Precedent Supporting Constitutionality of Florida Legislature’s Dissolving Disney Special Government District

As I suggested Friday and yesterday, Supreme Court precedent is unclear on whether Florida’s dissolving the special government district that Florida had created for Disney in the 1960s violates the First Amendment. On one hand, the dissolution appears to be retaliation for Disney’s prominent opposition to the Florida law that restricts “classroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientation or gender identity … in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards”; government retaliation for a person’s or corporation’s speech is often unconstitutional. On the other hand, the dissolution is the withdrawal of specially legislatively granted governmental power, not a generally available benefit or contracting opportunity, and that may well be constitutional.

Lawyer Adam Schulman, however, points out that the precedent in the Eleventh Circuit—the federal appellate court in charge of, among other things, Florida cases—is very much against any First Amendment challenge.

In 2011, the Alabama Legislature barred payroll deductions “of any contribution to an organization that uses any portion of those contributions for political activity.” A union  (the Alabama Education Association) sued, claiming the statute violated the First Amendment “the subjective motivations of the lawmakers in passing the Act were to retaliate against AEA for its political speech on education policy. No, said the court in In re Hubbard (11th Cir. 2015):

[A]s a matter of law, the First Amendment does not support the kind of claim AEA makes here: a challenge to an otherwise constitutional statute based on the subjective motivations of the lawmakers who passed it.

In United States v. O’Brien, the Supreme Court held that, as a “principle of constitutional law,” courts cannot “strike down an otherwise constitutional statute on the basis of an alleged illicit legislative motive.” The plaintiff in O’Brien had challenged a congressional statute on free-speech grounds by citing from the legislative history statements of three Congressmen and then using those statements to argue that “the ‘purpose’ of Congress” in passing the statute “was ‘to suppress freedom of speech.'” The Supreme Court rejected the challenge outright, citing the “fundamental principle of constitutional adjudication” that courts may not “void a statute that is, under well-settled criteria, constitutional on its face, on the basis of what fewer than a handful of Congressmen said about it.”

This Court’s precedent applying O’Brien recognizes that, when a statute is facially constitutional, a plaintiff cannot bring a free-speech challenge by claiming that the lawmakers who passed it acted with a constitutionally impermissible purpose. We have held that many times.

The O’Brien rule applies here because Act 761 does not, on its face, impinge on any constitutional rights…. The only basis for AEA’s retaliation claim is the alleged retaliatory motive that Alabama’s lawmakers had when passing Act 761. That is precisely the challenge that O’Brien, and our decisions following it, foreclose.

This suggests that, under Eleventh Circuit law, a court likewise can’t strike down the legislative dissolution of the special government district that the legislature had earlier created for Disney, even if “the subjective motivations of the lawmakers who passed it” were “retaliation” for Disney’s speech.

In re Hubbard did distinguish an earlier case that had struck down a school board policy forbidding payroll deductions for “GAE [Georgia Association of Educators]-GCAE [Gwinnett County Association of Educators] members,” on the grounds that “the school board did not adopt a generally applicable policy—it specifically singled out ‘GAE-GCAE members.'” I suppose that Disney could argue that the district dissolution specifically singles out the district created to benefit Disney (the Reedy Creek Improvement District). But I don’t think that’s what In re Hubbard was getting at: The earlier statute had on its face treated people differently based on their membership in particular expressive associations (GAE and GCAE), which is First-Amendment-protected activity. The Florida law dissolving the district on its face targets a particular government district, not particular First-Amendment-protected speech or expressive association. The challenge would be based on the speech-based motivation of the legislators, not on the face of the statute; and In re Hubbard appears to foreclose that challenge.

To be sure, I don’t think the O’Brien precedent from the Supreme Court fully disposes of the matter, and Reed v. Town of Gilbert (2015) suggests that First Amendment challenges based on legislative motive are permissible. But In re Hubbard, though it didn’t cite Reed, was decided after Reed; and I’m inclined to say that federal district courts in the Eleventh Circuit, and panels of the Eleventh Circuit, would and should likely follow In re Hubbard and reject any challenge to the Florida law dissolving the district. Reed might come up if the Eleventh Circuit agrees to hear the case en banc, of the Supreme Court agrees to hear the case; but both such results seem pretty unlikely.

