• APNEWS.COM
    Supreme Court declines to hear Texas book ban appeal in case watched by free speech groups
    The Supreme Court Building is seen in Washington on March 28, 2017. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)2025-12-08T23:18:02Z AUSTIN, Texas (AP) The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear an appeal on a Texas free speech case that allowed local officials to remove books deemed objectionable from public libraries.The case stemmed from a 2022 lawsuit by a group of residents in rural Llano County over the removal from the public library of more than a dozen books dealing with sex, race and gender themes, as well as humorously touching on topics such as flatulence.A lower federal appeals court had ruled that removing the books did not violate Constitutional free speech protections.The case had been closely watched by publishers and librarians across the country. The Supreme Courts decision to not consider the case was criticized by free speech rights groups.The Texas case has already been used to ban books in other areas of the country, said Elly Brinkley, staff attorney for U.S. Free Expression Programs at PEN America. Leaving the Fifth Circuits ruling in place erodes the most elemental principles of free speech and allows state and local governments to exert ideological control over the people with impunity. The government has no place telling people what they can and cannot read, Brinkley said. Sam Helmick, president of the American Library Association, said the Supreme Courts decision not to consider the case threatens to transform government libraries into centers for indoctrination instead of protecting them as centers of open inquiry, undermining the First Amendment right to read unfettered by viewpoint-based censorship. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on The Texas case began when a group of residents asked the county library commission to remove the group of books from circulation. The local commission ordered librarians to comply and a separate group of residents sued to keep the books on the shelves. Llano County, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) northwest of the Texas capital of Austin, has a population of about 20,000. It is mostly white and conservative, with deep ties to agriculture and deer hunting. The book titles originally ordered removed included, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent by Isabel Wilkerson; They Called Themselves the K.K.K: The Birth of an American Terrorist Group, by Susan Campbell Bartoletti; In the Night Kitchen by Maurice Sendak; Its Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex and Sexual Health by Robie H. Harris; and Being Jazz: My Life as a (Transgender) Teen by Jazz Jennings.Other titles include Larry the Farting Leprechaun by Jane Bexley and My Butt is So Noisy! by Dawn McMillan.A federal judge ordered the county to restore some of the books in 2023, but that decision was reversed earlier this year by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.The county at one point briefly considered closing its public libraries rather than return the books to the shelves after the federal judges initial order.In its order on May 23, the appeals courts majority opinion said the decision to remove a book from the library shelf is not a book ban. No one is banning (or burning books). If a disappointed patron cant find a book in the library, he can order it online, buy it from a bookstore or borrow it from a friend, the appeals court opinion said.Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham, the ranking official in the county, did not immediately respond to an email to his office seeking comment.___Hillel Italie contributed from New York City. JIM VERTUNO Vertuno has been covering news, sports and politics from Texas for The AP since 1998. He won a National Headliner Award for sports writing in 2013. twitter mailto
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  • GAYETY.COM
    From Pop Phenomenon to Beauty Icon: Chappell Roan Named MAC Global Ambassador
    Chappell Roans ascent has never followed a straight line, and thats precisely why MAC Cosmetics is betting on her next chapter. The beauty brand announced that the Grammy-winning pop star will serve as its newest global ambassador, a long-term partnership that positions Roan as a creative face of the company beginning in 2026, with early campaign moments already rolling out.For MAC, the choice feels less like a celebrity endorsement and more like a reunion. Roan has collaborated with the brand at various points during her rise, often using its products to construct the theatrical looks that have become inseparable from her performances. This new role formalizes that relationship, placing her on the brands global stage just as her influence continues to expand beyond music.Partnering with MAC feels full circle, Roan said in a statement. This brand has always made space for people like me. Since day one, theyve embraced art, queerness, drag, and self-expression.A Campaign Built on Androgyny and DramaRoans debut as a MAC ambassador arrives via a stark, film noirinspired campaign photographed by Inez & Vinoodh, the longtime fashion photography duo known for high-contrast storytelling. Shot in monochrome tones, the images spotlight Roan in a porcelain-white base with erased brows, sculpted contours, and a muted lip, an intentional departure from pops usual maximalist gloss.The look was created by makeup artist Andrew Dahling, who described the concept as a modern take on androgyny. Drawing from early cinema and 1930s military references, Dahling framed Roan as both severe and playful, finishing the face with a chunky, glittered lash that nods to her love of camp. The result reads less like a beauty ad and more like a character study, echoing how Roan approaches her onstage identities.Nicola Formichetti, MACs global creative director, said Roan embodies the values the brand has pushed for decades. He praised her use of beauty as emotional language and pointed to her visibility as a queer artist as central to the partnership.She represents a generation that values authenticity and joy, Formichetti said. That aligns with MACs mission of All Ages, All Races, All Genders.A Relationship Years in the MakingAccording to Ada Moudachirou-Rebois, the brands senior vice president and global general manager, MAC recognized Roans point of view early on. The company supported her makeup artistry during several pivotal career moments, long before chart placements and festival headlines entered the equation.Her story, Moudachirou-Rebois noted, mirrors the brands own ethos, persistence, experimentation, and the refusal to sand down sharp edges. That shared foundation made a deeper collaboration inevitable.Fame, Creativity, and What Comes NextThe ambassador announcement lands during a period of reflection for Roan, who has been candid about the tension between visibility and personal freedom. While the partnership solidifies her place in pops upper ranks, the singer has been vocal about wanting space to create without constant scrutiny.Roan has described a desire to reconnect with ordinary joys: bike rides, concerts, messy movie nights, while continuing to explore new creative directions.For MAC, that balance between spectacle and sincerity is part of the appeal. As future campaigns, red carpet appearances, and surprise projects roll out, the brand is aligning itself with an artist who treats beauty as a tool for world-building rather than decoration.If Roans career so far is any indication, this partnership wont be subtle, and MAC wouldnt have it any other way.Source
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Sources: Ailing Colts to work out retired QB Rivers
    The Indianapolis Colts will work out retired quarterback Philip Rivers on Tuesday, sources confirmed to ESPN.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    John Noble Wilford, Times Reporter Who Covered the Moon Landing, Dies at 92
    He gave readers a comprehensive and lyrical account of the historic mission in 1969. His science coverage as a Pulitzer-winning journalist and an author took him around the world.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Russian Court Sentences 4 Soldiers to Prison for Killing Texan
    Russell Bonner Bentley III, 64, who was living in the occupied Donbas region of Ukraine, was beaten and tortured to death after he was suspected of being an American saboteur, investigators said.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    G.O.P. Senators Push Health Care Options as Vote Looms
    The Senate is set to vote later this week on a three-year extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies that Republicans oppose. The G.O.P. has yet to coalesce around an alternative.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    A.I. Videos Have Flooded Social Media. No One Was Ready.
    Apps like OpenAIs Sora are fooling millions of users into thinking A.I. videos are real, even when they include warning labels.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    The Story of 8 Unforgettable Words About Apollo 11
    John Noble Wilford recounts some of what went into writing the story of humanitys giant leap for the July 21, 1969, edition of The New York Times.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Mets' Mendoza: Reports of clubhouse issues 'a lie'
    Mets manager Carlos Mendoza firmly refuted recent reports of discord among his players last season while also defending his management of the bullpen.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    DeSantis Designates CAIR, Muslim Advocacy Group, a Terrorist Organization
    The executive order from the Florida governor came after another Republican governor, Greg Abbott of Texas, issued a similar declaration last month.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Insists Tariffs Will Buoy the Economy and Ease Cost Concerns
    The president rolled out a $12 billion bailout for farmers as he makes the case that his policy is working or will soon.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Eagles' Hurts first ever with 2 turnovers on 1 play
    Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts became the first player since 1978 -- as far back as research goes -- to commit two turnovers on the same play during Monday night's game against the Chargers.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    QBs Cam Ward, Shedeur Sanders swap jerseys after Titans' victory
    The Browns and Titans rookies exchanged comical trash talk while swapping jerseys following Tennessee's 31-29 win at Cleveland.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Sources: Gamecocks hiring TCU's Briles as OC
    South Carolina is finalizing a deal to hire TCU's Kendal Briles as the school's new offensive coordinator, sources told ESPN's Pete Thamel on Monday.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Sources: 4 LSU coaches rejoin Rebels for CFP run
    Sources told ESPN's Pete Thamel on Monday that four current LSU offensive assistants are joining offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. at Ole Miss to help prepare the Rebels for their College Football Playoff appearance, which begins Dec. 20 vs. Tulane.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Honduras Issues Warrant for Juan Orlando Hernndez
    The countrys attorney general said he had issued an international arrest warrant for Juan Orlando Hernndez.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Top N.Y. Cannabis Official Resigns as Major Investigation Is Dropped
    Gov. Kathy Hochul demanded the resignation of the head of New Yorks Office of Cannabis Management following the withdrawal of a case against a Long Island-based company.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Chargers pull ahead in OT to defeat Eagles in tight MNF win
    It was the biggest win of the season for a Chargers team that appeared to be spiraling out of playoff contention.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    With Cheap Tickets and Lax Etiquette, a Theater Builds an Older Fan Base
    The Hollywood Classic cinema in Seoul is popular in a country where 70-year-olds now outnumber people in their 20s.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Massachusetts Church Keeps Anti-ICE Nativity Scene, Defying Diocese Leaders
    The Christmas display, which replaces Jesus, Mary and Joseph with a sign saying ICE Was Here, has drawn criticism from Catholic leaders and immigration officials.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Harper spoils Queen's triple-double in rookie clash
    Dylan Harper came out on top in a clash of 2025 rookies despite Pelicans center Derik Queen's 33-point triple-double in a thrilling 135-132 Spurs win.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Trumps ceasefire plan for the Israel-Hamas war faces pitfalls as it moves into a new phase
