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2018年7月6日 星期五

Overnight Health Care: Trump officials want more time to reunite families | Washington braces for Supreme Court pick | Nebraska could be next state to vote on Medicaid expansion

 
 
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Happy Friday, and welcome to Overnight Health Care. Congress returns from recess next week and will quickly turn its focus to health care. Here are today's big stories so that you are up to date.

 

The Trump administration is asking for more time to reunite the children and parents it separated at the border as it runs up against a court-imposed deadline of July 10. 

The Department of Justice asked a federal judge Friday to extend the deadline, arguing that it does not take into account the time needed to verify and vet each parent. 

"The government does not wish to unnecessarily delay reunification," lawyers for the Justice Department said in their response to the court.

"At the same time, however, the government has a strong interest in ensuring that any release of a child from government custody occurs in a manner that ensures the safety of the child."

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar expressed similar concerns in a call with reporters Thursday, noting that it had to use an expedited process of reviewing parents rather than a more "comprehensive one." 

Azar also said HHS is using DNA tests to speed up reunifications, but the Justice Department said Friday that inconclusive tests can lead to delays. 

Why it matters: The court ordered HHS to return children under the age of 5 to their parents by Tuesday. With the DOJ asking for more time, it's unclear how many of those children are ready to go.

Read more here.

 

Nebraska could be the next red state to consider Medicaid expansion. 

Insure the Good Life, an activist group pushing for Medicaid expansion in the state, said Thursday it had gathered more than 133,000 signatures in support of a ballot initiative to get the question on the ballot in November.

Voters in Idaho and Utah will also decide in November if they want to expand Medicaid, while Maine voters approved a similar ballot measure last year. 

Why it matters: Many Republican leaders in red states have rejected Medicaid expansion. But taking the issue directly to the voters is a way to work around that. Currently, 34 states, including DC, have expanded Medicaid. If these ballot initiatives are successful, it could inspire similar expansion campaigns in other states. 

Read more here.

 

Happening next week: 

Monday: 2 p.m. at the Omni Shoreham Hotel. HHS Secretary Azar will deliver remarks at the 340B Coalition Summer Conference

Wednesday: 10 a.m. in Rayburn House Office Building room 2123. The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health will hold a hearing on the 340B Drug Pricing program

1 p.m. in Rayburn 2123. The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Digital Commerce and Consumer Protection will hold a hearing on drug impaired driving

Thursday: 2 p.m. in Rayburn 2200. The House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and International Organizations will hold a hearing on tuberculosis in Southern Africa.

 

Also coming next week: President Trump says he will announce his pick to replace Justice Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court. 

The health angle: Expect plenty of fighting between Democrats and Republicans about the nominee's position on Roe v. Wade. Groups on the left have been buying up ad space all week urging Democrats to vote against any nominee that doesn't support access to abortion. 

But Trump has said he will only nominate "pro-life" justices to the Supreme Court. 

Read more here.

 

Republican attorneys general hit back at the Trump administration in an ongoing lawsuit targeting ObamaCare.

Texas, and 19 other states, filed a lawsuit earlier this year arguing that Congress' repeal of ObamaCare's individual mandate penalty makes the entire law unconstitutional. 

Last month, the Department of Justice sided in part with the states, but said aside from the law's protections for people with preexisting conditions, the rest of the law can stand. 

The states disagree and asked in a brief Thursday evening for a judge to place an immediate injunction on the enforcement of ObamaCare. 

From California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who is leading a coalition of Democratic states to defend the Affordable Care Act in court: 

"The Texas lawsuit is based on a dubious legal claim with the sole goal of stripping Americans of their healthcare. The proponents of the Texas lawsuit want to eliminate the preventive care and prescription drug benefits for working families, seniors and people with disabilities. To roll back the clock and risk the health of millions of Americans is irresponsible and dangerous. We can't and we won't go back."

 

A nonprofit aligned with Speaker Paul Ryan is dropping $2 million on ads touting the House's efforts to combat the opioid epidemic. 

The ads will air in 10 congressional districts ahead of November's midterm election, including some with competitive races for Republican incumbents, including GOP Reps. Mike Coffman (Colo.) Peter Roskam (Ill.), Andy Barr (Ky.), Bruce Poliquin (Maine), Claudia Tenney (N.Y.), Steve Chabot (Ohio), and Brian Fitzpatrick (Pa.) 

An ad will also air in the district of Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.), the chairman of the House subcommittee that led the work on the bills. 

AAN is also airing the ads in the districts of two Democrats running in uncompetitive races: Reps. Katherine Clark (Mass.) and Mark DeSaulnier (Calif.) 

Read more here.

