17th Amendment Weakened Balance of Power Between States, Federal Government – Heritage.org

As we head toward the 2022 elections, it is a safe bet that few Americans can identify the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, even though its one of the most significant amendments. Ratified on April 8, 1913, it completely changed the balance of power in our federal system.

The amendment provided for the direct popular election of U.S. senators. That sounds non-controversial now, but it meant taking the power away from state legislatures that were originally given the authority to choose the senators representing their state in Section 3 of Article I of the Constitution.

If you took civics in high school or you look up the definition of checks and balances, it is always referred to as the system that provides our three branches of the federal governmentthe legislative, judicial and executivewith separate powers that can be used to check the power of the other branches, ensuring that no one branch becomes too powerful. This is a horizontal balance of power that applies within the federal government.

But what civics teachers and others seem to have forgotten in the more than 100 years that the 17th Amendment has been in place is that the original design of the Constitution in Article I gave state governments an essential, second vertical check on the power of the federal governmentthe authority of state legislatures to pick the senators representing their states.

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As the Heritage Guide to the Constitution explains, the Framers intended to protect the interests of states as states and the mode of election impelled senators to preserve the original federal design and to protect the interests not only of their own states, but, concomitantly, of the states as political and legal entities within the federal system.

Alexander Hamilton emphasized this at the New York ratifying convention in 1788 when he said that senators will constantly look up to the state governments with an eye of dependance and, if they wanted to be reelected by state legislators, they, would have a uniform attachment to the interests of their several states. In other words, they would be wary of imposing unfunded mandates on state governments or taking other actions that extended the power of the federal government into areas traditionally within the authority of the states.

As Mark Levin succinctly explained in The Liberty Amendments, the original method of electing U.S. senators that provided state governments with direct input in the national government was not only an essential check on the new federal governments power, but also a means by which the states could influence congressional lawmaking.

Despite all of this, the amendment was ratified in fewer than 11 months and in overwhelming numbersin the 36 states that ratified it, only 191 opposing votes were cast.

The 17th Amendment was the result of the rise of Progressivism, pushed by intellectuals and social reformers who believed that our constitutional system of government was outdated and needed to be reformed. It was designed to enhance the authority of the central government and expand the size and power of a federal bureaucracy that could orchestrate the changes they believed would lead to a new utopia, while diminishing the power of state governments to contest those changes.

When the 17th Amendment was combined with the 16th Amendment, which gave Congress the power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, and which was ratified earlier that same year, the federal government had the ability to drastically increase its spending and power without considering the interests of the states or the effects on the sovereign authority of the states.

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The 17th Amendment critically altered the balance of power between state governments and the federal government, to the detriment of the states. States no longer had a legislative venue, or any venue, to influence directly the course of the federal government, Mr. Levin says.

It is impossible to conceive that the Constitution would have been ratified without this essential feature preserving the balance of power between the states and the federal government. With direct elections, senators have no incentive to protect state governments and state budgets at the expense of the enormous, bloated volume of federal programs and spending that is leading us down the road to financial insolvency.

Could this be changed? Should it be changed back? These are questions that prompt vigorous debate. But the likelihood that American voters would support going back to the original system and losing their ability to directly elect U.S. senators seems very slim. So, while we can recognize the structural damage this amendment has caused, what happened more than a century ago will probably remain unaltered.

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17th Amendment Weakened Balance of Power Between States, Federal Government - Heritage.org

With The Onions support, satirist asks court to revive lawsuit against police who arrested him – SCOTUSblog

petitions of the week ByKalvis Golde on Oct 14, 2022 at 6:10 pm

The Petitions of the Week column highlights a selection of cert petitions recently filed in the Supreme Court. A list of all petitions were watching is available here.

In a case that prompted satirical news outlet The Onion to file its first-ever amicus brief in the Supreme Court, an Ohio man sued police for violating his constitutional rights when they arrested him for creating a Facebook page parodying the local police department. This week, we highlight cert petitions that ask the court to consider, among other things, whether those officers are entitled to qualified immunity.

Anthony Novak, a resident of Parma, Ohio, created a Facebook page with the same name, cover photo, and profile picture as the city police departments page. In the 12 hours Novaks page was live, it went viral thanks to six satirical posts announcing, for example, a new hiring initiative strongly encouraging minorities not to apply and a no means no fair at which residents could remove their names from the sex-offender registry by completing a series of puzzles.

After obtaining a warrant to investigate the owner of the page, police arrested Novak under an Ohio law that makes it a felony to disrupt, interrupt, or impair police operations. Novak was acquitted at trial. He then sued the officers who arrested him for violating his First Amendment right to freedom of speech and his Fourth Amendment right to freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit granted the officers qualified immunity. Before taking down the page, Novak had copied a disclaimer posted on the departments real Facebook page decrying the fake account and deleted user comments that his own page was a parody. Because no court case has clearly established that those actions are protected speech, the 6th Circuit held, the officers could reasonably believe that some of Novaks Facebook activity was not parody protected under the First Amendment.