    Tents sheltering displaced Palestinians stand amid the destruction left by the Israeli air and ground offensive in Gaza City Dec. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File)2025-12-09T05:34:24Z DOHA, Qatar (AP) With the remains of one hostage still in Gaza, the first phase of the U.S.-brokered ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas is nearly complete, after a two-month process plagued by delays and finger-pointing.Now, the key players including Israel, the Palestinian militant Hamas group, the United States and a diverse list of international parties are to move to a far more complicated second phase that could reshape the Middle East.U.S. President Donald Trumps 20-point plan which was approved by the U.N. Security Council lays out an ambitious vision for ending Hamas rule of Gaza. If successful, it would see the rebuilding of a demilitarized Gaza under international supervision, normalized relations between Israel and the Arab world and a possible pathway to Palestinian independence.But if the deal stalls, Gaza could be trapped in an unstable limbo for years to come, with Hamas remaining in control of parts of the territory, Israels army enforcing an open-ended occupation and its residents stuck homeless, unemployed, unable to travel abroad and dependent on international aid to stay alive. Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, the prime minister of Qatar and a key mediator, said over the weekend that the ceasefire is at a critical point, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to travel to the White House this month to discuss the next steps.Here is a closer look at the next stages of the ceasefire and the potential pitfalls. Troops for GazaTrumps plan calls for the formation of an international force known as International Stabilization Force to maintain security and train Palestinian police to one day to take over. That force has not yet been formed, and a deployment date has not been announced. Some countries including Egypt, Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan and Indonesia have expressed willingness to participate. But no firm decisions have been made.A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss diplomatic talks, says partner countries are holding meetings this month to finalize operations. He predicted boots on the ground in early 2026.But there are pitfalls. The forces command structure and authorities remain unknown. Hamas says it will oppose any attempts by the force to disarm it, and contributing nations may not to want to risk clashes to take away its weapons. Israel, meanwhile, is hesitant to trust an international body with its security needs.Board of PeaceTrump has said he will head an international board to supervise a committee of Palestinian technocrats running Gazas day-to-day affairs. The board will oversee reconstruction and an open-ended reform process by the Palestinian Authority, with the goal of one day allowing the internationally recognized authority to govern Gaza.So far, Trump is the only board member officially named, though former British Prime Minister Tony Blairs name has been floated as a possibility. Another U.S. official, also speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss closed-door deliberations, says members of the board will be announced in the coming weeks.The key challenge will be forming a board that can work with Israel, Hamas, the mediators and international aid agencies. ReconstructionTrumps plan calls for an economic development plan to rebuild and energize Gaza, which suffered widespread destruction during the war and where most of the territorys 2 million people are displaced and unemployed.Still, no such plan has been announced. Egypt is expected to host a conference this month for donor nations to pledge reconstruction aid.The United Nations has estimated the cost of rebuilding Gaza would amount to $70 billion. Raising that money will be difficult. Even more difficult would be finding a plan acceptable to the many governments involved, along with their private sector partners. DisarmamentThe ceasefire deal calls for Hamas to surrender all of its weapons under the supervision of international monitors. Militants who disarm will be granted amnesty and the option to leave Gaza.However, Hamas, whose ideology is based on armed resistance against Israel, says it will not disarm until Israel ends its occupation of Palestinian territories.Bassem Naim, a senior Hamas official, told The Associated Press that the group is open to freezing or storing its weapons while a political process takes place, perhaps over many years. It is unclear whether that is sufficient for Israel. Failure to disarm Hamas could lead to renewed fighting with Israel, clashes with international troops and block progress on the rest of the peace plan.A Palestinian governmentThe Palestinians are to form a technocratic, apolitical committee to run daily affairs in Gaza, under the supervision of the Board of Peace.The committees members have not been announced and Israels opposition to having any Palestinians connected to Hamas or the Palestinian Authority on it could make choosing them more difficult. It is also not clear if the committee will give Palestinians any real voice in the government or will exist only to implement decisions by the Board of Peace. If the committee is seen as just a faade, it risks not gaining public support and some figures may balk at joining it. Israeli withdrawalsUnder the ceasefire, Israel is to withdraw from all of Gaza, with the exception of a small buffer zone along the border. At the moment, Israel retains control of just over half of Gaza. The plan says further withdrawals will be based upon standards, milestones and timeframes linked to demilitarization to be negotiated by Israel, the U.S., the international force and other guarantors.There are no firm timelines for further withdrawals, and Israel may refuse to pull back further. Its military chief, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, called the so-called Yellow Line that divides the Israeli-held part of Gaza from the rest a new border that would serve as a forward defensive line for our communities.Palestinian AuthorityThe plan calls for a reform of the Palestinian Authority, which runs the West Bank, and create conditions for a credible pathway to Palestinian statehood.Palestinian officials have met with Blair and U.S. officials, and have said they have begun reforms in key areas such as corruption, the education system and payments to families of prisoners convicted in attacks on Israelis.Israel rejects the creation of a Palestinian state, opposes any role for the authority in postwar Gaza and may oppose attempts to bring it in even if some reforms are made. Without a pathway to statehood, any Palestinian support for the new system could crumble. The plan also offers no clear benchmarks or timelines for the reform process. JOSEF FEDERMAN Federman manages coverage of Israel, the Palestinian territories and Jordan and has covered the Middle East for The AP for two decades.. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Cambodia vows fierce fight against Thailand in escalating border conflict
    A Thai resident who fled clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers, uses mobile phone while taking shelter in Buriram province, Thailand, Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)2025-12-09T05:26:07Z SURIN, Thailand (AP) Cambodias powerful Senate President Hun Sen on Tuesday vowed that his country would carry out a fierce fight against Thailand as a second day of widespread renewed combat between the Southeast Asian neighbors drove tens of thousands of people to flee border areas.Fighting broke out following a skirmish in which one Thai soldier was killed Sunday night, despite a ceasefire that ended five days of fighting in July over competing territorial claims along their border, which resulted in dozens of civilian and military dead on both sides, and the evacuation of over 100,000 civilians. Both sides vow to keep fightingIn a statement posted to Facebook and Telegram, Hun Sen claimed that his country had refrained from firing back on Monday, but overnight began to shoot back at Thai forces. He wrote that a strategy of concentrating on where Thailand was advancing would allow Cambodia to to weaken and destroy enemy forces through counterattacks.Thailands army said Cambodian forces had fired artillery at a village in Sa Kaeo province early Tuesday morning, though the strike caused no casualties. Thailand says that Cambodian forces also fired at its troops Sunday and Monday, as each side blames the other for firing the first shots.Cambodia wants peace, but Cambodia is forced to fight back to defend its territory, Hun Sen said. Hun Sen was Cambodias long-serving prime minister until 2023, when he was succeeded by his son Hun Manet, but is still widely seen as the countrys de facto leader. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Cambodias military announced Tuesday that the new fighting had killed seven civilians and wounded 20. A spokesperson for the Thai military announced Tuesday that one solder had been killed and 29 wounded in the new fighting. Speaking at a news conference, Thai Rear Adm. Surasant Kongsiri said the navy was strengthening its position in eastern Thailand near the border with Cambodia.Thailand on Monday carried out airstrikes along the frontier, which it said were a defensive action targeting military installations. Surasant said such operation would continue until attacks stop. Villagers on both sides flee to safetyA separate statement from Thailands 2nd Army Region, situated along the border, said almost 500 temporary shelters have been set up in four border provinces, accommodating 125,838 people. Additional refugees from the fighting are expected to stay with relatives in safe areas.It said Cambodia attacked Thai positions with rocket and drone attacks. Cambodia said people fled villages near the border.Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said Monday in a televised speech that military operations would be carried out as necessary to defend the country and protect public safety.Thailand has never wished for violence. Id like to reiterate that Thailand has never initiated a fight or an invasion, but will never tolerate a violation of its sovereignty, he said. The two nations have a history of ill willThailand and Cambodia have a history of enmity over centuries and experience periodic tensions along their land border of more than 800 kilometers (500 miles).The ceasefire that was agreed to end Julys fighting was brokered by Malaysia and pushed through by pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, who threatened to withhold trade privileges from the two nations unless they agreed to it.A more detailed agreement signed in October called for removing heavy weapons and equipment from the border; desisting from disseminating false information, accusations, and harmful rhetoric; implementing measures to restore mutual trust and full diplomatic relations; and coordinating operations to remove land mines.None of these actions appear to have been implemented in full or in good faith by either side. After the ceasefire, both nations continued to fight a bitter propaganda war using disinformation, alongside minor outbreaks of cross-border violence. Prisoners and land mines have been sticky issues A major Cambodian complaint has been that Thailand continues to hold 18 prisoners taken prisoner when the ceasefire became active. Thailand accuses Cambodia of laying new land mines in the areas under dispute, in several cases maiming Thai soldiers. Cambodia says the mines are left over from decades of civil war that ended in 1999.The mines issue caused Thailand to declare earlier this month that it was indefinitely pausing implementation of the details of the ceasefire until Cambodia apologized for the U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed concern over the new fighting, especially the use of air strikes and heavy weapons, and called on the warring parties to recommit to the ceasefire.___Sopheng Cheang reported from Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    ICE arrests of Afghans are on the rise in the wake of National Guard attack, immigration lawyers say
    Rohullah R., who did not want his face to be shown or to disclose his last name out of fear of ICE, is photographed at his home in North Highlands, Calif., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vsquez)2025-12-09T05:03:33Z SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) On a recent afternoon, Giselle Garcia, a volunteer who has been helping an Afghan family resettle, drove the father to a check-in with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She warned him and his family to prepare for the worst.The moment the father stepped into the ICE office in Californias capital city, he was arrested.Coming just days after the shooting of two National Guard troops by an Afghan national suspect, federal authorities have carried out increased arrests of Afghans in the U.S., immigration lawyers say as Afghans both in and outside the country have come under intense scrutiny by immigration officials.Garcia said the family she helped had reported to all their appointments and were following all legal requirements. He was trying to be strong for his wife and kids in the car, but the anxiety and fear were palpable, she said. His wife was trying to hold back tears, but I could see her in the rearview mirror silently crying.They had fled Afghanistan under threat by the Taliban because the wifes father had assisted the U.S. military, and they had asked for asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, Garcia said. She is not identifying him or his family for fear other members could be arrested. Afghan men arrested in wake of shootingSince the Nov. 26 Guard shooting, The Associated Press has tracked roughly two dozen arrests of Afghan immigrants, most of which happened in Northern California. In Sacramento, home to one of the nations largest Afghan communities, volunteers monitoring ICE activities say they witnessed at least nine arrests at the federal building last week after Afghan men received calls to check in there.Many of those detained had requested asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border in the last two years. Others were among the 76,000 Afghans brought to the U.S. under Operation Allies Welcome, created by former President Joe Bidens administration after the chaotic withdrawal of the U.S. from their country.White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Dec. 1 that the Trump administration is actively reexamining all the Afghan nationals who entered the U.S. during Bidens administration. The AP couldnt independently determine each of the Afghans immigration statuses or the reasons put forward by authorities for their arrests. In one case, the man had been arrested twice on suspicion of domestic violence, according to the government. Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland, said in an email that the agency has been going full throttle on identifying and arresting known or suspected terrorists and criminal illegal aliens that came in through Bidens fraudulent parole programs and working to get the criminals and public safety threats OUT of our country. Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the 29-year-old Afghan suspect in the shooting, was granted asylum earlier this year, according to advocate group #AfghanEvac. Critics say Afghans paying price for one bad actorSince the shooting, the U.S. government introduced sweeping immigration changes, including pausing asylum applications and requiring increased vetting for immigrants from certain countries. The administration also took steps specifically targeted at Afghans, including pausing all their immigration-related applications and visas for Afghans who closely helped the war effort.Those who work with Afghans say the stepped-up enforcement amounts to the collective punishment of a population, many of whom risked their lives to protect U.S. troops.Not to discount the horrific killing that happened, but that was one bad actor who should be prosecuted by the full extent of the law, Democratic Rep. Ami Bera, whose California district includes Sacramento, said of Lakanwal. A lot of these people kept our troops safe and served side by side with our soldiers for two decades in Afghanistan. Cuffed after reporting to ICE In Sacramento, Afghan men arrived one by one to the ICE office Dec. 1 after being asked to immediately report there, drawing the attention of volunteers who have been at the federal building for more than six months to monitor ICE activities and alert immigrants.As each man entered the office, agents handcuffed them, said Garcia, a volunteer with NorCal Resist.What we saw on Monday was an influx of Afghan immigrants called randomly starting at 6 a.m. and asked to do a check-in and report immediately, Garcia said. Most of these Afghan men already had ankle monitors on them.Her organizations volunteers witnessed ICE arrest six Afghans that day.Arrests and cancellations cause fear In Des Moines, Iowa, Ann Naffier, with the Iowa Migrant Movement for Justice, said her Afghan client was detained Dec. 2 on the way to work by agents who called him a terrorist. He was held for two hours before he was released with an apology.Wahida Noorzad is an immigration attorney in Northern California who has two Afghan clients who were arrested last week by ICE. Both entered the U.S. in recent years through the southern border. One used the app set up by the Biden administration to make an appointment to request asylum at the border. Noorzad felt both had strong cases to eventually be granted asylum in the U.S. She also said she found no criminal records for them.Spojmie Nasiri, another immigration attorney in Northern California, said shes received numerous calls from worried Afghans, including a man who called her terrified as agents stood outside his home. He put her on speaker phone so she could tell them that her client was a U.S. citizen.Iqbal Wafa, an Afghan immigration consultant in Sacramento, said officials told his client when he went to his appointment last week that that interviews for Afghans are canceled, and he observed interviews for other Afghan immigrants were canceled as well inside a federal building in Sacramento.A family left cryingGarcia said she listened through the wall of the waiting room at the ICE office and heard agents handcuff the father of the family she was helping.Im screaming his rights through the wall so he could hear me. Remain silent! Please dont sign anything! she said. She left after security approached.When she walked out of the building without him, she said his wife broke down sobbing.Their daughter tried to console her, telling her, Mommy, dont cry. Everything will be OK when daddy comes.__Bellisle reported from Seattle, Watson reported from San Diego and Santana reported from Washington. MARTHA BELLISLE Bellisle is an investigative reporter based in Washington state. She covers a variety of topics, including police accountability, immigration, and federal workers. twitter mailto REBECCA SANTANA Santana covers the Department of Homeland Security for The Associated Press. She has extensive experience reporting in such places as Russia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. twitter mailto JULIE WATSON Watson covers immigration, US-Mexico border issues and the environment, and helps direct coverage of California and Nevada for The Associated Press. Shes reported from Mexico, Central and South America, and was a 2019 Pulitzer Prize finalist. twitter
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    In Thailand and Cambodia, Taking Shelter (Again) as Fighting Reignites
    Hundreds of thousands of people fled a deadly border conflict, the authorities said, some sheltering at a racetrack in Thailand and some near temples in Cambodia.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Bolts laud injured Herbert's gritty effort in OT win
    One week after having surgery for a fracture in his left hand, Chargers QB Justin Herbert stiff-armed the Eagles in a 22-19 overtime win on "Monday Night Football." "It felt like we were in a movie," Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Transfer rumors, news: Neymar eyes Europe, MLS move for World Cup
    Santos forward Neymar is set to consider a move back to Europe or MLS if he doesn't stay in Brazil. Transfer Talk has the latest news and rumors.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Wave of Tax Cuts Has Left Many States Vulnerable to Trump SNAP and Medicaid Crisis
    This fall, Americans got to see what its like to go without a safety net for the hungry. With the U.S. government shut down for multiple weeks and President Donald Trump refusing to fund SNAP, the federal food stamp program, a panic set in among the more than 40 million people who rely on it. Families skipped meals, and babies went unfed. Food banks ran out of food, and some people turned to dumpster diving.It was just a glimpse of whats to come. Starting next October, Trumps so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act will shift billions in SNAP costs from the federal government onto states. Some states wont be able to afford this, and they could be forced to deeply cut or even shutter their SNAP programs altogether, according to the Congressional Budget Office.To be crystal clear, what this bill did was create the potential for SNAP programs to no longer exist in states that cannot afford to? Rep. Shomari Figures, an Alabama Democrat, asked a panel of state and county social services officials during a congressional hearing in September. Is it correct that under the new cost-sharing arrangement, Figures continued, these states might not have it in their budgets to feed anyone at all, including children and homeless veterans?Yes, officials from Ohio to Wyoming answered, one by one by one.Most vulnerable to this outcome are 26 states that have enacted sweeping corporate and personal income tax cuts over the past five years, depriving them of billions of dollars in revenue that they could have used at just this sort of moment. These state-level tax cuts, disproportionately benefiting the rich, have moved through legislatures with backing from powerful conservative organizations including the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, and the Koch brothers-founded Americans for Prosperity, as well as the Tax Foundation, a think tank. These groups seized on an opportunity created by the pandemic states were flush with cash from 2021 to 2023 largely because federal stimulus funding was flooding in to make significant progress toward the long-term goal of eliminating state income taxes entirely.States that slashed their own taxes have only made themselves more reliant on federal funding, and thus stand to be disproportionately harmed by the cuts to SNAP and also to Medicaid contained in the Trump legislation, budget experts and state legislators said.Its clear to policymakers across the country that there will be added costs coming down to states due to the Republican megabill, said Wesley Tharpe, senior adviser for state tax policy at the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. But whats less well understood by the public is that state and local budgets were already facing extreme strain due to the scope and scale of the tax cut wave that has been sweeping the nation.There have been prior waves, Tharpe added, but the number of states that have cut taxes in the last five years, and the sheer size of the cuts, is nearly unprecedentedly large.Indeed, according to Pew, the scale of the recent downturn in states tax revenue resembles what is usually seen during a recession even though the U.S. is not in a recession.Dave Rader, a state senator in Oklahoma who chairs that chambers Republican caucus as well as its revenue and taxation committee, told ProPublica that as the costs of SNAP and Medicaid are shifted onto states by the new federal law, those programs could have to be eliminated if he and his fellow lawmakers cant find a way to pay for them. And his colleagues recent decision to set Oklahoma on what has been called a path to zero income taxes will put us in an even less fortunate situation because of the decline in revenue, Rader said, adding that he still hopes the tax cuts work out.According to a ProPublica analysis of state tax trends since 2021, 26 states have lowered their income taxes, with 23 of them cutting their top marginal rate, which most benefits their wealthiest residents. Eight of these states did so while adopting a flat income tax meaning that a billionaire and his janitor will pay the same rate. Many states, meanwhile, have slashed other kinds of taxes, including property taxes. North Carolina is eliminating its corporate income tax. Missouri is even exempting passive income (money made on stocks, real estate, cryptocurrency and the like) from taxation, which will give millionaires there a $43,000 tax break on average compared with just $80 for everybody else.These deep cuts to states main revenue streams didnt hurt too much when stimulus dollars were still flowing in from the first Trump and Biden administrations which, along with high inflation and the temporary spike in sales tax revenue it created, juiced state budgets and budget forecasts. But state lawmakers might have easily foreseen that federal funding pegged to the pandemic would eventually dry up.Still, they kept cutting taxes, sometimes repeatedly, and now, several states are already facing severe shortfalls. Arizona, which in 2021 enacted an extremely low flat tax against the will of its voters even as it launched the nations most expensive private school voucher program, has since had to cut funding for community colleges, road repairs, water projects and services for disabled children. In West Virginia, where former Gov. Jim Justice (now a U.S. senator) signed the latest of multiple income tax cuts into law in 2024, deficits of $400 million and growing are expected in the coming years. Funding for education, child care and health care in the state has been decimated.And thats all before the One Big Beautiful Bill Act fully goes into effect, which will force states to come up with hundreds of millions to billions of dollars to cover new SNAP and Medicaid costs. The magnitude of the fiscal hit that theyre going to take is still coming into focus, with the cuts to the two safety net programs delayed by congressional Republicans so that most of the changes will be phased in from 2027 to 2029, after next years midterm elections.On the SNAP side of the equation, all states will see the amount that they already pay for the administration of the program increased by 25%. Separately, for the first time ever, each state will soon have to pay for a percentage of the actual SNAP benefits that go to recipients. Exactly how much that is will depend on how much theyre penalized for their SNAP error rate, a measurement of how often they accidentally make incorrect eligibility decisions or overpayments or underpayments to beneficiaries.By way of example, North Carolina will likely have to start paying out an estimated $420 million annually in SNAP benefits that the federal government used to cover, based on the states relatively high current error rate. Thats on top of the fact that it is presently the only state in the nation heading into the new year without a full budget, in part because lawmakers are gridlocked over whether to spend money on Hurricane Helene recovery efforts, teacher pay raises, Medicaid or a new childrens hospital ($535 million for that project has been a major sticking point), among many other priorities.Recent cuts to income taxes will cost the state $1 billion this coming year alone in revenue that could have been used toward any of these ends.When it comes to Medicaid, states will among several other things be required to implement new work requirements and to check many recipients eligibility for the program twice a year, which will mean new expenditures on additional staff, retraining of existing staff and technology to process all that paperwork. (When Georgia implemented such work requirements recently, it spent twice as much on administrative costs as it did on providing actual health care, the Government Accountability Office found.)What states like ours have been doing is more