Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Trump news on Youtube Jan 8 2019

As Supreme Court Shifts Under Trump, Cuomo Vows to Expand Abortion Rights The New York Times

With Hillary Clinton to his right, female elected officials seated before him and cheering women filling the audience, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo on Monday promised to protect womens reproductive rights by expanding the states abortion laws within the first 30 days of the new legislative session.

Mr. Cuomos vow was not exactly new. But the pageantry of the occasion seemed to reflect the circumstances that had prompted it: a Legislature newly controlled by Democrats raring to broaden reproductive rights, and a federal government increasingly looking to rein them in, all against the backdrop of a state with abortion laws that are not as liberal as many perceive them to be.

The Republican Senate said, You dont need a state law codifying Roe v. Wade. No administration would ever roll back Roe v. Wade, Mr. Cuomo said at the event at Barnard College, describing why previous efforts had languished for so long. So help me God, this was the conversation.

That Republican led State Senate is no more, ousted in November in favor of an overwhelming Democratic majority and the . The federal administration, meanwhile, is indeed , the 1973 decision that established a constitutional right to abortion: President Trump has appointed two conservative judges to the Supreme Court, and womens rights activists are warning that the decision is in peril.

Eighteen states already have laws that could restrict abortion if the landmark case were overturned. In Texas, abortion providers have sued the state for what they call unduly burdensome restrictions; there is of Mississippi.

Advancing the rights of women and girls is the great unfinished business of the 21st century, said Mrs. Clinton, a former secretary of state and presidential candidate.

Other liberal states have recently moved to cement reproductive rights at a state level: Massachusettss Legislature last year decriminalized abortion; and Oregon in 2017 expanded cost free insurance coverage for abortions, regardless of the womans citizenship status.

All of this has added fresh urgency to Mr. Cuomos and his fellow Democrats longstanding promises to reinforce New Yorks abortion laws, which abortion rights advocates consider antiquated and weak.

The states abortion laws have not been updated since 1970, three years before Roe v. Wade. They do not include some provisions that Roe v. Wade guaranteed, including permission for a late term abortion to preserve the health of the mother. Other states allow abortions late in the pregnancy when the fetus is not viable, an exception that New York does not make.

Although New York has not attracted the same headlines as conservative states for curbing abortion rights, state legislators have introduced unsuccessful bills aimed at restricting Roe v. Wade or cutting insurance funding for low income women, according to Andrea Miller, the president of the National Institute for Reproductive Health.

About 10 percent of New Yorks women lived in a county without an abortion provider in 2014, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

New York was once a that they could not obtain elsewhere; now some women find themselves forced to leave New York to seek treatment.

New York certainly has a far more strong public persona of being supportive on this, Ms. Miller said, but it is not true that everyone who needs abortion care is able to get it here.

That is almost certain to change this year. A bill known as the Reproductive Health Act, which has the strong support of the Democratic majorities in the State Senate and Assembly, would create exceptions for the mothers health or the fetuss viability. It would also move New Yorks abortion regulations from the penal code to the health code, recognizing abortion as a public health issue rather than a crime from which the state had carved out exclusions, Ms. Miller said.

The act has been passed by the Assembly for years, but did not come to a vote in the Senate when it was controlled by Republicans.

A companion bill would require insurers to provide free contraceptive coverage.

Mr. Cuomo, who vowed not to sign the state budget in April unless the Reproductive Health Act and the contraception coverage acts had been passed, also called on the Legislature to go one step further and enshrine reproductive rights in the State Constitution. That would take longer and be more complicated: A constitutional amendment must be passed in two different legislative sessions and also be approved by voters in a ballot measure.

The vast majority of other states that have recognized a constitutional right to abortion have done so because of litigation, rather than an affirmative desire to protect the right, Ms. Miller said.

Mondays event was not the first time that Mr. Cuomo had called for a constitutional amendment on reproductive rights, but, like the Reproductive Health Act, it was the first time such a call was actually politically viable. State Senator Liz Krueger, who has unsuccessfully sponsored the R.H.A. in the Senate in the past, said Mr. Cuomo had announced his support for an amendment before but that his office had never followed up with bill language.

A group opposed to abortion, Feminists Choosing Life of New York, issued a statement on Monday decrying the R.H.A. as an overreach and criticizing what it said were too broad exceptions for third trimester abortions.

Mrs. Clinton, who spoke briefly before Mr. Cuomo, made clear that the new political circumstances — both on the state and federal levels — would demand much more than just the promised expansion of reproductive rights.

The struggle for womens equality is not simply something to be read about in the pages of your history books, she said. It continues to be the fight of our lifetime.

For more infomation >> As Supreme Court Shifts Under Trump, Cuomo Vows to Expand Abortion Rights The New York Times - Duration: 4:08.

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Late-Night Hosts Target Trump's Government Shutdown | THR News - Duration: 4:15.