In Novak v. City of Parma, Ohio, Novak asks the justices to clarify when qualified immunity is available if the justification for probable cause relies on speech. He argues that his arrest was retaliation for his speech, and that the officers conduct was an obvious constitutional violation not entitled to qualified immunity. Novak also points out that the 6th Circuit originally sided with him at an earlier stage in the case: Imagine if The Onion, Judge Amul Thapar wrote, were required to disclaim that parodical headlines are, in reality, false.

Answering that call, The Onion filed an amicus brief in support of Novaks petition from the court of appeals subsequent ruling for the officers. In urging the court to take up the case, the magazine tells the justices that the 6th Circuits ruling threatens to disembowel a form of rhetoric that has existed for millennia, that is particularly potent in the realm of political debate, and that, purely incidentally, forms the basis of The Onions writers paychecks.

Donziger v. United States22-274Issues: (1) Whether Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 42(a)(2) authorizes judicial appointments of inferior executive officers; and (2) if so, whether such appointments violate the appointments clause in Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution.

Pavlock v. Holcomb22-282Issues: (1) Whether a judicial taking under the Fifth and 14th Amendments is a cognizable cause of action; and (2) whether a property owner who is deprived of property under the authority of a state court decision may seek prospective injunctive relief in federal court to halt encroachment on their property by state officials acting under the authority of that decision.

Novak v. City of Parma, Ohio22-293Issues: (1) Whether an officer is entitled to qualified immunity for arresting an individual based solely on speech parodying the government, so long as no case has previously held the particular speech is protected; and (2) whether the court should reconsider the doctrine of qualified immunity.

County of Ontario, New York v. Gunsalus22-294Issue: Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit erred in refusing to extend the holding ofBFP v. Resolution Trust Corp.to a lawfully conducted tax foreclosure, where New York tax foreclosure law provides for ample notice, opportunity to cure and judicial oversight of the process, and where there is no evidence of a clear and manifest intent by Congress to allow11 U.S.C. 548to impinge upon the important state interests in securing real estate titles and collecting real property taxes.

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With The Onions support, satirist asks court to revive lawsuit against police who arrested him - SCOTUSblog

How Amendment 1 on the November ballot could affect your ‘Right to Work’ in Tennessee – WATN – Local 24

The amendment would basically add Tennessees Right to Work law to the state Constitution.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. For the first time in recent history, Tennessee voters have a chance to make four big changes to the states Constitution.

Amendment 1 is all about your right to work. The amendment would basically add Tennessees Right to Work law to the state Constitution.

Our state law was established more than 70 years ago in 1947. Tennessee is one of 27 states and Guam that have given workers a choice when it comes to union membership, according the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Because the Right to Work is already a state law, many Republicans and Democrats disagree on whether or not it should be added to the State Constitution.

If its added to the Constitution, it would make it harder for anyone to unravel our right to work status, said Rep. Tom Leatherwood. Right now, they would just need to change a law. It makes it easier for the state to defend our right to work status if the federal government tried to strike down our law.

It's already in statute, said Rep. G.A. Hardaway. It's unnecessary. It clutters the Constitution and our constitution is not a document to be trifled with.

Some are not a fan of the state law.

Just recently, seven Starbucks employees say they were fired for trying to form a union in Memphis. A federal judge had to step in and ruled in favor of the employees. Because of that, some people question whether the right to work law even really protects workers.

What does this amendment do to us? Any of us out in the workforce? It's not good because you have no protection, said Rep. Joe Towns.

Some believe that state law protects people and companies.

I think it protects people in general, it protects workers, said Rep. Leatherwood. And, yes, it could definitely be viewed as not protecting, but maybe making a balance between employers and unions.

It comes down to this, do you like Tennessees current Right to Work law? If you do, this amendment will protect it. However, if you dont and this amendment passes, it will be much harder to change it in the future.

Either way, thats your decision and your choice on Election Day. Early voting starts October 19. Election Day is November 8.

See the article here:

How Amendment 1 on the November ballot could affect your 'Right to Work' in Tennessee - WATN - Local 24

$100K settlement reached in lawsuit over Baltimore County’s handling of sexual assault case – Baltimore Sun

Baltimore County and the state would each pay $50,000 under a settlement reached with a woman who argued her First Amendment rights were violated when county officials attempted to dissuade her from filing rape charges.

The state Board of Public Works must still approve the states share of the settlement payment. According to an online agenda, the matter will be considered at the boards Oct. 26 meeting. The county is paying $50,000, said Erica Palmisano, spokeswoman for the county executives office.