In any event, I thought I’d pass this along to our readers. Thanks to Adam Schulman for bringing this up, and to Dilan Esper for alerting me to Schulman’s point.

The post Precedent Supporting Constitutionality of Florida Legislature's Dissolving Disney Special Government District appeared first on Reason.com.

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FCC Commissioner Calls Demand For Feds To Block Elon Musk Twitter Sale “Frivolous”

FCC Commissioner Calls Demand For Feds To Block Elon Musk Twitter Sale “Frivolous”

Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News,

FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr called a demand by the leftist lobby group Open Market Institute for the feds to block Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter “frivolous,” while pouring scorn on the idea it should be done to protect free speech.

The Open Markets Institute, a liberal think tank, claims that the FCC, the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission all have the power to block the takeover under the Communications Act of 1934 and even the Telegraph Act of 1860.

They are upset with the sale because it would apparently give “direct control over one of the world’s most important platforms for public communications and debate” to one person and would represent a monopolistic merger between Twitter and Musk’s Starlink.

Liberal groups are noticeably less concerned about legacy media and social media outlets being owned by left-wing billionaires and pro-regime moguls who agree with their views.

FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr shot down the idea that the Federal Communications Commission should block the sale, calling the demand “particularly frivolous” and noting that the agency has zero authority to block it.

“The FCC has no authority to block Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter, and to suggest otherwise is absurd,” Carr’s statement reads. “I would welcome the full FCC making it clear that we will not entertain these types of frivolous arguments.”

Carr also asserted that leftists were setting up a false strawman, and that the primary concern should be restoring Twitter as a public town square for freedom of expression.

“They say that Twitter must stick with its current approach to moderation or unleash a flood of terrorist speech & illegal content,” he said.

“This is a false choice that ignores the issue: suppression of core political speech.”

During an interview with Fox Business, Carr said he was “hopeful that Elon Musk is going to bend Twitter’s content moderation towards a greater embrace of free speech.”

“There was a pivot point in this country that I think came around 2016 when people started to reach the view, particularly among the hard left, that the free exchange of ideas is incompatible with the outcomes that they want to see at the ballot box,” said Carr.

Experts have also said that the FTC is unlikely to intervene in the sale of Twitter to Elon Musk.

So I guess leftists are back to screaming and hyperventilating about it all on Twitter.

As we highlighted earlier, the Biden White House responded by launching a new DHS ‘disinformation unit’.

The unit will be headed by a woman who promoted the fake news that the Hunter Biden laptop story was ‘Russian disinformation’.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 20:00

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Shanghai Residents “Caged In” With Green Fencing To Prevent Them From Leaving Their Homes

Shanghai Residents “Caged In” With Green Fencing To Prevent Them From Leaving Their Homes

In continuing with China’s completely rational and totally not suspect “Covid Zero” policy, reports are now coming in that Chinese authorities are building “cages” around some homes.

This week, people living in Shanghai woke up to “green fences that had been installed by authorities overnight to restrict people’s movement,” according to a new report by The Mirror.

People with fences around their homes are not permitted to leave their properties, the report says. 

Shanghai has had its 25 million citizens on lockdown for weeks due to a spike in Covid cases in the country. 39 people in the city died of Covid on Sunday, April 24, when the lockdowns began in full force. 

Photographs of the green fencing being used to keep people in are making their rounds on social media. Meanwhile, citizens in Shanghai are already protesting and rebelling against the latest tranche of Covid lockdowns.

The Mirror writes that people are “shocked” by the latest step of putting up fencing. Residents had no clue the measures would be taken until they woke up one day to see it. 

One foreign national told The Mirror that green fencing “popped up” a couple days ago and that the main gain to his complex was “chained up” three weeks ago. 

The foreign national said: “There is a long corridor in our compound, and within the long corridor they put up another green fence three days ago. No one told us the reason it was installed.”