"'Some things never get better and never change.' Look at me for instance,

I'm horrible and I'm only getting worse."

President Donald Trump's government shutdown is now 18 days in and the late night

hosts are doing their best to see the funny side of the situation. On Monday night's

'Late Night with Seth Meyers,' the host said in his Closer Look segment,

"Our political system feels like it's at a breaking point. It was always fragile, but then

Donald Trump came along and wrecked it. He's like the guy at a party watching a game

of Jenga going 'Take that one, no THAT one.'

"And then finally someone says, 'You know what? If you think it's so easy, you try it.'

And then he just lights the Jenga tower on fire.

"There is no better test of a political leader than this," the NBC host continued

"Can you keep the government running? And Trump is now failing this test for the third

time in his presidency and realizing you don't get rehired after that.

He's like a stoner at a pizza place."

Meyers went on to explore the real-world consequences that Trump's border wall

obsession has created, including the hundreds of thousands of federal workers going

without pay, food stamps being cut, rental assistance lost and tax refunds delayed.

"Look, sometimes you take a job that ends so badly that you have to change your name,"

Meyers said.

"For example, you take a job as Donald J. Trump and you leave it as Prisoner 567-891."

Over on CBS's 'Late Show,' Stephen Colbert focused on Trump's obsession with

walls and wheels being tried and tested inventions that never get old and that will never

go away.

"It's possible that he's bringing up walls and wheels because he wants to combine

the two. That would be exciting." Colbert began.

"A short mobile wall that can slide back and forth to repel immigrants where it's needed."

And if that concept sounds vaguely familiar...

"I'm being told we have some footage of a prototype,

here's the refugee, there's the wall and oh! Rejected him!"

On ABC's 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!,' the host promised to employ a different government

worker affected by the shutdown on his show each night until the issue is resolved.

"Nearly 800,000 federal employees are working without pay, and that is Donald

Trump doing what Donald Trump does best: not paying the people who work for him."

Over on Comedy Central's 'The Daily Show,' host Trevor Noah also discussed

the government shutdown, saying it could go on for years. The host acknowledged that

the longer the shutdown goes on for, the worse it is for the country and compared the

situation to leaving your pet cat alone for a weekend and for an indefinite amount of time.

"They escape and then they leave. At 17 days into this shutdown, let's just say

that America's cats are starting to stink."

Noah also found a way to circle back to comments Trump made in 2018 about Haiti

and Africa being "shithole countries."

"The shutdown has gotten so bad that at national parks, Americans are pooping

on the ground. Who's the shithole country now?"

CBS's 'Late Late Show' also kicked off its first episode of 2019 by addressing the

shutdown with host James Corden joking:

"We've just spent the last two weeks not working, so...

pretty much like the federal government."

The host also pounced on Trump's comment that he "can relate" to the federal

government employees that are financially struggling as a result of the shutdown.

"No one's more relatable than Donald Trump, right?

He's just a regular, working class family man."

Digging deeper into Trump's claim that he can relate to the thousands of people now

unable to pay their bills, Corden jokingly defended the commander-in-chief saying

"To be fair though, maybe he can relate."

"Trump's filed for bankruptcy six times, right?

He's actually built his entire career on not being able to pay bills."

And over on 'The Tonight Show,' host Jimmy Fallon wished his audience a happy

2019 before bringing up the government shutdown also.

"Right now it's tough to say what will last longer:

The government shutdown or your neighbor's Christmas decorations. I don't know."

He then capitalised on another topic that is on everyone's lips these days -

Netflix's psychological thriller 'Bird Box.'

"The Democrats have a plan. They're gonna make Trump wear one of those blindfolds

from Bird Box and just tell him there's a wall. Don't take it off! Don't take it off!'"

To watch full clips of the late night hosts reacting to the ongoing government shutdown,

head to THR.com. For The Hollywood Reporter News, I'm Lyndsey Rodrigues.

For more infomation >> Late-Night Hosts Target Trump's Government Shutdown | THR News - Duration: 4:15.

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Trump Quietly Picks Next SCOTUS Nominee as Ginsburg Prepares to Retire - Duration: 2:49.

For more infomation >> Trump Quietly Picks Next SCOTUS Nominee as Ginsburg Prepares to Retire - Duration: 2:49.

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U.S. scouting Bangkok, Hanoi and Hawaii for 2nd Kim-Trump summit venue: CNN - Duration: 0:35.

Washington is reportedly searching for a potential location to hold the second summit with North

Korea.

On Tuesday, CNN citing a source familiar with the planning process said that Bangkok, Hanoi

and Hawaii have been visited by the White House scouting team.

The source added America has not yet decided on either the list or a top pick,… nor have

there been any meetings between the two sides regarding a summit venue.

Picking a date and place will require working-level discussions, but getting both parties on the

table proved to be a challenge, considering how the meeting scheduled in New York last

year was suddenly canceled.

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