The settlement was first announced last month, days before the case was set to go to trial in U.S. District Court. But the settlement amount was not made public.

If approved by the board later this month, the settlement would conclude the yearslong legal battle over the handling of rape allegations by the countys top prosecutor Scott Shellenberger and the county police department.

The case stems from an incident in 2017, when the woman was a college student. The Baltimore Sun does not typically identify individuals who say they are survivors of sexual assault.

The woman, then a Towson University student, has said an assault took place when she and another female student were in an apartment with three University of Maryland Baltimore County baseball players.

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Both women told police they had blacked out or passed out and were sexually assaulted by the men. The men have said the acts were consensual.

The Baltimore County States Attorneys Office declined to bring charges against the men, and so the woman opted to attempt to bring charges against them herself, by filing a statement of charges with the court commissioner. Her first try failed, but after her second attempt, a different commissioner charged the men with rape and sex offenses in 2018.

But before officials could deliver the criminal summonses, Shellenberger dispatched police officers to the womans home, according to her legal filing. Once there, they spoke with her grandmother, and stated that she risked facing criminal charges of her own if she pursued the charges against the men. Ultimately, prosecutors dropped the charges against the men.

The womans account was included in a broader class-action lawsuit filed by several women against Baltimore County and UMBC. But in 2020, U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow threw out all of the claims except hers.

Her case, focused on possible First Amendment violations, was allowed to go forward. In a rare move last year, Chasanow denied immunity for Shellenberger, opening the door for a trial or a settlement in the womans case.

The three baseball players received $150,000 each from the university in a defamation case, after they were named in an article about the assault allegations by the campus newspaper, The Retriever. The university is under a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into its Title IX compliance and response to sexual harassment complaints.

Shellenbergers record on sexual misconduct allegations was questioned frequently during his recent reelection bid. Ultimately, Shellenberger won a narrow victory over his first primary challenger since his election in 2006.

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$100K settlement reached in lawsuit over Baltimore County's handling of sexual assault case - Baltimore Sun

Haddonfield board of ed to vote on updated policies at next meeting – The Sun Newspapers

EMILY LIU/The Sun

The Haddonfield School District Board of Education meeting on Oct. 13 was a work session to review the agenda for an action meeting Thursday.

In a response to prior discussions, board member Lynn Hoag said a new form has been released and made available for parents to opt their students out of health, sex-ed, family life and dissections courses. Assistant Superintendent Gino Priolo explained what happens when a parent wants to opt their student out of a course other than what is listed and in accordance with New Jersey law.

Sometimes parents might want to opt out of something that goes beyond the scope of whats required by statute, and the process there is to schedule a meeting with the principal and have an open dialogue about understanding the unique concerns that might be brought and talk factually about what is or isnt part of the curriculum or being presented, Priolo explained.

Once those two views are heard, the principal will follow with what options are available in that case.

The opt-out form is available on the district website under Parents and lists a Parents statement of conflict with conscious form, in addition to the districts position on the right to opt out.

Up for second reading at the next board meeting will be two policies. The first is on bias crimes or bias-related acts that had previously omitted a phrase requiring the district to notify the borough police department and the bias investigation officer for the county prosecutors office when a bias crime or bias-related act has been committed. Though there had been discussion about the ramifications of reporting minors for unintentional acts, the language has been reincluded in the update for the policy.

The resolution on the agenda list(s) reasons that the board might oppose these changes, said Hoag, though none were seen on the draft of the policy available on the district website.

Additionally, the board will vote on an update to Policy 2240 on controversial issues, which was discussed by the equity council in addition to the policy committee.

In response to community feedback, the committee removed the section that read, In the discussion of any issue, a teacher may express a personal opinion, provided the expression is characterized as personal opinion and does not attempt to persuade students to the teachers point of view from the updated policy.

Central to our research surrounds the First Amendment right of teachers, the board wrote in a statement on the matter. We consulted with the school districts solicitor and our policy consultant, Strauss Esmay Associates. Our research concluded that removing the phrase, a teacher may express a personal opinion from the policy would not violate the First Amendment rights of teachers and is supported in case law.

Up for introduction on first reading at Thursdays meeting will be an updated dress code for district and support staff members more specific than what was in place.

(This is) just cleaning up and updating, Hoag noted. We all got a little relaxed during COVID, so this is just to encourage professionalism in attire.

The new regulations deem the following items inappropriate for a staff member to wear: ripped or torn jeans; shorts, sweatpants or workout attire; T-shirts with writing, images and advertising brands; strapless shirts and dresses; beach wear; and hats or head coverings, unless approved for medical or religious reasons.

Board member David Siedell questioned whether teachers wearing shirts that support the l district or other Haddonfield-related attire would be considered advertising or branding, and Priolo suggested a grace period for teachers who might need to make adjustments to their wardrobes.