“No one can get out. I feel helpless. You don’t know when the lockdown is going to end. If your area gets fenced off, what if a fire breaks out? I don’t think anyone in their right mind can seal people’s homes.”

One Twitter user, a documentary filmmaker from China, wrote:  “We all have heard stories of residents and even entire buildings refusing to go outside for mass testing. Some are fatigued, others fear that being together brings infection risks.”

““Some think sealed-off entrances like this are to separate these folks. The hope being that other residents of a community would not be punished for the lack of co-operation from a few. This might be wishful thinking,” they continued. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 19:40

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Kansas Senate Overrides Governor’s Veto On Transgender Sports Ban Bill

Kansas Senate Overrides Governor’s Veto On Transgender Sports Ban Bill

Authored by Kataella Roberts via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Kansas Senate on Monday voted to override Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto on The Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, a bill that would ban biological male athletes from competing in women’s school sports across the state.

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly speaks during an event at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kansas, on April 21, 2021. (John Hanna/AP Photo)

Also known as SB 160, the legislation “requires interscholastic, intercollegiate, intramural, or club athletic teams or sports that are sponsored by public educational institutions” to ban male students from joining teams or sports “designated for females.”

It does not ban female athletes or girls from participating in men’s or boys’ sports.

The bill was introduced by Republicans in February 2021 and vetoed by Kelly on April 15.

However, the Senate voted 28–10 on Monday to override the governor’s veto, and it now heads to the House for lawmakers to vote to sustain or override the veto.

Republican sponsors of the bill say it is needed to create fairness and protect the integrity of female sports and opportunities for girls to gain college athletic scholarships.

If the bill is violated, it allows any student deprived of an athletic opportunity or who suffers direct or indirect harm to file a civil suit and seek relief in the form of monetary damages.

“Men should not be competing in women’s sports,” Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said after the veto earlier this month. “Governor Kelly today vetoed (for the second time) a bill to implement that commonsense principle. I would have signed the bill into law.”

Lawsuits

But critics, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, say the legislation is prejudiced and harmful and targets trans children in the state.

“This bill embodied the worst of cynical politics; it was a solution in search of a problem, coldly trading the safety of Kansas children for cheap political points,” ACLU of Kansas Executive Director Micah Kubic said. “It was legalized bullying in the name of identity politics.”

At least 15 states have enacted similar bills on transgender athletes, which has prompted lawsuits in Tennessee and Florida.

The Senate also voted on Monday to override the veto on the “Parents’ Bill of Rights,” also known as SB 58, in a 27–12 vote.

That bill enumerates 12 rights reserved by the state for parents with regards to their child, including the right to “be informed of and inspect any materials, activities, and curriculum provided to the child,” and “object to any learning material or activity” that they believe may harm their child due to the “parent’s beliefs, values, or principles.”

Republican state Sen. Renee Erickson told Washington-based Just the News on Thursday that the bills are part of a “bigger fight” against Democrats.

“We know that they will use any means at their disposal to further their ideology and their agenda. But we’re on to them; parents are on to them,” she said, adding, “If anything positive happened from the pandemic, it’s [that] parents woke up, and they’re seeing what’s going on. And they don’t like it.”

With regards to SB 160, Erickson said the legislation will “ensure that Kansas girls and women have a level playing field when it comes to sports competition.”

The SB 58 legislation focuses on “reaffirming that parents are the most important educator in their child’s lives and affirming the right that they have to know what is being taught in schools,” Erickson said.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 19:20

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Whistleblowers: CDC, FDA “Altered” Covid Guidance And Suppressed Findings Amid Political Pressure

Whistleblowers: CDC, FDA “Altered” Covid Guidance And Suppressed Findings Amid Political Pressure

Instead of ‘following the science,’ the CDC and FDA ‘altered’ Covid guidance and ‘suppressed’ findings while under political pressure, accoridng to a 37-page report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), a watchdog group which spoke with two former CDC directors, four former FDA directors and 17 employees who were involved with the US pandemic response.

