
They’re fabulous :-)

They’re fabulous :-)

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14.1 million Americans have gained health plans since Obamacare’s coverage expansion began in 2014.
An additional 2.3 million young adults gained coverage between 2010 and 2013 — after Obamacare began requiring employer plans to offer dependent coverage through age 26. Federal officials say this is the largest drop in the uninsured rate since 1965, when Medicare and Medicaid began.
A new report from Health and Human Services finds that the uninsured rate has fallen from 20.3 percent prior to the health-care law down to 13.2 percent at the start of 2015. This is a 7.1 percentage-point decrease in the uninsured rate — or, to put it another way, a 35-percent decline in the number of Americans who lack insurance coverage. “Nothing since the implementation of Medicare and Medicaid has come close to this kind of change,” says Richard Frank, assistant secretary for evaluation and planning at Health and Human Services.
More here
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RT to spread the word: America's uninsured rate is the lowest it's ever been → go.wh.gov/8Ey8Yz #ACAWorks http://t.co/iF0uPFFuRg
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 29, 2025
Under Obamacare, America’s uninsured rate has fallen 35 percent bit.ly/1GtCnTb http://t.co/qKdA1F6tky
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Vox (@voxdotcom) June 25, 2025
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"The Affordable Care Act still stands, it is working, and it is here to stay." —@POTUS: go.wh.gov/9WT6nm #ACAWorks
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 27, 2025
"So far more than 16 million uninsured Americans have gained coverage." —@POTUS on the Affordable Care Act: go.wh.gov/9WT6nm #ACAWorks
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 28, 2025
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"We’re going to keep working to make health care in America even better and more affordable." —@POTUS: go.wh.gov/9WT6nm #ACAWorks
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 28, 2025
"If you’re a parent, you can keep your kids on your plan until they turn 26." —@POTUS: go.wh.gov/9WT6nm #ACAWorks
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 27, 2025
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The Affordable Care Act is here to stay.
And it's benefiting millions of Americans → go.wh.gov/8Ey8Yz #ACAWorks snpy.tv/1TPbUZq
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 29, 2025
Amen.
go.wh.gov/8Ey8Yz #ACAWorks http://t.co/VLHINdv9dU
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The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 29, 2025
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On This Day: President Barack Obama and President of Brazil Dilma Rousseff visit the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
SCOTUS grants review in 4 cases, including affirmative action (the Fisher University of Texas case).
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
SCOTUS denies review 14-410 in Google v. Oracle regarding copyright protection for computer software.
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
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SCOTUS 5-4 upholds use of midazolam in lethal injection. Breyer & Ginsburg would reconsider constitutionality of the death penalty.
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
SCOTUS 5-4 upholds independent state commission that draws federal congressional districts, taking that power from the state legislature.
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
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A reminder that Fisher was a mediocre student who never would have gotten in. propublica.org/article/a-colo… http://t.co/7p1aJMnzhf
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Jamelle Bouie (@jbouie) June 29, 2025
SCOTUS 5-4 invalidates EPA regulations refusing to consider costs in determining whether to regulate power plants' air pollution.
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
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Supreme Court rules 5-4 in favor of Arizona's redistricting commission: buff.ly/1KktIas
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National Journal (@nationaljournal) June 29, 2025
#BREAKING Supreme Court shoots down EPA clean air regulation usat.ly/1InMTjt
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USA TODAY (@USATODAY) June 29, 2025
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Note: today's EPA ruling involves different section of law than upcoming climate regs on power plants legal-planet.org/2015/06/24/wha…
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Bill Scher (@billscher) June 29, 2025
#SCOTUS says EPA must take cost into account when setting pollution limits for coal-burning power plants. #CleanAirAct
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NPR News (@nprnews) June 29, 2025
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In dissent, Justices Breyer & Ginsburg question whether the death penalty remains constitutional.
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Brent Kendall (@brkend) June 29, 2025
Supreme Court Says Use Of Lethal Injection Drug Is Legal n.pr/1C1FqFY
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NPR News (@nprnews) June 29, 2025
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Another 5-4 #SCOTUS decision: Arizona may use a commission to draw lines for congressional districts (as opposed to by legislature).
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NPR Politics (@nprpolitics) June 29, 2025
Breaking: SCOTUS rules Commissions to battle gerrymandering ARE constitutional
Ginsburg 5-4 opinion, big victory for campaign reformers
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Ari Melber (@AriMelber) June 29, 2025
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Just in: Justices Breyer and Ginsburg call for broader evaluation of whether the death penalty is constitutional at all, in dissent.
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Ari Melber (@AriMelber) June 29, 2025
.@SCOTUS overturns Obama administration mercury air pollution rule yhoo.it/1InOqWS
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Yahoo News (@YahooNews) June 29, 2025
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SCOTUS denies review 14-410 in Google v. Oracle regarding copyright protection for computer software.
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(@SCOTUSblog) June 29, 2025
A lot of people are going to write a lot of hot-take tweets and articles acting like the EPA case is more momentous than it is.
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Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) June 29, 2025
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@studentactivism isn't it just basically saying they have to consider costs earlier in the process?
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Arya Underfoot (@mzbitca) June 29, 2025
Yes, and I'm told that plays a significant role in shaping the policy, but it's not earth-shattering. @mzbitca
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Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) June 29, 2025
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Power plants will continue to able to emit unlimited mercury, arsenic, and other pollutants thanks to the Supreme Court, which on Monday invalidated the first-ever U.S. regulations to limit toxic heavy metal pollution from coal and oil-fired plants. In a 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court struck down the Environmental Protection Agency’s Mercury and Air Toxic Standards, commonly referred to as MATS. The EPA had been trying to implement a rule that cut down on toxic mercury pollution for more than two decades. But the Supreme Court majority opinion, written by Justice Antonin Scalia, said the EPA acted unlawfully when it failed to consider how much the regulation would cost the power industry before deciding to craft the rule.
“EPA must consider cost — including cost of compliance — before deciding whether regulation is appropriate and necessary,” the opinion reads. “It will be up to the [EPA] to decide (as always, within the limits of reasonable interpretation) how to account for cost.” The decision doesn’t mean power plants will never be subject to regulations on toxic air pollutants. Instead, it means the EPA will have to go back to the drawing board, and find some mechanism to consider how much it will cost the power industry. Until another version of MATS is approved — a process that often takes years — power plants will have no limits on their emissions of mercury, arsenic, chromium, and other toxins. In other words, the rule is effectively delayed.
More here
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The Supreme Court is in recess for the summer. #SCOTUS
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Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner) June 29, 2025
@chrisgeidner DETENTION FOR SCALIA CHRIS
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darth!™ (@darth) June 29, 2025