During the boards committee of the whole meeting, members discussed the purpose and aim of the equity council. While no decisions were made, the board revisited the context behind the councils creation and acknowledged the work it has done to engage the community and lead to more inclusivity and understanding.

Thursdays board meeting will begin at 7 p.m. at the high-school library.

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Haddonfield board of ed to vote on updated policies at next meeting - The Sun Newspapers

West Virginia 2022 elections voter guide: What you need to know – Mountain State Spotlight

The deadline to register to vote is Oct. 18. Early voting runs from Oct. 26 to Nov. 5. Heres what you need to know.

West Virginians will go to the polls to elect two members of the U.S. House of Representatives, state delegates, state senators, and in many places, new county and city officials. Plus, there are four proposed changes to the West Virginia Constitution. If voters approve them, the amendments will let churches incorporate and give more power to the state Legislature to modify property taxes, set education policy, and conduct impeachment trials without state court interference.

To register to vote in West Virginia, you must:

You can search for your voter registration information on the Secretary of States website by entering your name and date of birth.

The deadline to register to vote is Oct. 18, 2022. You can register online, by mail or in person. You will need a valid ID in order to vote; heres a list of acceptable IDs. Note that first-time voters may be asked to provide additional identification with their current name and address.

You can search for your polling place on the Secretary of States website by entering your name and date of birth.

Deadline to register: Oct. 18, 2022

Early voting starts Oct. 26 and goes through Nov. 5. Heres a list of early voting locations and times.

Election Day: Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Yes, but unlike in recent elections, you have to meet certain requirements before youre allowed to vote absentee in West Virginia. Eligibility requires two basic criteria: (1) confinement or not being present in the county during in-person voting, and (2) a permitted reason/excuse.

Read more on the Secretary of States website.

If approved by voters, this amendment would bar all state courts from interfering with impeachment trials conducted by the West Virginia Legislature.

Background: In 2018, a panel of five circuit judges ruled in a case that halted impeachment proceedings in the West Virginia Legislature against several state Supreme Court justices. Lawmakers who support the amendment have said it is necessary and the legislative branch needs this check on the power of the judicial branch. Opponents argue it would remove some of the existing checks and balances built into the system.

If approved by voters, this amendment would allow the state Legislature to adjust property taxes paid on business inventory; business machinery and equipment; and personal vehicles.

Background: Republicans in the Legislature have wanted for years to eliminate these taxes, which provide hundreds of millions of dollars each year for local services like schools, libraries and emergency services. Theres still no plan to replace the money that local governments get from this tax, although state senators passed a non-binding resolution saying they were committed to [replace] revenue in perpetuity that is above and beyond the personal property taxes to be eliminated.

Almost all local governments have urged people to reject this amendment, which would replace a consistent source of annual funding with one that would be controlled by the state Legislature every year. Gov. Jim Justice has also campaigned against the amendment; he wants to reduce personal income taxes rather than property taxes.

If approved by voters, churches would be allowed to incorporate in West Virginia, which is the only state in the nation that does not allow the practice in its constitution.

Background: This proposed amendment comes after a federal judges ruling in neighboring Virginia that prohibiting a church from incorporating violated its First Amendment rights. The language in the West Virginia Constitution comes from the Virginia Constitution.

If approved by voters, state lawmakers would have the final say over policies and rules created by the West Virginia Board of Education.

Background: The state Board of Education operates independently from the Legislature, with the boards nine voting members appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate. The board sets policies about what students are taught in K-12 schools, teacher requirements, discipline policy and many other areas of school administration. Currently the board does not have to submit school policies and rules to lawmakers for approval. In 2017, the West Virginia Supreme Court ruled that legislative action that impedes school board policy would be unconstitutional. But this constitutional amendment would usurp that ruling.

You can read the full text of all four amendments here.

Read more frequently asked questions here.

Other West Virginia elected offices including governor, attorney general, secretary of state wont beup for election until 2024. The U.S. Senate seat held by Joe Manchin will also be up in 2024; the states other U.S. Senate seat, held by Shelley Moore Capito, wont be up until 2026.

Also note that West Virginia lawmakers completely re-drew the states legislative maps in 2021. Because of that, your U.S. congressional district, state delegate district and state senate district may have changed.

The rest is here:

West Virginia 2022 elections voter guide: What you need to know - Mountain State Spotlight

The Week That Was – Lawfare

Quinta Jurecic discussed former President Trumps consistent pattern of attempting to stymie the Mueller investigation, the work of the House select committee to investigate Jan. 6 and the Justice Departments Mar-a-Lago investigation, and the legal implications for the ongoing investigations now that Trump is no longer president.