radical than anything thats ever been done in terms of tax cutting at the state level, concluded Jason Bailey, founder and executive director of the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy. Tell me how that works if youre trying to maintain a Medicaid program.Part of why this post-pandemic state tax-cutting spree has gone relatively unnoticed is that tax cut proponents are conscious of what happened not so long ago in Kansas. There, Gov. Sam Brownback in 2012 signed a set of enormous income tax cuts into law to much fanfare, only for them later to be repealed by a bipartisan supermajority after they caused severe economic and political pain. Brownback, with support from ALEC, the Koch brothers and the anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist, had said that the Kansas experiment would show how tax cuts spur economic growth and create jobs. Instead, state revenues fell by hundreds of millions of dollars and funding for education and infrastructure had to be slashed.This time around, most of the 26 states that have cut their income taxes are doing so over a period of years, thus delaying some of the fiscal fallout and diffusing media attention. But what that approach didnt anticipate is how quickly the hurt would be felt if massive funding cuts were to simultaneously come from the federal level.To be sure, absorbing the costs of the Trump law will be difficult for states no matter their tax structure. Several blue states that have enacted no income tax cuts or more minor ones in recent years, including Connecticut, New Mexico and Oregon, have nonetheless had to call special legislative sessions over the past several months because they too are worried about the federal budget picture.Advocates and experts at conservative organizations, in interviews and emails, defended states recent tax cuts even in the context of the budget pinch to come.Jared Walczak is vice president of state projects at the Tax Foundation, a think tank that has provided testimony on several of the recent state tax cut bills. He acknowledged that there was a sugar high of extreme state revenue growth just after the height of the pandemic and through 2023, which wasnt sustainable. Still, Walczak said, revenue remains higher in most states than it was in the 2010s. And cutting taxes from that place of growth was a wise move for the states that did so especially because the modern economy is so fluid and competitive, with both businesses and individuals moving across state lines to where taxes are lower. New York and California, with their higher tax rates, have seen out migration in some recent years, he pointed out.Walczak said it would be difficult, though, to tell how this calculus might change in the face of the upcoming cuts to SNAP and Medicaid. He said the situation would indeed force some hard choices on states, such as whether to reduce their Medicaid rolls in response to the federal law or to consider returning some tax rates to previous levels.But whether youve raised [taxes], lowered them or kept them the same, you will still face similar choices, he contended. Everyones in the same boat that whatever your budget is now, your budget just got a little tighter. Everyone is going to experience more stress against their baseline.A spokesperson for Americans for Prosperity, meanwhile, noted that the group hasnt just advocated state income tax rate cuts, it has also emphasized the need for tax reforms that broaden the base of taxable economic activity, as well as spending restraint.Liberal state budget experts and advocates countered that a more cautious fiscal approach over the past five years, including saving more surpluses in rainy-day funds rather than jumping at the opportunity to cut taxes, would have better protected essential services and vulnerable populations from future federal funding reductions. Instead, to help pay for their tax cuts, many states have already raided their various cash funds. Weve sort of maxed out on gimmicks, said Geraldine Miranda, assistant director of fiscal policy at the Arizona Center for Economic Progress. Theres nothing left in the couch cushions.And raising income taxes, especially after theyve just been cut, is easier said than done, politically speaking. We always try to get the Legislature to open up to the idea of raising revenue, said Craig Beck, research director at the OpenSky Policy Institute, a Nebraska think tank. But were met with just complete disregard.As a result, cutting programs and services will be the most likely route for states as the Trump law takes effect, experts said. Even though the proximate cause will have been the loss of funding for SNAP and Medicaid for lower-income people, those in the middle class will feel the consequences too. States, unlike the federal government, have to balance their budgets. So, everything from raising tuition at state universities to canceling unfinished state road projects to freezing state workers salaries is now on the table, as states try to find the money to address the budget dilemma that they themselves are partly to blame for creating.In an article published in October, Joshua Meyer, director of the tax and fiscal policy task force at ALEC, wrote that the generational effort to eliminate states personal income taxes is now finally coming to fruition from Oklahoma to Kentucky to Mississippi.West Virginia might be next. With the backing of many of the same organizations that once supported the Kansas experiment, multiple rounds of income tax cuts have been enacted in the Mountain State in recent years. This has led, among other things, to worsening understaffing at the very state agencies that will have to carry out the Trump administrations orders with regard to SNAP and Medicaid, like implementing work requirements and trying to reduce instances of fraud, waste and abuse. Due to vacancies, [economic service workers] are carrying an average caseload of 947 cases. This makes this job nearly impossible, reads a recent West Virginia budget report.Matt Rohrbach, the Republican deputy speaker of the West Virginia House of Delegates, still supports those tax cuts, which he said have produced economic growth. But if we suddenly have to take over all the costs for SNAP and for Medicaid or even a significant part of it, he told ProPublica, thats really going to put a hurt on a state like ours.The post Wave of Tax Cuts Has Left Many States Vulnerable to Trump SNAP and Medicaid Crisis appeared first on ProPublica.
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    These Health Centers Are Supposed to Make Care Affordable. One Has Sued Patients for as Little as $59 in Unpaid Bills.
    This past June, Ashley Voss-Barnes received a court summons in the mail.PrairieStar Health Center, a nonprofit community health center in south-central Kansas, was suing her for $675 and her wife for $732 in unpaid medical bills. Voss-Barnes knew the clinic received federal funding to make preventive health care accessible in a region where many families, including her own, needed financial help.She didnt understand what led to the lawsuit. She and her wife had a blended family of five kids that cost a lot to keep healthy. As a result, years ago, the couple had asked PrairieStar if they could set up an ongoing payment plan to automatically take money from their checking accounts multiple times a month. Voss-Barnes would later state in a court filing that PrairieStar never informed her those payments were not enough to cover her bills and keep her out of collections.If I have something due, then I will try to pay it, she said to ProPublica. It came out of nowhere.Voss-Barnes, a nurse who feels confident navigating the health care system, wanted to push back. She reached out to a local lawyer to see if he could represent them, but he said the debt was too small to be worth it. So she represented herself, filing a letter in court objecting to the lawsuit and asking to continue the existing payment plan.Eventually, Voss-Barnes and her wife agreed to set up new payment plans with the collections agency for the debt, to avoid having the money taken directly from their paychecks through wage garnishment. To their dismay, they owed hundreds more in interest, court costs and lawyer fees as a result of PrairieStars decision to sue.They worry about PrairieStar suing them again. I know were not the only ones this has happened to, Voss-Barnes said.The lawsuits against the two women are among at least 1,000 that PrairieStar has filed against patients since 2020 for unpaid medical bills, according to a ProPublica analysis of state court records over that period. Many patients PrairieStar sued were uninsured and made so little money they qualified for discounted care, a former patient accounts employee told ProPublica.Community health centers like PrairieStar Health, also known as federally qualified health centers, were created to serve as medical safety nets for people who struggle to afford primary care. They were established during the Civil Rights Movement-era War on Poverty, when federal officials realized that low-income Americans, overwhelmed by long drives and crowded hospitals, were forgoing medical attention. The health centers receive federal grants in exchange for serving patients regardless of their ability to pay, increasing access across large swaths of the country.But ProPublica found that several of these health centers are suing patients and garnishing their paychecks which experts say contradicts their mission. We identified two other centers in Kansas, plus one in rural Virginia and one in Kalamazoo, Michigan, that consistently filed lawsuits against patients since at least 2020. Our search, which was not exhaustive, focused on states and counties where court records are publicly accessible online. We also reviewed documents from a municipality in Alaska and a county in California that run community health centers, which showed they use outside debt collectors to pursue what patients owe.Leaders of five community health centers, including PrairieStar, told ProPublica they send patients to collections or file lawsuits against them as a last resort, after sending statements and offering payment plans. Three pointed to the financial instability that community health centers face as a reason to pursue patient debt. All five stressed that they did not turn away patients who could not afford medical care, citing a goal to make health care accessible.In response to questions from ProPublica, PrairieStar CEO Bryant Anderson said that the health center faces a perfect storm caring for patients while also dealing with higher costs and unstable funding. With all the challenges PrairieStar faces to maintain access to care for the uninsured and the underinsured, having someone imply that we dont fulfill our mission is certainly rubbing salt in the wounds, he wrote in an email.Anderson said PrairieStar generally tries six times to communicate with patients before sending them to collections. He also said every patient is given the option to apply for sliding-scale discounts based on income and about a third choose not to provide that information.Other health center leaders also explained their decision to pursue patient debt through lawsuits, in response to questions from ProPublica. We understand that sending accounts to collections can seem at odds with that mission, and its not a decision we take lightly, said Renee Hively, the CEO of CareArc, a community health center in Kansas. CareArc has appeared in local news for pursuing one patients medical bill through a lawsuit and wage garnishments for more than 12 years, contributing to her being unable to afford basic utilities. (CareArc did not respond to a request for comment about that particular case.)A spokesperson for the department that oversees community health centers in Monterey County, California, told ProPublica that most unpaid bills it sends to collections involve small amounts that do not justify the cost of initiating legal proceedings. As a result, none of its patients have been sued since 2019. If the health centers ever stopped sending patients to collections, the spokesperson said, the financial effect would be minimal.Most of the public attention on medical debt and related lawsuits has been focused on hospitals, especially nonprofit hospitals that receive tax breaks in order to make care more affordable. Hospitals must provide emergency care regardless of whether the patient can afford it but are not required to provide primary care like checkups or routine screenings. Nonprofit hospitals are required by federal law to check whether patients qualify for financial help before suing them or garnishing their wages.Community health centers, on the other hand, must make every reasonable effort to collect money from patients before writing it off, according to federal law.Though experts and leaders of other health centers say the centers have ample freedom to decide what reasonable means and whether to pursue debt through collections agencies and the courts Anderson said the manner in which PrairieStar collects debts is mandated by the law.He also said that ProPublica may be trying to induce other health centers to violate federal law by reporting and writing this story. Your messaging would therefore be dangerous and intimate that such health centers were not required to make every reasonable effort to secure payments for their services, he wrote.But experts on community health center finances said that federal law does not require the centers to send patients to collections. Theres no law that says you have to garnish wages or that you have to go after someone through collections, said Ray Jorgensen, a health care billing consultant who said he has worked with hundreds of community health centers over about 30 years. I would say thats