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Texas Medical Board director retires after uproar over his Planned Parenthood employment

"Texas Medical Board director retires after uproar over his Planned Parenthood employment" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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‘Fundamentally lawless’: Legal analyst shreds Judge Cannon’s 'outrageous' Trump ruling

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon is entirely without power to block the Justice Department from releasing special council Jack Smith’s report into President-elect Donald Trump’s two criminal investigations, Slate legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern wrote in a blistering rebuke of the order.

The Tuesday ruling from the Trump-appointed far-right judge appeared to befuddle Stern, who wrote that of the many "wildly indefensible" court decisions issued by Cannon, none have been as "perverse" as her latest legal finding favoring the incoming president.

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California overhauled its insurance system. Then Los Angeles caught fire.

On Tuesday, after a ferocious Santa Ana windstorm blew through Southern California, a severe brush fire broke out in the wealthy Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, burning 1,000 structures and forcing tens of thousands of residents to evacuate as of Wednesday afternoon. Another large brush fire broke out near Pasadena around the same time, killing at least two people. Together the two blazes threatened some of the most valuable homes and businesses in the United States. The damage from the Palisades Fire alone could exceed $10 billion, according to a preliminary estimate from J.P. Morgan.

If this estimate holds true, it will test insurers’ commitment to a market that has been teetering on the verge of collapse for the better part of a decade now. Over the past five years, California has become a poster child for what climate-fueled weather disasters can do to a state’s home insurance market. Following a rash of historic wildfires in 2017 and 2018, insurance companies have fled the state, dropped tens of thousands of customers in flammable areas, and raised prices by double-digit percentages.

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'Will lead to chaos': Panama Canal director claps back at Trump's fantasies

The director of the Panama Canal Authority is pushing back on President-elect Donald Trump's demands to regain control of the famous shipping connection between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, reported the Wall Street Journal — and warning that there is no way to meet his demands for how it should be operated.

Trump recently roped the Panama Canal into the growing list of various land possessions he has fantasized about annexing, including Greenland and Canada. He has demanded the canal be "returned" to America, because “China’s basically taken it over."

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Fake headlines flood Facebook after fact-checkers dropped — including 'Zuckerberg dead'

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is dealing with a flood of fake news headlines after announcing that his social media sites will stop fact-checking news stories on Meta platforms like Facebook, Instagram and Threads. Instead, Zuckerberg said he'd copy Elon Musk's "community notes" model.

One headline shared on X read, "Mark Zuckerberg-Dead at 36-Says Social Media Sites Should Not Fact-Check Posts."

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U.S. House begins work on Trump immigration crackdown

US lawmakers voted Tuesday to expand pre-trial incarceration for foreign criminal suspects as a new Congress unified under Republican control works to deliver on Donald Trump's vow to crack down on illegal immigration.

The Laken Riley Act -- which calls for the detention of undocumented immigrants charged with theft-related crimes -- is named for a 22-year-old student murdered by a Venezuelan man with no papers who was wanted for shoplifting.

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Biden says he could have defeated Trump

Joe Biden thinks he could have won reelection if he had stayed in the White House race, he said in an interview published Wednesday -- while conceding he was unsure if he would have served another full term.

The 82-year-old Democrat, who leaves office on January 20, was asked by USA Today if he believed victory over Republican Donald Trump was a realistic prospect last November, and he pointed to unspecified polling and said: "I think yes."

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Political chess or true beliefs? Zuckerberg's surprise Trump pivot

The clean cut hair has grown, his college kid's hoodie is now a gold chain, and his politics have swerved hard right.

Mark Zuckerberg, the boss of Facebook and Instagram, on Tuesday accused governments and so-called legacy media of pushing censorship, and vowed to take his world-dominating platforms back to their "roots."

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'This is the move': Texas Gov. Greg Abbott floats renaming Gulf of Mexico 'Gulf of Texas'

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday joined in on the hypothetical renaming of the Gulf of Mexico after President-elect Donald Trump vowed to change the name to the "Gulf of America" a day earlier.

The far-right governor threw Texas’ hat in the ring with another suggestion of paying homage to the Lone Star State – one of several states that borders the body of water.

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Campaigners fear spike in hate speech as Meta lifts restrictions

Tech giant Meta has rolled back restrictions around topics such as gender and sexual identity, a sweeping move advocacy groups fear will fuel hate speech.

The change coincides with the company's shock announcement on Tuesday that it was ending its third-party fact-checking program in the United States and adopting a crowd-sourced model to police misinformation similar to the Elon Musk-owned X.

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West Virginia legislature vacates lawmaker's seat after his arrest for terroristic threats

In one of the most chaotic developments in a state legislature in months, the West Virginia House of Delegates has vacated a seat of a newly-elected Republican state legislator — and due to a bizarre series of events, Democrats may get to appoint his replacement, despite the seat being in a county that gave two-thirds of its vote to Trump.

Delegate-elect Joseph De Soto, who ran unopposed last year after winning the GOP primary for House District 91, stumbled into an explosive and snowballing controversy even before he was elected. DragLine, a local nonprofit journalism outfit affiliated with the West Virginia ACLU, published a bombshell series of allegations, including that De Soto was not licensed to practice medicine despite claiming to be a doctor on his campaign site, and that while he served in the military, the timeline of his service doesn't line up with some of the roles he claimed to have served.

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New tracker spotlights corporate criminals Trump could let off the hook

The progressive advocacy group Public Citizen on Tuesday launched a new project aimed at tracking the incoming Trump administration's approach to corporate crime, an effort the watchdog said is particularly urgent given that many of the companies currently under federal investigation have connections to the president-elect.

Public Citizen found that of 192 individual corporations currently facing federal probes or cases, a third "have known ties with the Trump administration."

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GOP senators laugh off idea of Trump invading Greenland — but dodge serious questions

WASHINGTON — Republican senators were cracking jokes and outright laughing at President-elect Donald Trump over his suggestions he's open to using military force in Panama and Greenland, as well as his flirtation with making Canada the 51st state.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) cracked jokes with a dry wit, saying that he would only want to acquire parts of Canada, particularly the more attractive places.

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