Hyemin Han shared the Justice Department's opening brief in the Eleventh Circuit for an appeal of U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon's Sept. 5 order appointing a special master to oversee privilege claims of documents seized during the Aug. 8 search of former President Donald Trumps Mar-a-Lago residence. It asked the Eleventh Circuit to vacate Cannons order in its entirety with instructions to dismiss the case.

Han also shared the Justice Departments Oct. 11 response in opposition to former President Trumps Oct. 4 application to the Supreme Court for a partial vacatur of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuits Sept. 21 order allowing the Justice Department to resume use of materials it has been previously enjoined from using in a Sept. 5 order by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon.

William Appleton shared a livestream of the Jan. 6 Select Committees Oct. 13 hearing, announced as the final one. The Lawfare team also hosted a Twitter Spaces on the hearing at 5 p.m. ET.

Hadley Baker shared an episode of Lawfare No Bull which featured audio from the Jan. 6 committees ninth public hearing:

Benjamin Wittes sat down for a conversation with Jurecic, Alan Rozenshtein, and Molly Reynolds on Twitter Spaces to discuss the ninth Jan. 6 select committee hearing, the subpoena of Donald Trump, how this all could impact the upcoming midterm elections, and the performance of the committee given the constraints it faced:

Katherine Pompilio shared former President Donald Trumps letter in response to the House select committees decision to issue him a subpoena seeking information about his involvement in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Han also shared the Biden-Harris administrations first National Security Strategy which details the administrations enduring vision for the U.S. in the coming decade, its views on investment priorities, the administrations global priorities, and a breakdown of the administration's national security strategy by region.

Stewart Baker, Nick Weaver, Matthew Heiman, and Brian Fleming sat down to discuss the White House Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights, the criminal conviction of Ubers CSO Joe Sullivan, new export restrictions on U.S. technology and its implications for U.S.-China trade relations, a Russian hack and leak operation, and more:

Henry Farrell and Bruce Schneier discussed the U.S. Treasurys Office of Foreign Assets Controls sanctions of Tornado Cash, a cryptocurrency and money-laundering platform, and the implications for cryptocurrency regulation if decentralized autonomous organizations like Tornado Cash are afforded First Amendment protections.Jordan Schneider sat down for a conversation with Kevin Wolf, partner at Akin Gump, to discuss the U.S. Commerce Department's new export control regulations, what the regulations mean for the global semiconductor industry, and if the regulations are even enforceable:

Chenny Zhang discussed the possibility of the American drug industry experiencing a similar manufacturing crisis as the semiconductor industry due to the increasing likelihood of industry consolidation, the difficulties of the regulatory approval process and its impacts on innovation, and the importance of the U.S. bioeconomy for national security.

Russell Buchan and Joe Devanny responded to a recent Lawfare article on the U.K.s cyber strategy and emphasized the need for a nuanced and incremental development of that strategy to achieve the responsible and democratic use of cyber power.

Han sat down for a conversation with Alexander Downes, professor of political science and international affairs at The George Washington University, to discuss the history of foreign-imposed regime change, what lessons can be learned from past foreign-imposed regime changes, and why, when it actually works, its success doesnt last very long:

Tyler McBrien sat down with Beln Carrasco Rodrguez and Tom Southern of the Center for Information Resilience to discuss their research into how Russia establishes and strengthens occupational rule, the Russian playbook for control, and the ways that forced assimilation may or may not be working:

Benjamin Wittes sat down for a conversation with Svitlana Khytrenko, a Ukrainian student who escaped Kyiv in March, to talk about her experiences as a refugee, her life in Poland, and her feelings about the Russian invasion:

Jordan Schneider sat down for a conversation with Kamil Galeev to discuss the prospects of nuclear war, the stability of the Russian state, Moscows grip on annexed regions, Putins future viability, and more:

Katherine Yon Ebright discussed an obscure counterterrorism authority used to create and control proxy forces across Africa and Asia, its intersection with the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), and argued that the executive branchs current interpretation may have gone beyond its previous representations to Congress and the public.

Caleb Johnson and Yang Liu provided a summary of President Joe Bidens Oct. 7 executive order which laid out a framework in which the government can conduct signals intelligence activities; establishes a three-layer redress mechanism to address potential violations of privacy, civil liberties, or law; and also fulfills prior commitments to provide higher privacy protections and a more durable basis for future trans-Atlantic data flows.

Renee DiResta and John Perrino discussed the new history of U.S. military information campaigns, how it illustrates the challenges of reaching and influencing online audiences, and argued for a U.S. policy of radical transparency in the information ecosystem in contrast to the opaque policies and disinformation campaigns of authoritarian adversaries such as Russia.