an anomaly. Thats not the norm.Anderson did not answer specific questions about PrairieStars lawsuits or wage garnishments. He repeatedly said that ProPublica did not have all the facts and that the story would be potentially defamatory, but he did not clarify what he felt was missing or inaccurate. Nor did he respond directly to questions about Voss-Barnes experience, even though she and her wife signed privacy waivers allowing him to do so. Voss-Barnes said that he reached out to her directly, telling her that everyone in their Kansas city would know that she had failed to pay her medical bills if she moved forward with the article. (He did not respond when asked about that outreach.) He did tell ProPublica that he personally contacted both a former employee and another patient who ProPublica had asked him about. The patient stopped responding to ProPublica.Medical debt experts said they were surprised and horrified to hear that community health centers were using lawsuits and third-party debt collectors to recover money from patients, given their intended purpose of providing care to people who have no other options. Under federal law, community health centers must provide discounted care on a sliding scale for patients who make at or below 200% of the federal poverty guideline, an amount that varies based on family size and household income. A family of four must make under $64,300 to receive a discount. Medical debt disproportionately burdens Black, Hispanic, low-income and uninsured patients groups more likely to use community health centers for affordable care.Patients who have been sued because of medical debt are likely to avoid care in the future, said Miriam Straus, policy adviser for Community Catalyst, a health advocacy group. These collection activities seem to violate at least the spirit of the requirement to provide health services available to all.On Virginias Eastern Shore, a narrow peninsula bordered by the Atlantic and the Chesapeake Bay, getting sued by the community health care center is a regular occurrence. Over the last decade, Eastern Shore Rural Health filed more than 7,000 lawsuits for unpaid medical bills in two counties where 45,000 people live.It sued one couple for $59 in January 2024, an amount that ballooned by more than 600% within months due to interest, court costs and lawyer fees. Court records show money regularly garnished from people working in the low-wage industries that abound on the Eastern Shore, including poultry processing and retail.On an August morning in Accomack Countys civil court, Eastern Shore Rural Health accounted for most of the cases on the judges docket. One man who showed up to court told ProPublica that the visit potentially cost him hundreds of dollars because he missed out on lucrative hours harvesting oysters and clams. He only spoke Spanish and the court did not make a translator available; the judge told him to return for another hearing in the fall. Most people didnt show up to court at all, meaning the health center won by default.ProPublica did not find any other community health centers in Virginia consistently suing patients for unpaid bills in the court records.Eastern Shore Rural Health began using lawsuits to collect medical debt about 20 years ago after conversations about maximizing our revenue, according to Kandy Bruno, the organizations chief financial officer. A local company called Bay Area Receivables handles its collections and takes 30% to 40% of what it recovers from patients through the court. The minimum amount that Eastern Shore sends to collections is $25, Bruno said.Bruno said Eastern Shore sends patients to collections when it has exhausted other options, including sending out letters, offering interest-fee payment plans and helping fill out Medicaid applications. We should never have to send anyone to collections, she said. It should be 100% avoidable. She also said the number of lawsuits the company had filed in a decade was not very high compared to the 32,400 patients seen there last year.Patients are never refused health care, no matter how much they owe, she said.Virginia recently passed a law that experts say would stop at least some of Eastern Shore Rural Healths debt collection practices starting next summer. The law prohibits large medical providers from garnishing wages of patients who qualify for financial assistance.Bruno said she hasnt yet looked into how the Virginia law would affect the health center or its patients on the sliding scale. We will absolutely comply with and make adjustments to comply with the letter of the new law, she said.The health center is the main option for preventive care on the peninsula; otherwise, people have to make the long drive up to Maryland or pay tolls, often totaling more than $20, to cross the bridge over the Chesapeake Bay. More than 70% of people who live on the Eastern Shore see doctors at the health center, including higher-income people with private insurance through their jobs, Bruno said.That means some of the patients, she said, make enough to take responsibility for their care. But the health center does not track what percentage of patients sent to collections receive financial assistance or make so little that their checks legally cannot be garnished.Brittney Shea, a single mom with two teenagers, has been sued three times by Eastern Shore Rural Health since 2021. She and both of her children have chronic health conditions that require them to see doctors and specialists frequently, and the $25 co-payments add up quickly, she said.Most recently, the health center sued her last October for about $2,000 in medical bills and an additional $760 in lawyer fees and court costs, records show. The money was garnished from multiple paychecks from her Walmart job.Shea is aware that she ends up paying more through garnishments than she would if she paid her medical bills on time. But she said the money just isnt there on the front end, especially when she has been out of work due to health emergencies. Sometimes she avoids seeing doctors when she is feeling sick to avoid owing more money.The cycle of lawsuits and garnishments has made it harder to provide for her children, she said. You expect this money, but then theyre garnishing you, she said. Now you got to figure out how youre going to feed them, how youre going to put gas in your car to go back and forth to work, how youre going to pay your rent.Many regions served by community health centers lack primary care options and havea real need for them. That was the case in Hutchinson, Kansas, a historic salt mining town northwest of Wichita, in the 1990s when the local hospital came up with the idea to start PrairieStar Health.When Aimee Jones started working at PrairieStar in 2015, she had only ever been on the patient side of debt collection. After a difficult divorce decades earlier, shed had trouble paying outstanding medical bills and filed for bankruptcy to avoid having her wages garnished.As a patient accounts representative, Jones was responsible for handing patients debt over to an outside collection agency once she had exhausted efforts to get them to pay. PrairieStar would send out three statements and two collections notices and often make an additional phone call reminding patients of their unpaid balances and encouraging them to set up a payment plan. The last notice told them that their bill would be sent to collections. (Anderson, the PrairieStar CEO, told ProPublica the collections agency also sent patients multiple notices before escalating to lawsuits.)Jones said she convinced her bosses to change some policies in favor of patients. The company was initially sending bills as low as $30 to collections, which Jones felt was pointless because the outside agency took a third of the money. She pushed PrairieStar to raise the threshold to $200 in outstanding debt. In more recent years, that amount increased to $500, she said.In Kansas, unlike Virginia, lawmakers have not significantly limited how health care providers can recover medical debt. Kansas is also one of 10 states that has chosen not to expand Medicaid, leaving thousands of people unable to get health insurance and potentially more reliant on community health centers.Many of the patients who qualified for discounted care based on their income had no insurance, Jones said. And even with lower fees, some struggled to afford medical care at PrairieStar. You dont stay on top of it or you come in a lot, its going to accumulate quite fast, Jones said. According to the health centers financial assistance policy, not all services qualify for discounts.Jones tried hard to convince patients to pay even a few dollars each month so they could stay out of collections. Often, it worked. She was aware that some people, especially those on fixed incomes, had almost nothing to spare. If they didnt pay their bills or sign up for a payment plan within about six months, she handed their names over to the collection agency.Jones could request permission to write off some bills for people who had endured extreme hardship, like a woman whose baby died in a house fire or another whose boyfriend and son died in a car accident. But she couldnt help everyone.Once the collection agency referred a case for a lawsuit, it was largely out of Jones hands, she said. PrairieStar hired a company that handles collections for hospitals in many Kansas counties Account Recovery Specialists Inc., which has a documented history of requesting arrest warrants for patients who dont show up to court. (The collections agency told ProPublica that the warrants were ordered by a judge and that it could not discuss its contract with PrairieStar. It has previously denied using the threat of jail to get people to pay.) Each summer, the agency would send PrairieStar a long list of patient accounts deemed uncollectible because they had no income or assets, Jones said.Jones, who retired last year, looks back on nearly a decade of work with a mixture of pride and sadness. She wonders if PrairieStar could have convinced more people to agree to payment plans if it hadnt contracted with an outside agency. The health centers patients would have benefited from a law like Virginias, she said, which prevents providers from garnishing wages of patients receiving financial assistance.We serve the poorest of the poor. These people dont have any money, Jones said.Pursuing debt in court is a choice, and some community health center leaders have opted out.Several years before Krista Postai founded the Community Health Center of Southeast Kansas in the states poorest region, she worked at a hospital that took extreme measures to collect medical debt. As part of her job, she fielded calls from patients unhappy with the billing process. At times, she said, patients reported receiving warnings that they would be sent to collections, even though they hadnt received a bill.When she began applying for grants to start her own clinic in 2002, she knew there had to be another way. If your goal is really keeping people healthier, it makes more sense to deliver care at the lowest cost possible and not drive them into ERs and hospitals, she said.Hospitals do not make much from suing their patients, according to research in several states. (Experts did not know of similar studies on community health centers.) One study of Virginia hospitals found that wage garnishment brought in just a fraction of a percent of their total revenue, on average. But patients can see their finances devastated by these lawsuits, especially with the added interest charges, lawyer fees and court costs.The National Consumer Law Center, a nonprofit that focuses on consumer protection, urges states to set limits on health care providers collecting medical debt. Their recommendations include capping interest rates for debt at 2% a year much lower than Kansass 10% maximum and prohibiting lawsuits for patients who qualify for financial help. It recommends banning wage garnishment for all patients.Community health centers should be held to the same requirements when possible, said Berneta Haynes, policy adviser for the center. The idea here is that certain types of egregious and aggressive debt collections really should just be banned, she said.Community Health Center of Southeast Kansas, based in a county with a poverty rate almost twice that of the state as a whole, provides care to many people who cant afford to immediately pay their bills. Postai said the health center makes every reasonable effort to collect money from patients, as required by federal law. But she is determined to never outsource that work to a collections agency, despite the weekly calls she gets from companies hoping to purchase the health centers debt.The centers internal policy says it will not send patients to collections to ensure that patient dignity is maintained. Its peers, she said, should do the same.Most people try to pay, she said. It makes no sense to take an already stressed population and stress them further.Instead, the health center finds creative ways to pull in more patients using federal grants to open discount pharmacies, serving patients at jails and prisons, partnering with other local nonprofits. It has branched out to neighboring counties with no other sources of affordable medical care. Last year, it wrote off about $5.3 million of bad debt from patients who didnt pay their bills, about 5% of its total revenue, federal reports show.Postai said the clinic is willing and able to sustain the loss, and she cringes thinking about patients at PrairieStar and similar health centers who may avoid returning there for medical help.Thats a big hole in the safety net, she said.The post These Health Centers Are Supposed to Make Care Affordable. One Has Sued Patients for as Little as $59 in Unpaid Bills. appeared first on ProPublica.