 

Odds & ends 

Health care jobs rose by 25,000 in the month of June, continuing strong growth for the industry, according to the jobs report released Friday.

The FDA announced revised guidance on the testing of donated blood for the Zika virus. 

 

What we're reading

What a U.S.-China trade war could mean for the opioid epidemic (Kaiser Health News)

In a rare success, Paraguay conquers malaria (The New York Times)

 

State by state 

New law preserves ACA measures for Hawaii residents (hawaiinewsnow.com)

What does a drug cost? It depends where you live. (The New York Times)

 
 
 
 
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News Alert: Celebrities risk backlash with vulgar anti-Trump rhetoric

 
 
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Celebrities risk backlash with vulgar anti-Trump rhetoric
Hollywood celebrities have been raising the heat in their rhetoric against President Trump, but critics say the often-profane criticism could actually inflame a pro-Trump backlash ahead of November’s midterm elections.

Trump is considered vulgar Enemy No. 1 in much of the entertainment world, and more and more performers — from Robert De Niro to Michelle Wolf — are following him into the mud, though their harshest insults may actually be giving Republicans a boost.
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The Hill's 12:30 Report: Trump officials seek more time to reunite families | China accuses US of launching 'biggest trade war' ever as tariffs take effect | Strong June jobs report | Why Coney Barrett is a Supreme Court favorite on the right | Fallout from Pruitt's exit | Trump says he'd offer Warren $1M to prove Native American heritage | Latest on Thai cave rescue

The Hill 12:30 Report
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TALK OF THE MORNING

Free idea for Scott Pruitt's next career move -- administer 'Scott's Tots foundation':

 

--> http://bit.ly/2KOsCvD 

 

Embattled Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt is resigning from his post today. Was this a surprise?: Eh, not really. He's been the subject of many controversies over the last few months. But many were surprised by how long Pruitt held on. http://bit.ly/2KFpLWN

 
PRUITT'S REPLACEMENT:

EPA Deputy Director Andrew Wheeler will take over as the acting EPA administrator. "I am both humbled and honored to take on this new responsibility at the same agency where I started my career over 25 years ago," Wheeler wrote in the email obtained by The Hill. Keep in mind: This email was the first official word to 14,000 EPA staffers that Pruitt had resigned. http://bit.ly/2zi8rli

 
GOOD READ ON PRUITT'S EXIT:

Via Politico's Alex Guillen and Andrew Restuccia, here's "how Scott Pruitt blew it." https://politi.co/2KMtXTB

 
TIMELINE OF PRUITT'S CONTROVERSIES:

http://bit.ly/2IZDeCU

 
READ PRUITT'S ACTUAL RESIGNATION LETTER:

http://bit.ly/2MUfmmE

 
WHAT IT'S LIKE WORKING AT THE EPA:

Via The Hill's Miranda Green, "Succeeding at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) meant keeping your head down, your opinions to yourself and never saying no to the boss, according to three former staffers who worked under Administrator Scott Pruitt." How so: http://bit.ly/2IZsMv2

 
TIDBIT -- THE EPA IS SLOWING THE RELEASE OF A CANCER STUDY:

Via Politico's Annie Snider, "The Trump administration is suppressing an Environmental Protection Agency report that warns that most Americans inhale enough formaldehyde vapor in the course of daily life to put them at risk of developing leukemia and other ailments, a current and a former agency official told Politico." Full story: https://politi.co/2KRawJe 

 

Happy second Friday of the week! (This week has been confusing, right?) I'm Cate Martel with a quick recap of the morning and what's coming up. Send comments, story ideas and events for our radar to cmartel@thehill.com, @CateMartel and on Facebook.

 
NEWS THIS MORNING

What have we learned in all of this? Children don't come with receipts:

Via NBC's Julia Ainsley, the Trump administration has requested more time to reunite children and parents who have been separated at the U.S.-Mexico border. The current deadlines: All children under the age of 5 must be reunited by July 10; July 26 for all other children. Why the extension?: Attorneys say it doesn't give enough time to verify each parent. Full story: https://nbcnews.to/2zggNK4

 

First Fridays of the month are for jobs:

The U.S. economy added a solid 213,000 jobs in June, a stronger number than expected. Job gains have averaged 211,000 a month over the last three months. Unemployment rate: The unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 4 percent from 3.8 percent. The worry: There are fears the economy will suffer and jobs will be lost from President Trump's new tariffs. http://bit.ly/2uaZMLB

 

The Red Hen is back open for business:

The Virginia restaurant that kicked out White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders reopened today. Why was it closed?: The restaurant has been closed for two weeks because of protests. http://bit.ly/2IWBj1P

 
HAPPENING TODAY

Why China isn't exactly sending well wishes to the United States today:

President Trump's 35 percent tariffs on China officially kicked in this morning. What products are affected: 800 Chinese goods worth $34 billion. https://cnnmon.ie/2MWecaj

 

The biggest trade war in 100 years...no, 1,000 years...no, ever:

China accused President Trump of starting "the biggest trade war in economic history." China referred to the tariffs as "typical trade bullying." From the Commerce Ministry: "China is forced to strike back to safeguard core national interests and the interests of its people." http://bit.ly/2IXOkbJ

 
WHICH AMERICAN PRODUCTS ARE CHINA'S RETALIATORY TARIFFS HITTING:

Soybeans, seafood, SUVs and crude oil, among others.