David Priess sat down for a chat with Jordan Taylor, historian and author of Misinformation Nation: Foreign News and the Politics of Truth in Revolutionary America. They discussed the persistence of misinformation, the origins and limits of newspapers in colonial America, the Illuminati scare of 1798-99, and more:

McBrien also reviewed Sierra Pettengills documentary Riotsville, U.S.A. (2022) which illustrates the history of police militarization in the United States, the legacies of the Kerner Commission, and the importance of investigating the origins of repressive social forces.

Wittes also sat down with Jurecic, Rozenshtein, and Scott R. Anderson to discuss the current state of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, the two cases recently taken up by the Supreme Court relating to Section 230, and what the correct interpretation of 230if there is onemight look like:

Rozenshtein, Jurecic, and Anderson also sat down with Ashley Deeks, professor of law at the University of Virginia Law School, to discuss some of the weeks big national security news including: developments in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Saudi Arabias decision to cut oil production, and the Supreme Court's decision to take up two cases related to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act:

And that was the week that was.

Original post:

The Week That Was - Lawfare

‘He’s Developing Blinkers’: Has Ron DeSantis Let All the Winning Go to His Head? – POLITICO

Its hardly just Republicans who think so. Ione Townsend, the chair of the Hillsborough County Democratic Party, told me she knows three or four people who she said voted for DeSantis in 2018 but wont this year because of this because of the action he took against Warren. She also said they didnt want to talk about it publicly. I heard a lot of this from a lot of people.

They absolutely exist, she said, as if she were speaking about some scarce species.

But enough of them? To make a difference come November? Townsend doubted it.

Were too polarized. There are people who come hell or high water theyre going to vote Republican or theyre going to vote Democrat. No matter what. Because were in our silos. There are too many Fox News watchers who believe Democrats are pedophiles and eat babies, she said. Its really discouraging.

When something like this happens, you can for a moment lose your faith in politics, Warren told me. But Ive been encouraged and had my faith restored by not just all the people whove rushed to my defense but people who have told me, I didnt vote for you, but I know this is wrong. Ive had people tell me, I wont vote for the governor again because of this.

Supporters, former voters, for DeSantis? Who are not anymore? Because of this? I said.

Correct.

But again how many?

I dont know, he said.

It sounded at least to me like a tacit recognition that for every Republican or independent who is outraged by these power plays by DeSantis there probably are at least as many voters who are cheering him on or just dont know or care. If there is, then, true political peril, it more realistically plays out over a longer arc of time.

If Warren comes back as state attorney in any way, shape or form, I think thats a loss, a former DeSantis aide told me. Like, Charlie Crist couldnt take him down Covid couldnt take him down but Andrew Warren took him down? the aide said. Andrew Warren cant be his first loss.

Hes developing blinkers where hes not seeing the board, in my judgment.

Mac Stipanovich

I dont know that well find out this year, or when well find out, but has he gone, or will he go, too far? Mac Stipanovich said. Hes developing blinkers where hes not seeing the board, in my judgment. Now, it hasnt cost him anything so far, he keeps being rewarded, and so he keeps up the behavior that produces those rewards. But I think hes missing things that could come back to bite him.

It is in the end, of course, not about the Warren case as such, or even its eventual upshot. Its about the precedent.

If Andrew Warren could be suspended for what he did, Stipanovich said, then any public official could be suspended for almost anything that they said.

Excerpt from:

'He's Developing Blinkers': Has Ron DeSantis Let All the Winning Go to His Head? - POLITICO

York County agrees to improve public access to criminal court records in response to suit by Spotlight PA, others Spotlight PA – Spotlight PA

Spotlight PA is an independent, nonpartisan newsroom powered by The Philadelphia Inquirer in partnership with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. Sign up for our free newsletters.

YORK Information on criminal cases will be available faster and with fewer redactions under a settlement agreement between the York County Clerk of Courts and five newsrooms including Spotlight PA that had sued alleging First Amendment violations.

The settlement will bring York County in line with First Amendment and Pennsylvania Constitution requirements when granting access to criminal court records, said Sasha Dudding, a legal fellow for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Thats important for both members of the media who are reporting on criminal cases in York County and also members of the public who are entitled to know whats happening in their community, said Dudding, whose organization provides free legal resources to journalists.

Earlier this year, Spotlight PA joined four other state newsrooms to sue York County Clerk of Courts Daniel J. Byrnes after he shut down free, easy access to criminal court records and instituted practices and policies that slowed the release of documents, according to the federal lawsuit filed in March.

Byrnes office also improperly withheld documents and redacted nonconfidential information, obscuring public access that is critical to reporting on the details of a case, the lawsuit alleged.

Dudding and attorney Paula Knudsen Burke both represented Spotlight PA, the York Daily Record, The York Dispatch, LNP Media Group, and public media organization WITF in the lawsuit. Byrnes, an elected Republican who took office in 2020, was the sole defendant.

