns “hysterical” during a floor speech Tuesday, accusing the Democrats of hypocrisy. A number of Senate Democrats have called to outright abolish the filibuster, and in 2022, Senate Democrats attempted to create a filibuster carveout for voting rights legislation. (The effort failed because of former Sens. Kyrsten Sinema and Joe Manchin’s opposition.)
“I want to make two things crystal clear, the procedural action we have taken today is not about the filibuster and not about the parliamentarian,” Sen. Shelley-Moore Capito said on the Senate floor Wednesday night. “My Democrat colleagues say that our action today undermines the legislative filibuster, and that is simply not true. I support the legislative filibuster. I have supported the legislative filibuster as a senator in the majority and as a senator in the minority.”
But Democrats and former Biden officials saw the GOP’s decision much differently.
“This is an untethered expansion of the CRA beyond the limits that Congress contemplated when it passed this legislation,” said Richard Revesz, the former director of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs under the Biden administration. Revesz warned that, with this precedent, any future administration — if the White House also controls the House and Senate — could try to repeal other previously protected agency actions.
California’s leadership opposes the Senate’s decision to vote on its waivers, but it’s not clear what moves the state can make moving forward. The CRA has been so rarely used that it’s not clear whether the Senate’s vote can be subject to any kind of legal challenge or if any challenge would succeed, legal experts told NOTUS.
It’s possible California could sue to try to force a judge to determine whether today’s votes were actually overturning rules, said Craig Segall, a former executive at the California Air Resources Board.
“There’s a threshold question: Are these CRA votes at all or are they just called that? Which a court will have to resolve,” Segall said.
It’s also possible that a state might choose to continue enforcing the regulations because they don’t believe the Senate vote has legitimately removed the waivers, though Segall said taking that course could have political consequences.
“The use of the Congressional Review Act resolution is inconsistent with past precedent and violates the plain language of the Congressional Review Act itself as recognized by both the nonpartisan and well-reasoned analyses of the U.S. Government Accountability Office and the Senate parliamentarian,” a spokesperson with the California Air Resources Board told NOTUS.
“The vote does not change CARB’s authority,” the spokesperson added. “CARB will continue its mission to protect the public health of Californians impacted by harmful air pollution.”
Much of the auto industry has lobbied heavily for the revocation of California’s vehicle emissions rules, arguing that the regulations would greatly limit auto manufacturers’ freedom to produce and sell all types of cars across the country.
The size of Callifornia’s economy, combined with other states embracing the same rules, means the state’s coming electric vehicle mandate could significantly reshape the auto market across much of the country.
“Repealing gas vehicle bans in California and 30 percent of the U.S. auto market is among the most important policies to restore some balance to vehicle emissions regulations,” the Alliance for Automotive Innovation said in a statement, continuing that such a decision would “support a healthy and competitive auto industry in America” and would “ensure customers remain free to choose the type of vehicle that works for them and their family.”
This story was produced as part of a partnership between NOTUS — a publication from the nonprofit, nonpartisan Allbritton Journalism Institute — and NEWSWELL, home of Times of San Diego, Santa Barbara News-Press and Stocktonia.
Donald Trump continues to insist that white farmers are under attack in South Africa.
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The courts have come to the rescue yet again, with a federal judge on Thursday blocking President Donald Trump’s executive order to dismantle the Department of Education, ordering the agency to ...
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At issue is President Trump's firing of NLRB member Gwen Wilcox, who still has three years left on her term, and Cathy Harris, who still has four years left on her term as a member of the MSPB.
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U.S. stocks ended mixed Thursday after the House narrowly passed Trump’s $4T tax bill. Bond yields spiked, and Bitcoin continued its rally, hitting new highs above $111,000
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NEW YORK (AP) — Rapper Kid Cudi testified Thursday that Sean “Diddy” Combs broke into his Hollywood Hills home in 2011 after finding out he was dating Combs’ ex-girlfriend,Read More
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The Protector of the Year award will make its debut this season and the Chargers should have two candidates in serious contention.
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The “Lover” songstress was initially name-dropped in Baldoni’s bombshell $400 million lawsuit against Lively and Ryan Reynolds, which was filed in January.
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The Fever suffered a one-point home loss to the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday and now visit them Thursday in each team’s very next game.
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Nearly two weeks after Taylor Swift was subpoenaed as a witness in Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni's heated legal dispute, the Grammy Award-winning pop star is no longer required to testify
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President Donald Trump is hosting a dinner at his private gold club near Washington, D.C., Thursday night for the top holders of his $TRUMP meme coin, but a report in The Guardian says nearly half of his "winners" have lost millions on the cryptocurrency.According to last month's announcement, the t...
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The Trump administration on Thursday moved to terminate a 1997 settlement known as the Flores Agreement, which established protections for migrant children.
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Senator Ron Johnson’s initiative comes amid speculation of a cover-up at the top after the ex-president was diagnosed with prostate cancer
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After winning his first NBA MVP award, Oklahoma City Thunder star Shai Gilgeous Alexander's mother left an emotional voicemail for her son.
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GENEVA (AP) — Novak Djokovic advanced to the semifinals at the Geneva Open on his 38th birthday Thursday, beating the opponent who eliminated him at the Madrid Masters last month.
Djokovic rallied strongly in the second set for a 6-4, 6-4 win over 39th-ranked Matteo Arnaldi in their quarterfinals match.
The second-seeded Djokovic had smashed his racket into the ground behind the baseline after his serve was broken to trail 3-1 in the second set, when he sent a backhand long.
“I’m sorry for the racket, it’s not a good example particularly for the young ones,” Djokovic told the crowd in French in an on-court interview. “Thank for your support. I know that with the cold temperatures it’s not easy to stay here.”
At 4-1 down, and after seeming to strain his right knee stretching for a shot, Djokovic reeled off five straight games for victory.
He clinched his first match-point chance when Arnaldi hit a wild forehand from behind the baseline.
“It was much closer than maybe the scoring indicates,” Djokovic said.
On a chilly and rainy day that was tough for higher-ranked players, top-seeded Taylor Fritz lost to sixth-seeded Hubert Hurkacz 6-3, 7-6 (5), and fourth-seeded Karen Khachanov lost 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 to 128th-ranked Austrian qualifier Sebastian Ofner.
Djokovic’s semifinal opponent Friday will be the winner of the late match between Alexei Popyrin, the fifth-seeded Australian, and another qualifier, Cameron Norrie.
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AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis
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Twitter (X), Inc. was an American social media company based in San Francisco, California, which operated and was named for its flagship social media network prior to its rebrand as X. In addition to Twitter, the company previously operated the Vine short video app and Periscope livestreaming service
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