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    The Harsh Truth About HIV Phobia in Gay Dating
    Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.Subscribe nowThis story was produced with the support of MISTR, a telehealth platform offering free online access to PrEP, DoxyPEP, STI testing, Hepatitis C testing and treatment and long-term HIV care across the U.S. MISTR did not have any editorial input into the content of this story.In his room, 19-year-old Cody Nester toggles between Grindr profiles on his phone.As he senses chemistry with a match, he knows he has to flag something that could be a deal breaker.Did you see on my profile that Im HIV positive? he writes.The reply arrives instantly.Youre disgusting. I dont know why youre on here. Seconds later, the profile disappears, suggesting Nester is blocked.Cody Nester on his phone. Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.He went out of his way to say that. People could at least be more aware, ask questions, and understand the reality [of living with HIV] instead of attacking us, Nester told Uncloseted Media.I would say 95% of people respond that way, says Nester, who lives in Hollywood, Florida, and works at a Mexican restaurant. The entire conversation is going fine. Theyre down to meet up and then right when I mention [HIV], its always, Oh no, never mind.Some other messages hes received include:Youll never get anything in your life.Why dont you die?Why are you on here?More often, its silence, a cold No or a sudden block.Its like youre a white fish in a school of black fish, he says. Youre immediately the odd one out.Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.Even though Nesters undetectable status makes it impossible for him to transmit HIV to partners during sex, he experiences stigma around HIV, something which nearly 90% of Americans agree still exists, according to a 2022 GLAAD report. And a survey shared in 2019 found that 64% of respondents would feel uncomfortable having sex with someone living with HIV, even on effective treatment. The emotional cost of this stigma is a significant barrier to intimacy and can result in a loss of self-esteem, fear of disclosure and suicidal thoughts.Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.What the Science Saysand Why It Doesnt Seem to MatterThe fear comes from antiquated ideas around HIV, says Xavier A. Erguera, senior clinical research coordinator at University of California, San Franciscos (UCSF) Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases & Global Medicine. A lot of people who are newly diagnosed still fear its a death sentence. Even though we have medications now to treat it effectively, and its basically a chronic condition, people havent caught up.Since 1996, antiretroviral therapies have developed to where they can suppress the virus to levels so low that it is undetectable in the blood, and thus not able to be transmitted to sexual partners. This is known as Undetectable = Untransmittable, or U=U. According to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report from 2024, 65% of HIV-positive cases are virally suppressed.Another line of defense is pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), which reduces the risk of acquiring HIV from sexual intercourse by roughly 99% when taken as prescribed. Approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2012, the medication launched as a once-a-day pill and was hailed as a breakthrough as it transformed the sex lives of gay men, which had been shaped by decades of fear about HIV complications and about where AIDS came from.Internal logic doesnt reflect what we know scientifically, says Kim Koester, associate professor in the Department of Medicine at UCSF. I was very optimistic when PrEP came out. The drug works, so why wouldnt everyone use it?Subscribe nowEven with PrEP use on the rise, less than 600,000 Americans used it in 2024, and Koester says skepticism and judgments about taking the drug persist.The phobia is pervasive, Koester told Uncloseted Media. People believe that others get the disease because of their lifestyle. PrEP was supposed to be the antidote to the threat of HIV, reduce the anxiety, and make you more open to who you are and the sex you want. Its supposed to be liberating. It is part of the answer. But its not enough. We dont have enough people using PrEP for it to make the dent in the stigma we need.According to a 2023 study of seven informants living with HIV, public stigma stems from problematic views from society that those living with HIV are a dangerous transmission source, disgraceful and violators of social and religious norms who have committed deviant behavior.Laramie Smith, assistant professor of Global Public Health at the University of California, San Diego, says this stigma is unwarranted and fueled by misunderstanding:With todays treatments, it shouldnt be a life-altering identity shift. It should be no different than, I have diabetes. If youre virally suppressed, it shouldnt matter whether youre friends with someone, whether youre sleeping with someonethe science shows us that.How HIV Phobia Shows Up OnlinePhoto by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.Nester, who contracted HIV last year from a Grindr hook-up who insisted he was negative, says he is just starting to accept his diagnosis. I didnt go back on the apps for a long time after that. It messed with my mental health realizing Id have to take medication for the rest of my life.Since he started dating again this year, returning to apps like Grindr and Sniffies, he has faced a new normal. He tries to do everything right and disclose his status early. Even on his Grindr profile, he identifies as poz, slang for HIV-positive.Nester on Sniffies, a queer dating app. Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.Still, he says most people ghost him once they find out. The second I bring it up, its No, says Nester. The amount of discrimination you get its always the same pattern. People dont know, and they dont want to know. It messes with you.This discrimination may be fueled by a deprioritization of HIV awareness programs across the country. Earlier this month, the U.S. State Department did not commemorate World AIDS Day for the first time in 37 years. HIV prevention programs have been slashed, especially in conservative districts, and only 25 states and D.C. require both HIV and sex education. In many states, health curricula often lag behind current science and omit teaching about PrEP, gay sex and concepts like U=U. Research shows that Gen Z is currently the least educated generation about HIV.Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.I could go all day explaining HIV, but people dont want to listen, says Nester, who is part of Gen Z. People dont want to learn about it; they just want to avoid it.HIV Anxiety and Public Stigma Shaped by HistoryEven in more progressive areas, stigma still exists. Damian Jack, a 45-year-old from Brooklyn, remembers sitting in an exam room in 2009 as a doctor explained how low his T-cell count was, which is a hallmark of HIV infection.I started hysterically crying, he told Uncloseted Media. HIV meant death. Thats what I thought.Photo courtesy of Jack.In 1981, when Jack was 1 year old, the first reports of a mysterious and deadly immune deficiency syndrome, which would later be named AIDS, appeared in the U.S. Growing up, Jack saw countless terrifying images of men on their deathbeds with Kaposi sarcoma, the purple lesions the media once called gay cancer. Public misinformation and fearmongering spread ideas that AIDS was a disease that only gay men and drug users get. And politicians often equated it with homosexuality and moral failure, calling it a gay plague. It wasnt until September 1985, four years after the crisis began and thousands had died, that President Ronald Reagan first publicly mentioned AIDS.Decades later, the emotional residue of that era and the shame associated with the virus lingers.Hours after learning of his diagnosis, Jack faced his first encounter with rejection. He already had a date planned that night, and his doctor and friends encouraged him to go.They had a great time until the date asked him: Are you negative or positive?He told the truth.It was just understood there wouldnt be a second date, says Jack. I remember thinking, This is how dating is going to be now. I felt so anxious telling guys. It followed me everywhere. I dont think that anxiety ever truly goes away.The Emotional Impact of HIV StigmaFor those who are HIV-negative, experts say that stigmas whole design is to other.The us versus them creates that false sense of safety when it comes to HIV, says Smith. If I can believe that someone did something to deserve their diagnosis, and Im not that [kind of person], then Im safe.This othering is painful and can lead to shame, fear and isolation, and it is linked to a higher risk of depression and anxiety.If Im undesirable, and thats what those messages are communicating, that threatens your sense of safety, your sense of belonging and the fundamental desire we all have to be loved, Smith says. And that starts to reinforce the thinking that I am not worthy. This virus that I have means that Im not lovable. I am not safe showing up among other men.Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.I pretend it doesnt hurt, but some things do sting a little bit, Nester says. You start thinking, Am I really that disgusting? Am I really that singled out?When Public Stigma Turns InwardInternalized stigma is what occurs when applying the stereotypes about who gets HIV, the prejudice, the negative feelings, onto yourself, says Smith.In 2024, 38% of people living with HIV reported internalized stigma. And studies show that it can predict hopelessness and lower quality of life, even when people are engaged in care or virally suppressed.Internalized stigma can also affect how people practice safe sex and communicate about the virus. A 2019 survey of men who have sex with men found that individuals who perceived greater community-level stigma were less likely to be aware ofand usesafer-sex functions available on dating apps, such as HIV-status disclosure fields, as well as sexual health information and resources.Subscribe now[HIV phobia] is probably the most intense, subvert bigotry I think you could experience, Joseph Monroe Jr., a 48-year-old living in the Bronx, told Uncloseted Media.On dating apps, men have messaged him things like, You look like youve got that thing and Go ahead and infect someone else.Monroe Jr. has also dealt with misinformed people who rudely opine about how he contracted the virus: Who fucked you? Thats how you got it, right? people will say to him.You end up internalizing all these stereotypes about who gets HIVthat you were promiscuous, that you didnt care about yourself, that you did something wrong, says Smith. You carry that in, and then you have to relearn: No, I didnt. This is just a health condition.ShareWhat HIV Acceptance Looks Like and Raising AwarenessFor those living with HIV, acceptance feels far away.Youre living under this threat of HIV and the threat that others find you threatening. It inhabits you socially and sexually, Koester says. People are hunkering down. Not putting themselves out there and having a mediocre quality of life. To have a sense of empowerment, you have to be legitimate and seen in the world and its hard to do that with the stigma that exists.Researchers say the path forward lies as much in conversation as in medicine.Koester says she talks about HIV and PrEP anywhere she can, including in salons, cafes and restaurants. Whenever I get into a cab with someone, Im going to bring up HIV so the driver gets accustomed to hearing about it. We have a long way to go in terms of exposure and awareness and every little bit helps.Part of this lies in increasing awareness through targeted marketing campaigns. PrEP is still profoundly misunderstood outside major urban centers, with uneven uptake among minority groups and usage gaps in the bible belt. And a 2022 U.S. survey found that 54.5% of people living with HIV didnt know what U=U meant, and less than half of Americans agree that people living with HIV who are on proper medications cannot transmit the virus.While eradicating stigma is slow, there is hope for acceptance.Years after Jacks diagnosis, in 2021, he told a man he was on a third date with that he was HIV-positive but undetectable. His dates reply was almost casual:Ohis that it? I thought you were going to say you had a boyfriend or something. Im on PrEP. Youre fine.Photo courtesy of Jack.It felt so good to hear him say that and accept me, says Jack. I was like, This is my person. Youre my person. One year later, they got married.Photo by Val Chaparro for Uncloseted Media.Back in Florida, 19-year-old Cody Nester isnt feeling this acceptance. He still scrolls past profiles that read Only negative guys and tries to ignore the hateful messages.It still hurts, but I know its coming from fear, he says. I wasnt too informed about HIV before I got it. When I got it, I really jumped into the rabbit hole and began to learn. I really do think [HIV and stigma] is because people are not knowledgeable. When people dont know details, they tend to get scared.Additional Reporting by Nandika Chatterjee.If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    What we eat is making us obese and sick but science shows solutions are within reach