As the Daily Mail reports, “They unearthed allegations of ‘political interference’ in scientific reports, raising fears that research was tampered with,” and that “neither agency had a system in place for reporting allegations of political interference. It also said they had failed to train staff how to spot and report this.”

The report defined ‘political’ interference as that which seeks to ‘undermine impartiality… and professional judgement.’ They set up an anonymous whistleblower hotline for 60 days which employees could call to report instances, and which received ‘a few calls.’

A few respondents from CDC and FDA stated they felt that the potential political interference they observed resulted in the alteration or suppression of scientific findings. Some of these respondents believed that this potential political interference may have resulted in the politically motivated alteration of public health guidance or delayed publication of COVID-19-related scientific findings. -GAO

The whistleblowers say they didn’t speak out earlier out of fear of retaliation – and didn’t know how to report issues to higher-ups.

More from the report;

Through semi-structured interviews and a confidential hotline, employees at CDC, FDA, and NIH told GAO they observed incidents that they perceived to be political interference but did not report them for various reasons. These reasons included fearing retaliation, being unsure how to report issues, and believing agency leaders were already aware.

A footnote reveals that emails made public last April between Trump officials and CDC employees suggested that the agency had bent to pressure over a study in its weekly morbidity reports (MMWR).

In one 2020 email, former Trump scientific adviser Paul Alexander appeared to be celebrating getting the top line in one of its reports changed – writing “Small victory, but a victory nonetheless yippee!!!”

Meanwhile, the FDA was also accused of ‘grossly misrepresenting’ the effectiveness of blood plasma transfusions according to another GAO footnote which cited a New York Times article. The report slams the Trump administration for touting a ‘35% efficacy’, when in fact plasma transfusions actually provided little benefit to Covid-19 patients.

On Tuesday, Biden’s top Covid adviser, Dr. Anthony Fauci, declared that the US is now ‘out of the pandemic phase’ of the disease…

however he quickly walked that back the statement – telling AP that the US is in a “different moment” but that the pandemic isn’t over yet.

“After a brutal winter surge, “we’ve now decelerated and transitioned into more of a controlled phase,” he said. “By no means does that mean the pandemic is over.”

Why the ‘clarification’ Anthony?

The GAO report made seven recommendations to the four agencies it investigated for ‘political interference,’ according to the Mail, which included establishing systems for whistleblowers to report potential interference, as well as training staff how to identify and respond to it.

Read the GAO report below:

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 19:00

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Victor Davis Hanson: Tearing Down The Silicon Valley Wall

Victor Davis Hanson: Tearing Down The Silicon Valley Wall

Authored by Victor Davis Hanson,

Elon Musk has finally managed to buy Twitter. And the moment he did, the enraged Left flipped out.

Abruptly leftists began trashing their favorite electronic communications platform as the domain of the nation’s elite, professional classes. Had they just discovered that they had been racists and privileged users all this time?

And what happened to the Left’s former worship of Musk as the man who revolutionized the clean, green automobile industry with his Tesla electric car company?

Or Musk the space revolutionary and hip star trekker, who with his own money helped ensure the United States remains preeminent in space exploration?

Or Musk, the patriot who is providing free next-generation internet service to the underdog Ukrainians fighting Russians for their lives?

No matter. The Left reviles Musk because he has announced that Twitter will be the one social-media platform whose business is not to censor or massage free speech in an otherwise monopolist, intolerant, and hard-Left Silicon Valley.

Who knows, Musk might even allow former president Donald Trump to communicate on Twitter – in the fashion that the terrorist Taliban, Iranian theocrats, and violent Antifa protesters all take for granted in their daily access to Twitter.

But how did the once free-speech, anti-trust, let-it-all-hang out Left become a Victorian busybody, a censorious Soviet, and an old-fashioned robber-baron monopoly?

When it discovered that few Americans wanted left-wing, socialist politics it turned elsewhere. It found power instead through control of American institutions, from academia and Wall Street to traditional and social media.

When Musk merely talked about buying Twitter, the Left shrieked that an outlier multibillionaire owning a media – and especially a social media – venue was unfair. The buyout was supposedly “dangerous” and “a threat to democracy.”