 
SOME CONTEXT -- 'HOW A TRADE WAR COULD TURN INTO A RECESSION':

Via CNN's Matt Egan: https://cnnmon.ie/2zfEFh3

 
T MINUS THREE DAYS

This feels like THE MOST dramatic season of The Bachelor:

(Important programming note: I realize I’ve made "The Bachelor" jokes in the past two editions, but I am in no way a Bachelor fan. It just happens to be the perfect analogy. That is all.)  

 

President Trump said he has narrowed his search for his next Supreme Court nominee to two or three -- and will have his final decision on Sunday. When we will find out: Monday at 9 p.m. 

 
CONSERVATIVES' FAVORITE -- AMY CONEY BARRETT:

Why: Barrett is a 46-year-old appellate judge. She is young, conservative and religious. Because she is a woman, supporters believe it will make it harder for critics to paint her as extreme on women's rights and health-care issues. Why that matters so much: Retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy was a pivotal vote in the abortion debate, which is expected to flare up again. If she's the pick: Expect an explosive confirmation fight, with the left already making her a target. http://bit.ly/2MSiyPu

 
WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT TRUMP'S TOP PICKS:

https://wapo.st/2IZRFah

 
IN OTHER NEWS

Elon Musk's team is helping the Thai soccer team rescue mission:

Tech billionaire Elon Musk is sending a group of engineers to Thailand to help the rescue efforts for a soccer team that has been trapped in a cave. The latest with the rescue efforts: https://cnn.it/2MSLSFx

 

If I never see a Trump-Warren-Native American headline ever again, it will still be too soon:

During a campaign rally last night, President Trump said he would offer Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) $1 million to prove her Native American heritage. 

 

In Trump's words: "But let's say I'm debating Pocahontas, I'll do this ... I'm going to get one of those little kits and in the middle of the debate, when she proclaims she's of Indian heritage -- because her mother said she has high cheekbones, that's her only evidence. We will take that little kit, we have to do it gently because we're in the 'Me Too' generation, we have to be very gentle." http://bit.ly/2m033K4

 

Watch Trump talking about Warren: http://bit.ly/2u9wWLz

 

Then Warren fired back: Sen. Warren tweeted: "Hey, @realDonaldTrump: While you obsess over my genes, your Admin is conducting DNA tests on little kids because you ripped them from their mamas & you are too incompetent to reunite them in time to meet a court order. Maybe you should focus on fixing the lives you're destroying." 

 

Trending -- I hope fans didn't try too hard for an encore because Chris Brown had left the building:

When singer Chris Brown walked off the stage after his concert in Florida, sheriff's deputies were waiting to arrest him. What charges: A felony battery charge. His bond: He was released after paying a $2,000 bond. Details: https://ti.me/2J103WP

 

The strangest thing I've come across this week:

Check out this cover of Friday's New York Post --> http://bit.ly/2lZLCt7

 
NOTABLE TWEETS

Lol, ouch:

 

Wow:

 
ON TAP

Congress is out. President Trump is at his golf club in Bedminster, N.J. Vice President Pence is in Washington, D.C., but will meet Trump for dinner in New Jersey.

 

Today: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is in North Korea to discuss denuclearization. Details from Reuters: https://reut.rs/2m1zurj

 

Photo of Pompeo in Pyongyang: http://bit.ly/2MScXss

 

11:05 a.m. EDT: Vice President Pence participates in a briefing at Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

 

Op-ed on ICE: http://bit.ly/2ubY2BE

 

7:30 p.m. EDT: President Trump and first lady Melania Trump have dinner with Vice President Pence and second lady Karen Pence in Bedminster, N.J.

 
WHAT TO WATCH

11:45 a.m. EDT: Vice President Pence spoke at Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Livestream: http://bit.ly/2lVEQEu

 
NOW FOR THE FUN STUFF...

Today is National Fried Chicken Day!

 

And to get your weekend off to the right start, here's a toddler who really wants to play hockey: http://bit.ly/2ucqROo

 
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