    Nature, Published online: 09 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03977-7An ambitious book challenges long-held assumptions on diet and nutrition and exposes gaps in public-health guidance.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Zelenskyy refuses to cede land to Russia as he rallies European support
    Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Pope Leo XIV wave to journalists during their meeting in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)2025-12-09T09:14:12Z ROME (AP) Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has reaffimed his firm refusal to cede any territory, resisting U.S. pressure for a painful compromise with Russia as he continued to rally European support for Ukraine.Undoubtedly, Russia insists for us to give up territories. We, clearly, dont want to give up anything. Thats what we are fighting for, Zelenskyy said in a WhatsApp chat late Monday in which he answered reporters questions.Do we consider ceding any territories? According to the law we dont have such right. According to Ukraines law, our constitution, international law, and to be frank, we dont have a moral right either.In an interview with Politico released Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump again pressed Zelenskyy to accept the U.S. proposal that Ukraine cede territory to Putin, arguing that Russia retains the upper hand and that Zelenskyys government must play ball. Zelenskyy met Tuesday with Pope Leo XIV at Castel Gandolfo, a papal residence outside Rome, and is to have talks with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni later in the day. The Vatican said the pope reiterated the need for the continuation of dialogue and expressed his urgent desire that the current diplomatic initiatives bring about a just and lasting peace. The Holy See has tried to remain neutral in the war while offering solidarity and assistance to what it calls the martyred people of Ukraine. Leo, who has met three times with Zelenskyy and has spoken by telephone at least once with Russian President Vladimir Putin, has called for a ceasefire and urged Moscow in particular to make gestures to promote peace.On Monday, Zelenskyy held talks in London with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz to strengthen Ukraines hand amid mounting impatience from Trump. Facing pressure from TrumpU.S. and Ukrainian negotiators completed three days of talks on Saturday aimed at trying to narrow differences on the U.S. administrations peace proposal.A major sticking point in the plan is the suggestion that Kyiv must cede control of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine to Russia, which illegally occupies most but not all of the territory. Ukraine and its European allies have firmly resisted the idea of handing over land.You know, a lot of people are dying, Trump told Politico, claiming that other unnamed Ukrainian officials agree with the U.S. administration. His people loved the proposal. They really liked it. His lieutenants, his top people, they liked it, but they said he hasnt read it yet.Russia, Trump reasoned, remains too powerful for Ukraine to continue fighting.I give the people of Ukraine and the military of Ukraine tremendous credit for the, you know, bravery and for the fighting and all of that, he said. But you know, at some point, size will win, generally.Trump also amplified his calls for Ukraine to hold national elections even though the martial law doesnt allow it. and Zelenskyy, elected in 2019, had his five-year term extended because of the war. Theyre using war not to hold an election, but, uh, I would think the Ukrainian people would ... should have that choice, Trump said. And maybe Zelenskyy would win. I dont know who would win. But they havent had an election in a long time. You know, they talk about a democracy, but it gets to a point where its not a democracy anymore.Trump has had a hot-and-cold relationship with Zelenskyy since winning a second term, insisting the war was a waste of U.S. taxpayers money. Trump has also repeatedly urged the Ukrainians to cede land to Russia to end the nearly four-year conflict.Zelenskyy said Monday that Trump certainly wants to end the war. ... Surely, he has his own vision. We live here, from within we see details and nuances, we perceive everything much deeper, because this is our motherland.He said the current U.S. peace plan differs from earlier versions in that it now has 20 points, down from 28, after he said some obvious anti-Ukrainian points were removed. Europeans back UkraineStarmer, Macron and Merz strongly backed Kyiv, with the U.K. leader saying Monday that the push for peace was at a critical stage, and stressed the need for a just and lasting ceasefire.Merz, meanwhile, said he was skeptical about some details in documents released by the U.S. We have to talk about it. Thats why we are here, he said. The coming days could be a decisive time for all of us.European leaders are working to ensure that any ceasefire is backed by solid security guarantees both from Europe and the U.S. to deter Russia from attacking again. Trump has not given explicit guarantees in public.Zelenskyy and his European allies have repeatedly accused Putin of slow-walking the talks to press ahead with the invasion as his forces are making slow buy steady gains while waves of missiles and drones are pummeling Ukrainian infrastructure. Both sides exchange aerial strikesUkraines Air Force said Russia fired 110 drones of various types across the country last night. They said air defenses neutralized 84 drones, 24 more have struck their targets.Several regions of Ukraine faced emergency blackouts Tuesday due to Russias prior attacks on energy infrastructure, according to Ukraines national energy operator, Ukrenergo.Ukraine, in its turn, continued its drone attacks on Russia.Russian air defenses destroyed 121 Ukrainian drones overnight above various Russian regions and occupied Crimea, Russias Ministry of Defense said Tuesday. In Chuvashia, a region about 900 kilometers (about 560 miles) northeast of the border with Ukraine, the attack damaged residential buildings and injured nine people, local governor Oleg Nikolayev said.Ukraines Security Service carried out a drone attack on an LPG terminal at the port of Temryuk in Russias Krasnodar region on Dec. 5, according to an official with knowledge of the operation who spoke to The Associated Press.The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly, said the strike sparked a large fire at the facility. More than 20 LPG storage tanks were set ablaze and burned for more than three days, he said. The attack also damaged railway tank cars, an intermediate refueling tank, and a loading and unloading rack.___Novikov reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report. PAOLO SANTALUCIA Santalucia covers events throughout Southern Europe, Italy, the Mediterranean sea and the Vatican for The Associated Press based in Rome. instagram mailto ILLIA NOVIKOV Novikov is an Associated Press reporter covering news in Ukraine since 2022. He is based in Kyiv. instagram mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Supreme Court weighs Republican appeal to end limits on party spending in federal elections
    The Supreme Court is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)2025-12-09T05:07:57Z WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court is considering a Republican-led drive, backed by President Donald Trumps administration, to overturn a quarter-century-old decision and erase limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with candidates for Congress and president.A day after the justices indicated they would overturn a 90-year-old decision limiting the presidents power to fire independent agency heads, the court is revisiting a 2001 decision that upheld a provision of federal election law that is more than 50 years old.Democrats are calling on the court to uphold the law.The limits stem from a desire to prevent large donors from skirting caps on individual contributions to a candidate by directing unlimited sums to the party, with the understanding that the money will be spent on behalf of the candidate.The Federal Election Commission and the GOP argue that the court should cast a skeptical eye on the limits, in line with recent high court decisions. Led by Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative majority has upended a variety of congressionally enacted limits on raising and spending money to influence elections. The courts 2010 Citizens United decision opened the door to unlimited independent spending in federal elections. After the Trump administration joined with Republicans to ask the court to strike down the campaign finance law, the justices appointed a lawyer to defend it. Roman Martinez, an experienced Supreme Court advocate, is offering the justices a way out of the case without deciding anything. Instead, they should hold the case is moot now that the FEC agrees with Republicans that the law is unconstitutional and there is no credible risk the agency will try to enforce it, Martinez wrote. The Republican committees for House and Senate candidates filed the lawsuit in Ohio in 2022, joined by two Ohio Republicans in Congress, then-Sen. JD Vance, now vice president, and then-Rep. Steve Chabot.In 2025, the coordinated party spending for Senate races ranges from $127,200 in several states with small populations to nearly $4 million in California. For House races, the limits are $127,200 in states with only one representative and $63,600 everywhere else. MARK SHERMAN Sherman has covered the Supreme Court for The Associated Press since 2006. His journalism career spans five decades. He is based in Washington, D.C., and previously lived in New York, Paris and Atlanta. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Indiana Senate committee advance redistricting legislation backed by Trump toward final floor vote
    Senators meet in the senate chamber at the Statehouse, Feb. 1, 2024, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, file)2025-12-08T05:01:06Z State senators in Indiana advanced a proposal to redraw the states congressional boundaries Monday, although it is not clear if it has the support to become law in a final vote expected later this week even after months of pressure from President Donald Trump. The legislation was designed to favor GOP candidates in the next years midterms. Republicans control the state Senate, but many have been hesitant or openly opposed to the idea of mid-decade redistricting. About a dozen have been threatened over their stance or refusal to immediately declare support over the past several weeks. Still, the Senates elections committee voted 6-3 to advance the measure, with one Republican and two Democrats lawmakers opposing it. The final vote of the whole chamber is expected Thursday and could test Trumps typically iron grip on the Republican Party. During committee debate Monday night, state Sen. Greg Walker, an Indiana Republican who is against redistricting and voted against it in committee, spoke about threats made against him in recent weeks. I refuse to be intimidated, Walker proclaimed in an impassioned speech during the committee meeting. I fear for all states if we allow intimidation and threats to become the norm. The map, introduced just last Monday and passed by the Republican supermajority in the state House on Friday, would split the city of Indianapolis into four districts distributed across other Republican-leaning areas. It also groups the cities of East Chicago and Gary with a broad rural region. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on The contours would eliminate the districts of Indianas two Democratic congressional representatives: longtime Rep. Andr Carson of Indianapolis, the states only Black member of Congress, and Rep. Frank Mrvan, who represents northwest Indiana near Chicago.Republicans currently hold seven of the states nine districts. Why redistricting? Democrats are hoping to flip control of the U.S. House in the 2026 elections and they like their odds, since midterms tend to favor the party out of power.Redistricting usually happens once a decade after the census, but Trump has pushed Republican-led states to create more GOP-leaning districts. Texas, Missouri, Ohio and North Carolina have followed suit, while Democrats in California and Virginia have moved to draw their own favorable maps.Not many states, outside of those with smaller or single-member congressional delegations, are represented solely by one party. Republicans in favor of making it easier for Republicans to capture all nine of Indianas seats through gerrymandering often point to Massachusetts, where Democrats hold all nine seats, or Connecticut, where they hold all five. Republicans hold all five Oklahoma seats and eight of Tennessees nine seats, while Democrats hold seven of Marylands eight seats.But the idea of redrawing a congressional map last approved just four years ago has made many Republicans in Indiana uneasy. The Senates leader, a Republican, previously said there were not enough votes to support redistricting. A few of the Republican senators who voted to move the legislation forward Monday said it deserved to be debated by the full Senate, but indicated they may vote against its final passage. I reserve my right to change my vote on the floor, said state Sen. Linda Rogers, a Republican on the committee.The Senate elections committee heard testimony on the legislation from about 100 people Monday for more than four hours, the vast majority who spoke against the bill. Kandy Baker told lawmakers she worries about her 5-year-old granddaughters future since the new map, she fears, would dilute the political power of nonwhite voters. I am afraid she will not have representation, Baker said during her testimony against the bill, emotion choking her voice. I dont think whats happening is a short-term thing.Before he voted in favor of moving the legislation forward, GOP State Sen. Mike Gaskill, chair of the elections committee, called political gerrymandering an uncomfortable practice. But he said the Republican Party has act to stop Democratic policy in Congress and act against gerrymandering in Democratic states. This is a very small part that we can play and rebalance the scales on a national basis, he said. After Senate leader Rodric Bray said the chamber would reject the governors call for a special session on redistricting last month, Trump attacked Bray and other senators on social media and vowed to endorse primary challengers against any lawmaker who opposes redrawing the map.In the following weeks, about a dozen state lawmakers were targeted by threats and swatting incidents, in which a hoax call attempts to prompt a police response to a private home.Redistricting proponents need at least 25 votes in the Senate, where Democrats are vastly outnumbered and hold just 10 seats, to give final passage to the map. That would trigger a tiebreaking vote from Republican Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, who supports redistricting.If the Senate rejects the new districts, it would be extremely difficult for proponents to revive the issue. Indianas filing deadline for congressional candidates is in early February, and primary elections are held in early May. National redistricting battle A federal judge in Missouri on Monday dismissed a lawsuit backed by Republican state officials seeking to block a referendum on a new congressional map. The decision clears the way for opponents to submit petition signatures Tuesday that could put the map on hold until a statewide vote can be held next year. In Utah, lawmakers on Tuesday will try to reassert authority over congressional redistricting by convening a special legislative session.A judge ruled in November that a map advanced by state lawmakers earlier this year unduly favors Republicans and disfavors Democrats. The judge imposed an alternative map that would keep Democratic-leaning Salt Lake County almost entirely within one district rather than split between the four Republican-leaning districts.The legislative sessions agenda includes pushing back next years filing deadlines from January to March, buying time until after a potential ruling on redistricting by the state Supreme Court.I support the states appeal and have confidence the Utah Supreme Court will consider it in a timely way, Republican Gov. Spencer Cox said Sunday, so we have clarity for the 2026 election. ___Volmert reported from Lansing, Michigan. Mead Gruver in Fort Collins, Colorado, and David A. Lieb in Jefferson City, Missouri, contributed to this report. ISABELLA VOLMERT Volmert covers Michigan government and politics for The Associated Press, with a focus on women in state government. She is based in Lansing. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Trump says hes fixing affordability problems. Hell test out that message at a rally
    President Donald Trump arrives for the lighting of the National Christmas Tree on the Ellipse, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, near the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)2025-12-09T05:01:36Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump will road-test his claims that hes tackling Americans affordability woes at a Tuesday rally in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania shifting an argument made in Oval Office appearances and social media posts to a campaign-style event.The trip comes as polling consistently shows that public trust in Trumps economic leadership has faltered. Following dismal results for Republicans in last months off-cycle elections, the White House has sought to convince voters that the economy will emerge stronger next year and that any anxieties over inflation have nothing to do with Trump.The president has consistently blamed his predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden, for inflation even as his own aggressive implementation of policies has pushed up prices that had been settling down after spiking in 2022 to a four-decade high. Inflation began to accelerate after Trump announced his sweeping Liberation Day tariffs in April. Companies warned that the import taxes could be passed along to consumers in the form of higher prices and reduced hiring, yet Trump continues to insist that inflation has faded. Were bringing prices way down, Trump said at the White House on Monday. You can call it affordability or anything you want but the Democrats caused the affordability problem and were the ones that are fixing it. The presidents reception in the county hosting his Tuesday rally could give a signal of just how much voters trust his claims. Monroe County flipped to Trump in the 2024 election after having backed Biden in 2020, helping the Republican to win the swing state of Pennsylvania and return to the White House after a four-year hiatus. As home to the Pocono Mountains, the county has largely relied on tourism for skiing, hiking, hunting and other activities as a source of jobs. Its proximity to New York City under two hours by car has also attracted people seeking more affordable housing. Its also an area that could help decide control of the House in next years midterm elections.Trump is holding his rally in a congressional district held by freshman Republican Rep. Rob Bresnahan, who is a top target of Democrats and won his 2024 race by about 1.5 percentage points, among the nations closest. Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti, a Democrat, is running for the nomination to challenge him.White House chief of staff Susie Wiles said on the online conservative talk show The Mom View that Trump would be on the campaign trail next year to engage supporters who otherwise might sit out a congressional race.Wiles, who helped manage Trumps 2024 campaign, said most administrations try to localize midterm elections and keep the president out of the race, but she intends to do the opposite of that.Were actually going to turn that on its head, Wiles said, and put him on the ballot because so many of those low-propensity voters are Trump voters. Wiles added, So I havent quite broken it to him yet, but hes going to campaign like its 2024 again. Trump has said hes giving consumers relief by relaxing fuel efficiency standards for autos and signing agreements to reduce list prices on prescription drugs.Trump has also advocated for cuts to the Federal Reserves benchmark interest rate which influences the supply of money in the U.S. economy. He argues that would reduce the cost of mortgages and auto loans, although critics warn that cuts of the scale sought by Trump could instead worsen inflation.The U.S. economy has shown signs of resilience with the stock market up this year and overall growth looking solid for the third quarter. But many Americans see the prices of housing, groceries, education, electricity and other basic needs as swallowing up their incomes, a dynamic that the Trump administration has said it expects to fade next year with more investments in artificial intelligence and manufacturing.Since the November elections where Democrats won key races with a focus on kitchen-table issues, Trump has often dismissed the concerns about prices as a hoax and con job to suggest that he bears no responsibility for inflation, even though he campaigned on his ability to quickly bring down prices. Just 33% of U.S. adults approve of Trumps handling of the economy, according to a November survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.___Levy reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. JOSH BOAK Boak covers the White House and economic policy for The Associated Press. He joined the AP in 2013. twitter mailto MARC LEVY Levy covers politics and state government in Pennsylvania for The Associated Press. He is based in Harrisburg. twitter
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  • APNEWS.COM
    At least 22 people killed in office building fire in Indonesias capital
    A man cries at the site of a fire in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)2025-12-09T09:07:09Z JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) A fire ripped through an office building in Indonesias capital, Jakarta, on Tuesday, killing at least 22 people, including a pregnant woman, police said.Flames engulfed the seven-story building, sending thick black smoke billowing into the sky and causing panic among nearby residents and workers in a neighborhood in Central Jakarta.The fire, which broke out around midday, is believed to have started on the first floor of the building in the Kemayoran neighborhood before spreading to other floors, Central Jakarta police chief Susatyo Purnomo Condro said.Hundreds of personnel and 29 fire trucks were deployed to try to contain the blaze. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.Many workers in the building, which was used as a sales and storage office for a drone company, were out for lunch when a battery started sparking in a storage and testing area, said Condro, citing several witnesses. The fire was extinguished after three hours of intense effort. At least 22 bodies seven men and 15 women, including a pregnant woman were recovered from the building and taken to the police hospital in East Jakarta for identification. It is suspected that a short circuit or thermal failure in the drone battery triggered an explosion and fire, a survivor named Dimitri, who like many Indonesians uses a single name, told local television. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Some colleagues on the upper floors tried to escape by moving to the rooftop while calling for help, he added. Television reports showed the tense evacuation of more than a dozen trapped workers, including many women, from the sixth floor using an emergency ladder extended by firefighters. Each person had to be lowered one-by-one from the building, and several struggled to breathe because of the thick smoke while waiting for their turn.Authorities said most of the victims died from smoke inhalation. Firefighters managed to rescue at least 19 trapped workers, some of whom suffered minor injuries, but were in a weak and traumatized condition. A police officer and a firefighter also experienced breathing difficulties. We will comb through the entire building again, Condro said when asked about the possible rise in the death toll. Firefighters are cooling down the scene because the smoke is still thick and it is not yet possible for us to enter the structure.Families anxiously awaited news at hospitals or near the building rented by PT Terra Drone Indonesia, a company that provides unmanned aerial vehicle technology for various industrial sectors such as construction, mining, oil and gas, energy, plantations and urban planning.
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