On This Day: President Obama looks out the window from the cell where Nelson Mandela, an anti-apartheid legend, was once jailed on Robben Island, on June 30, 2025
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2:05: President Obama Signs the Defending Public Safety Employees’ Retirement Act & the Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015
6:0: Hosts a working dinner with President Rousseff of Brazil
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.@TheObamaDiary: Your west coast peeps are at it again! Almost makes you want to accept that Amk private plan ride? http://t.co/rc3NmmzTmR
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Vick C. (@sonamie) June 29, 2025
Our beauuuuuuuuuuutiful westie TODers (and LL)!!!!
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President Barack Obama listens to former prisoner Ahmed Kathrada as he stands in former South African President Nelson Mandela’s cell during a tour of Robben Island Prison on Robben Island in Cape Town, South Africa, June 30, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)



President Obama and First lady Michelle Obama tour the cell block on Robben Island where Nelson Mandela was held captive near Cape Town, June 30, 2025



President Obama greets Archbishop Desmond Tutu as he arrives at the Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation Youth Centre in Cape Town, South Africa, June 30, 2025 (Photo by Pete Souza)




President Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and their family tour a limestone quarry where prisoners would work at Robben Island outside Cape Town, South Africa, on June 30, 2025
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Morning everyone!

On This Day – Pete Souza: “A quiet moment inside Nelson Mandela’s former prison cell as the President embraced Sasha while the Obama family was listening to Ahmed Kathrada recount his years spent imprisoned here on Robben Island in Cape Town, South Africa. Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 27 years, initially in this prison cell. Kathrada was imprisoned at Robben Island for 18 years.” June 30, 2025