But the more the Left screamed, the less people listened.

After all, left-wing Mark Zuckerberg‘s Facebook has roughly 15 times more market capitalization than Twitter. It has an audience of 2 billion users – over seven times larger than Twitter’s 271 million.

Zuckerberg’s monopoly on global social media and his enormous wealth were stealthily put in service to the Democratic Party in the 2020 election. He reportedly infused nearly $420 million of his media money into warping the vote in key precincts, by augmenting and absorbing the work of state registrars to empower likely left-wing voters.

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, the second wealthiest man in the world, owns the influential Washington Post.

It has moved markedly to the activist Left under his patronage.

Multibillionaire Lisa Jobs, widow of the late Apple founder Steve Jobs, owns The Atlantic.

It has become an increasingly hard-Left political magazine.

So in Orwellian fashion, apparently most media-owning, left-wing billionaires are good? But one social media-owning, non-left-wing billionaire is bad?

How exactly might a Musk-owned Twitter alter an election?

By emulating the former directors of Twitter and the rest of Silicon Valley social media who canceled not just conservatives, but any new communication they felt harmful to the 2020 Biden campaign?

From the outset, it was clear that Hunter Biden’s lost laptop incriminated his dad, Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Biden was referenced by his own quid pro quo, grifting son variously as “the Big Guy” and “Mr. Ten Percent” – a full partner in peddling Beltway influence to rich foreign actors.

Yet in lockstep, social media banned most coverage of the pre-election laptop story.

It instead spread its standby false narrative of “Russian disinformation.” We now know the laptop was always authentic. The crude efforts to suppress mention of it were classic politicized news suppression.

Still, the Left may well have some reason to be terrified of Elon Musk.

Should he liberate Twitter from left-wing scolds and groupthinkers, would other renegade new companies and old standbys follow his lead?

Is Musk’s $46-billion acquisition the internet equivalent of Germans in November 1989 with sledgehammers smashing down the Berlin Wall?

Does Musk sense that the looming November midterm elections may result in one of the rare landslide verdicts in American history?

Does he assume the public prefers a muckraker who demands free speech rather than corporate insider cronies censoring expression they don’t find useful?

Polls show that the American people have had their fill of 14 months of self-inflicted, ideology-driven disasters. And why not, given the nonexistent border, spiking crime, inflation, unaffordable gasoline, and neo-Confederate racial fixations?

Are the recent Netflix implosion, the CNN+ disaster, the Disney debacle, the Virginia statewide and San Francisco school board elections, the polls showing massive defections of Latinos from the Left, and the grass-roots pushback against government-imposed mask wearing, and explicit transgender education in the k-3 grades–also symptoms of a reckoning on the horizon?

The country is ready for a revolution. And Musk believes he can lead it with his Silicon-Valley sledgehammer.

So, as the Left says, “Bring it on.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 18:40

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Russian Missiles Slam Into Kyiv As UN Chief & Bulgarian PM Visit: Reports

Russian Missiles Slam Into Kyiv As UN Chief & Bulgarian PM Visit: Reports

On Thursday Ukraine’s government is alleging that a Russian cruise missile slammed into the capital of Kiev at the very moment the United Nations secretary-general and Bulgaria’s prime minister were visiting. UN chief Antonio Guterres was there meeting with President Zelensky and other top officials less than 24 hours after first meeting with President Putin in Moscow – something which he came under criticism for.

“Russia stroke Kyiv with cruise missiles right when UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Bulgarian PM Kiril Petkov visit our capital. By this heinous act of barbarism Russia demonstrates once again its attitude towards Ukraine, Europe and the world,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba stated in the alleged attack aftermath.

And mayor the capital city Vitali Klitschko informed the public in an Instagram post, “Friends! Tonight the enemy fired at Kyiv. Two hits in the Shevchenko district. All services are in place. Information about the victims is being clarified.”

Kiev has throughout the over two-month long war at various times come under direct missile fire and shelling; however, such attacks on the capital have grown more rare of late as Russia has been focused primarily on combat operations in the east and south.