Byrnes initially called the lawsuit frivolous and said his office has actually expanded free public access to the public, especially to those facing a financial barrier to information.

The Plaintiffs are essentially disgruntled by not having unfettered and immediate access to all records within the Clerk of Courts Office, an attorney for Byrnes wrote in a March 2022 court filing.

In an email Tuesday, Byrnes said his office will continue to reflect our adherence to professional practices that serve the media and general public as accorded by law.

Attorneys for the news organizations pointed to numerous instances where they say the office delayed access to, improperly restricted, and overcharged for judicial records.

During a three-week period in September 2021, journalists from the five news organizations requested access to 42 judicial records. The office provided six the same day, denied access to another six, and redacted information in 32, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit said the office improperly redacted details in several cases, including the name of an adult victim of an alleged property crime and the address of a shooting.

In court filings, attorneys for Byrnes wrote that the office complied with the requirements of the statewide court system and Pennsylvania law, but acknowledged a few isolated errors.

As part of the settlement, Byrnes agreed to provide the news organizations with a copy of a policy notifying the public how to access judicial records, and a fee schedule that aligns with statewide court policies.

The agreement also addresses the timeline for obtaining records. Byrnes office will make all reasonable attempts to respond to requests on the same business day on which the request is made, and when not practicable, on the next business day, excepting inconsequential deviations and extraordinary circumstances which may delay access.

The office must also adopt a written policy outlining how it will respond to requests for judicial records made in person and by email.

Byrnes also agreed to pay $6,796.52 for costs and expenses incurred by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Both sides agreed that the clerks office will provide redacted versions of documents in order to protect the identities of victims of human trafficking and minor victims of physical or sexual abuse. But the office agreed to not withhold those documents entirely.

Byrnes on Tuesday said his office is pleased that the lawsuit has been resolved with all parties supporting and acknowledging that the Clerk of Courts has a legal and ethical duty to protect the identity of crime victims, particularly minors as specified in the laws of the Commonwealth of PA.

Byrnes office and the newsrooms agreed to have employees who make or fulfill requests for court records participate in training within 30 days.

Hopefully that will sort of bring everybody to the same understanding, Dudding said.

WHILE YOURE HERE… If you learned something from this story, pay it forward and become a member of Spotlight PA so someone else can in the future at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.

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York County agrees to improve public access to criminal court records in response to suit by Spotlight PA, others Spotlight PA - Spotlight PA

Elon Musk And Grimes Relationship Timeline: All About Their On-And-Off Dating – TheTealMango

In recent history, few celebrity couples have been more unexpected than the pairing of the musical genius Grimes and the Tesla founder Elon Musk, considered one of the worlds highest-earning individuals.

One of the most fun aspects of watching the love story of these two is trying to figure out whether they are coming together as a couple or whether they are not at any particular time during the story. At the 2018 Met Gala, Grimes and Musk made a stunning debut in front of the public as a couple making their official public debuts.

It has been revealed that the couple welcomed their first child together in May 2020 a son, X Eight Sider Musk, who was called X, and a daughter, Y, who was named Y in December 2021. Upon Grimes tweet of a breakup clarification on March 11 this year, a report was released stating that Grimes had started dating the infamous leaker Chelsea Manning. However, both celebs have been seen to be friendly with one another on Twitter, as observers have noticed.

As a former U.S. soldier, activist, and whistleblower, Manning is well known for releasing secret military documents in 2010 that were made public via WikiLeaks. In 2017, Manning was released after serving seven years in prison.

During their relationship, Musk and Grimes have both experienced ups and downs.

Since their romance began in 2018, the pair have remained dedicated to one another through various means, including unfollowing each other on Instagram and posing for a photo shoot where Grimes reads The Communist Manifesto shortly after their semi-separation.

Here is what they had in common to provide a timeline of Grimes and Musks relationship.

It is no secret that Musk was always a fan of Grimes work even before they became romantically involved. As a result, he tweeted on March 31 of this year a link to the video she had released for the single Venus Fly, on which she collaborated with Janelle Mona back in 2015.

He called it one of the best music videos he has seen in the last few months. Even though the artist did not publicly reply when he praised him, it didnt matter when they ended up talking about the matter when they finally managed to get in touch.

According to a media report, Musk and Grimes met through Twitter at the beginning of April and reportedly began a casual dating relationship at the end of April. According to reports, the pair formed a bond over a game called Rokos Basilisk, which is a game about artificial intelligence.

According to a source, Elon Musk was looking into the idea of joking about Rococo Basilisk, and when he noticed that Grimes had already made jokes about it, he decided to reach out to her about it. According to Grimes, the trick was understood for the first time in three years, who said the joke had not been understood for years. Both of them were poking fun at artificial intelligence at the same time.