What was a potential ‘close call’ is likely to spark outrage among NATO allies, given the presence of the Bulgarian prime minister – a NATO member country. Just in the two days prior to the trip, Russia halted natural gas deliveries to Bulgaria, for refusing to settle existing contracts in rubles.

PM Petkov tweeted just after meeting with the Ukrainian president, “Bulgaria stands firmly by Ukraine.” He accompanied Guterres on the trip, which included visiting the areas of Borodyanka, Bucha and Irpin – where Ukraine has alleged major Russian war crimes.

As for the UN chief, he had said while touring battlegrounds:

So, the war is an absurdity in the 21st century. The war is evil. And when one sees these situations our heart, of course, stays with the victims.”

Guterres himself hasn’t as yet mentioned observing any rocket attacks while he was there. Ironically enough, the prior day there appeared to be agreement between the UN Secretary-General and the Russian government on cooperating on securing safe passage for Ukrainian civilians caught in the fighting.

“We urgently need humanitarian corridors that are truly safe and effective,” Guterres had told the Russians. “To that end, I have proposed the establishment of a humanitarian contact group bringing together the Russian Federation, Ukraine and the United Nations to look for opportunities for the opening of safe corridors.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 18:20

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Daily Briefing: The U.S. Consumer Boosts the Stock Market

Daily Briefing: The U.S. Consumer Boosts the Stock Market

U.S. equity indexes were well in the green Thursday afternoon despite the fact that gross domestic product contracted at an annualized rate of 1.4% during the first quarter, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Earnings reports continue to reflect consumer resilience in the face of historic inflation, even as the conflict in Eastern Europe metastasizes and the situation in Japan – with the central bank still trying to control the yield curve but the government pushing for a stronger yen – threatens a fiscal crisis. “The bottom line with the U.S. economy is where the breaking point is with respect to the consumer response to ever-rising prices,” notes Peter Boockvar. “We are moving closer to it, and there are signs here and there that we are hitting it. But, from what I’ve heard from company CEOs, we’re not there yet.” Boockvar, the CIO of Bleakley Advisory Group, joins Ash Bennington for today’s Real Vision Daily Briefing to talk about the economy, inflation, and today’s price action. Want to submit questions? Drop them right here on the Exchange: https://rvtv.io/3OCdmQu

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 14:13

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Federal Judge Explains Why He’s Blocking Biden Admin’s Termination Of Title 42

Federal Judge Explains Why He’s Blocking Biden Admin’s Termination Of Title 42

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

A federal judge is blocking the Biden administration’s attempt to terminate Title 42 because states that sued the administration are poised to succeed in their claims that the move violated federal law, according to a transcript of a closed-door status conference obtained by The Epoch Times.

U.S. District Judge Robert Summerhays, a Trump appointee, announced on April 25 his intent to enter a temporary restraining order that forces the administration to keep enforcing Title 42, an emergency order that enables quick expulsion of illegal immigrants due to concerns that they may have COVID-19.

In a hearing that day, Summerhays said the plaintiff states, which include Missouri and Louisiana, have demonstrated that the federal government likely violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) with its April 1 announcement that the emergency order would be terminated in May, according to the transcript.

“I also find that the record supports a showing of immediate and irreparable harm. The states contend that the termination of the Title 42 suspension orders will result in increased costs and burdens, including increased healthcare costs. The Court concludes that the record supports these allegations and that the fact of those increased costs is sufficient to support injunctive relief, Summerhays said.

“The Court also finds, as far as the balance of harms, that a temporary restraining order restoring the status quo to immediately prior to the April 1st order will result in little injury to the defendants, and that any such injury is outweighed by the injury caused by a result of the implementation of the April 1st order without the states having an opportunity to fully vet their APA claims, and that a temporary restraining order will not disserve the public interest.”

The states had argued in filings that the Biden administration wouldn’t suffer from a block against scaling back the order, since the administration itself delayed the termination until May 23.