It was news that shocked the world when Grimes and Musk announced their union in May 2018 when they announced their union during one of the worlds biggest public platforms of the year, the Met Gala, one of the worlds most glamorous events. In addition to the musicians Tesla choker, a bold way to make a statement about the couples relationship, the couple walked the red carpet together in custom-made looks and accessories.

There was also an after-party for Rihannas Met Gala that the couple attended together. To date, Grimes and Musk have only appeared together in public once, making this their first public appearance together.

Grimes spoke about her relationship with Musk for the first time in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, where she admitted that she was unprepared and unprepared to be subjected to such intense scrutiny from the media associated with the relationship.

As stated in the statement, she said, just thought I could keep going along in my funny little way, and then you casually respond to someone in a tweet, and its on Fox News, and youre like, Ugh, you know? So that was an alarming moment.

After dating Musk for over a year and a half, Grimes and Musk announced on January 8, 2020, that they had announced their pregnancy and that they would be awaiting the birth of their first child together. So it was only fitting that Grimes announced her inspiring news in the most fantastic way possible, posting an image of her sonogram that was photoshopped on top of a topless selfie of her baby bump on Instagram.

A short time later, Instagram removed the post, which resulted in her reposting an edited image where her braids cover most of her nakedness. Censored for insta haha almost got away w it, she captioned.

Musks son, Xavier Musk, joined the family on May 4, with his name being announced as Xavier A-12 Musk via an announcement tweet, which Musk posted shortly after the birth. Thats the name he was given at birth, although California does not allow a number to be used as part of a birth name.

So they eventually decided that it was better to change his legal name to X L A X II Musk by simply substituting the 12 with the Roman numerals corresponding to his birth date. Musk then shared a picture of the baby on the same day and a photo of his face, which had been photoshopped with a face tattoo that he had not explained for whatever reason.

Whenever Musk is in the middle of a crisis on Twitter, he is constantly forced to step in to save himself, but there was once when even Grimes stepped in. It was on July 24 that he tweeted the words Pronouns suck in reply to him, which the musician deleted the answer. I love you but please turn off ur phone or give me a [c]all, she wrote. I cannot support hate. Please stop this. I know this isnt your heart. As a result, they both unfollowed each other on Twitter.

There was an exclusive interview with Musk published by the New York Times the next day, where he clarified that the couple was happy together, even though she had been taking care of most of the baby care duties.

Grimes attended a sketch on Saturday Night Live, where she appeared in a role as Princess Peach opposite Musks Wario, who was on trial for killing Mario on Saturday. This was Musks first time hosting an episode featuring Miley Cyrus as the musical guest on May 8, and it was a privilege for her to be in Studio 8H to support her beau, as well as appear in a sketch as Princess Peach, who was facing Musks Wario in a courtroom.

In the days following the show, Musk took to Twitter in an attempt to reveal that the Nintendo-themed drawing was his favorite.

As reports of a split between Musk and Grimes began to circulate, it was reported on September 24 that Musk and Grimes had been semi-separated after dating for an extended period. It was clarified by him, however, that they are still in love with one another, see each other frequently, and have a good relationship, especially when it comes to co-parenting, and they are on good terms.

My work at SpaceX and Tesla requires me to be primarily in Texas or traveling overseas, and her work is primarily in L.A. Shes staying with me now, and Baby X is in the adjacent room. According to him.

By avoiding the publicity surrounding Grimes and Musks second pregnancy, the couple managed to keep their babys arrival a secret because Grimes and Musk avoided the public eye, which meant they could conceal her birth from the public.

The news was first revealed in Vanity Fairs March 10, 2022, cover story, in which it was revealed that Grimes had never planned to disclose Y to the world and that she was likely to remain a secret to this day if she hadnt started crying during her in-person interview at her empty home, as she did during the interview itself.

Upon the daughters birth, Grimes spoke about the relationship between her and Musk, saying the two had reconciled and that she had relocated to Austin with Musk to co-parent with him without putting any labels on the relationship.

After the publication of the cover story for Vanity Fair, Grimes took to Twitter to elaborate on a couple of things, including her status regarding Musks current relationship. Me and E have broken up again since the writing of this article haha, but hes my best friend and the love of my life, and my life and art are forever dedicated to The Mission now, as she put it.

As a follow-up to her initial tweet, she explained that she aimed to make humanity more sustainable, make it a multi-planetary species, and preserve any consciousness it might have.

There is such confusion in the relationship between this great couple. The two are not yet together, but many fans have seen them conversing on Twitter while they are apart. The singer shared a picture of her daughter wearing a pink headband and a black dress.

Do you think they make a good couple? Would you mind telling me what you think about their relationship? Please let us know in the comments section.

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Elon Musk And Grimes Relationship Timeline: All About Their On-And-Off Dating - TheTealMango