The government said in a counter-filing that it was boosting expulsion under Title 8, a federal law, in preparation for Title 42 officially ending, but urged the court not to grant the request for a restraining order.

“The purpose of delaying implementation of the Termination Order is to allow time for DHS to operationalize before May 23,” government lawyers said in a brief.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) “cannot simply flip a switch on May 23.”

While Summerhays said he’d enter the restraining order, he hasn’t yet done so. That’s because he took issue with some of the language proposed by the states, and out of a desire to ensure the order doesn’t interfere with the “legitimate use of law enforcement discretion” afforded to immigration enforcement officials. He offered that he wanted the order to, “in the least disruptive way” address the states’ concerns.

Summerhays directed the parties to confer and try to reach an agreement on certain issues and, if they couldn’t, he said they would hold another status conference to hammer out the differences.

It remains unclear when the actual order will be issued.

While the Department of Justice declined to comment on the judge’s decision, a senior administration official reportedly told news outlets in a call that the administration would obey the order once it was issued.

“The Department of Justice will need to review any rulings before commenting—there’ll be something more formal, is our expectation—and they would discuss any next legal steps or interpretation of the ruling, so we’ll leave that to them,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters in Washington.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 18:00

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Moderna Asks FDA To Authorize Covid Vaccine For Children Under 6

Moderna Asks FDA To Authorize Covid Vaccine For Children Under 6

Moderna on Thursday became the first Covid-19 vaccine manufacturer to ask the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to approve its jab for children under 6, less than six months after the agency delayed approval for adolescents as young as 12-years-old over the risk of dangerous heart inflammation in younger patients.

The development comes after the company announced positive results in late March for a phase 2/3 study for children aged 6 months to under 6 years – which found that the vaccine had “lower efficacy” against the Omicron strain.

“Using the Phase 3 COVE study COVID-19 definition, vaccine efficacy in children 6 months to 2 years was 43.7% and vaccine efficacy was 37.5% in the 2 to under 6 years age group.”

And while the New York Times says that “Parents of the roughly 18 million youngest Americans” have been “waiting for months for pediatric doses,” a CDC study revealed that throughout the entire pandemic up until January 31, 2022, there were just 2,562 children up the age of four years-old who were hospitalized with Covid-19, and just 16 deaths (2 of them from Omicron).

So Moderna wants approval for a jab with efficacy as low a 37.5%, for a demographic which has a 0.000142% hospitalization rate and generally mild (to no) symptoms without vaccination.

Moderna’s clinical trial data showed that the antibody response of the youngest children compared favorably with that of adults ages 18 to 25, meeting the trial’s primary criterion for success. Although the trial was not big enough to measure vaccine effectiveness, Moderna said Thursday the vaccine appeared to be 51 percent effective against symptomatic infection among those younger than 2, and 37 percent effective among those 2 to 5. -NYT

Moderna’s chief medical officer, Dr. Paul Burton, said that the Omicron variant accounted for 80% of cases in the study group, which explains the low efficacy rate.

For now, Moderna’s vaccine has only been cleared for adults – and the company has also requested authorization of its Covid vaccine for those aged 6-11 and 12-17, which the company will submit data for in around two weeks.

The FDA’s head of vaccine regulation, Dr. Peter Marks, hinted at a Tuesday Senate oversight hearing that the agency may consider Moderna’s applications for all children as a whole.

Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech have both been developing doses for the youngest children since last year. Moderna is proposing a two-dose regimen for children from 6 months to 5 years old, using one-fourth the strength of an adult dose. Pfizer and BioNTech are working on a three-dose regimen for those 6 months to 4 years old, at one-tenth the strength of the adult dose. Pfizer has not yet submitted a request for F.D.A. authorization, but is expected to do so soon. -NYT

Last week, White House adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci suggested that the agency wants to review data for Moderna and Pfizer simultaneously in order to directly compare the two.

Regulators aren’t expected to act on Moderna’s application before June, while federal officials will ask the agency’s outside advisory panel of experts to review the data before authorizing any vaccine for the least vulnerable.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/28/2022 – 17:40

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