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    Revamping Friary Grange is not the answer to long term leisure provision in Lichfield, councillor says – Lichfield Live - October 13, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A councillor has said that revamping Friary Grange Leisure Centre is not the answer for Lichfield in the long term.

    Members of Lichfield District Councils cabinet unanimously backed a move to make Stychbrook Park the preferred site for a new leisure centre at a meeting earlier this week.

    The move comes after a community campaign to keep leisure provision in the city.

    As a result the local authority has given a short term commitment to Friary Grange, with a long term plan to build a new site elsewhere that location now likely to be Stychbrook Park.

    Cllr Richard Cox, cabinet member for leisure and parks, said the council needed to look to the future after some residents questioned why the existing site could not be home to a replacement facility.

    What do you do with Friary Grange Leisure Centre? Constantly sticking plasters over it is not the answer.

    Even if you were to somehow come to an agreement, you are still sharing a site and it will still have constraints.

    This new centre will move away from that and we will have a modern facility that is not more than 50 years old.

    I do think Stychbrook Park is the right site for us and I am comfortable about putting a leisure centre on that piece of land as I see it as a sports and recreational area in that sense.

    The future of Friary Grange Leisure Centre was thrown into focus after parts of the facility were handed over to The Friary School as part of its move to become an academy.

    Cllr Robert Strachan, cabinet member for finance, told the meeting that retaining the centre in the current spot wasnt an option.

    The most convenient site is where it currently is, but we dont control that site and the school want us off so that door is closed to us.

    Stychbrook Park is the most appropriate site because of previous sports and recreational use on there.

    Residents have been critical of the plan to build on the current park which is home to two football pitches.

    But Cllr Cox said the fact it had been used for sport meant it was a suitable location for a new leisure centre.

    Stychbrook Park is an existing sporting facility in my mind rather than a designated open space because obviously there are two football pitches there.

    Knowing the work that the cross-party task group have gone through I think we are seeing the best site.

    Im sure theres people who would want us to consider other locations, but this is something thats within our own tenure.

    If we were to look at other sites beyond our tenure, we will exceed the timescale to provide an alternative centre as promised.

    The council has earmarked 5million to help develop the new leisure centre in Lichfield.

    Cllr Liz Little, cabinet member for major projects and economic development, said the local authority would still need to tackle the issue of funding for the scheme to go ahead.

    Cost is a bridge we will have to cross and that is a question we will have to answer.

    But we are at the current time committed to building a replacement.

    We know cost will be an issue but we will do our utmost to overcome that.

    Continued here:
    Revamping Friary Grange is not the answer to long term leisure provision in Lichfield, councillor says - Lichfield Live

    COVID in the capital – Washington Examiner - October 13, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Since Donald Trump has been diagnosed with COVID-19, the health of the president is suddenly an issue. And given the nasty trajectory the disease is capable of taking, the possibility of presidential disability must be considered. Unsurprisingly, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has taken the opportunity to score political points by considering legislation to change the specific procedures on how to deal with presidential disability a move that is sure to go nowhere but no doubt thrills her partys liberal base.

    Political angling aside, there are some basic questions members of the public are surely wondering. What happens if the president is incapable of discharging his duties? What do law and history tell us? While it is unlikely that these will actually come into play, its no doubt possible, and understanding what our government is supposed to do can be useful.

    The 25th Amendment, ratified in 1967, deals with vacancies in the executive office. It explicitly affirms that if the presidential office is vacated, the vice president becomes president. This had been understood by implication and historical tradition, but when President William Henry Harrison died in 1841, it was not entirely clear whether Vice President John Tyler became president in his own right or simply acting president. Tyler importantly asserted that he was the president arguably his only positive contribution to American history (he would later vote to secede from the Union as a member to the Virginia Convention in 1861). The 25th Amendment also calls for vacancies in the vice presidential office to be filled through a process of nomination by the president and ratification by Congress. It gives the president the power to transfer executive power to the vice president when he is unable to perform his duties. And in the case that the president is not able to make a formal transmission, it invests the power in the Vice President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments or of such other body as Congress may by law provide.

    It is this latter provision that is garnering attention right now. How sick is the president? is a question for the medical team attending to him. How sick is too sick to continue to be president, and are we nearing that point? are, ultimately, political questions asked of the men and women of the presidents Cabinet.

    Pundits have wondered if the Cabinet should transfer power to Vice President Mike Pence while Trump has been recuperating. That is a matter for the political process, which is informed under the 25th Amendment by our constitutional systems doctrine of separation of powers. If the president is to be declared incapable of discharging his duties, that decision rests with the principal officers of the government not Congress or the courts. The only direct role Congress has in the process of presidential disability (beyond establishing the laws to effectuate the 25th Amendment, a power it shares with the president) is to resolve a dispute within the executive branch namely, if the Cabinet and the vice president believe the president is still unfit but the president believes he is well. If the president is going to be stripped of power because of disability, that decision is to be made within the executive branch alone. James Madison hinted at this reasoning in Federalist 51, in which he noted that the separation of powers requires that the members of each department should be as little dependent as possible on those of the others. Otherwise, members of one branch might seize power by interfering with the officers of the other branches.

    The congressional version of this is located in Article 1, Section 5, which gives each chamber the exclusive power to be the Judge of the Elections, Returns, and Qualifications of its own Members ... determine the Rules of its Proceedings, punish its Members for disorderly Behavior, and, with the Concurrence of two thirds, expel a Member.

    Similarly, judges on federal courts enjoy tenure for good behavior and cannot be removed by any traditional reason. The only exception to these rules, whereby the members of each branch are independent from the others, is the power of impeachment and removal, which is housed exclusively in Congress. But impeachment cannot be for no reason the Constitution states that the impeached must be guilty of Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors. It also requires the House to indict and two-thirds of the Senate to convict. That is a high bar.

    So, outside of clear instances of executive malfeasance, the president or the Cabinet gets to decide whether the president can fulfill his duties. Thats it. Congress mainly arbitrates disputes between the two, while the people only get a say at the ballot box. And though the 25th Amendment was only ratified in 1967, the executive historically has been protective of its prerogatives on questions of presidential capacity, even when that has meant not disclosing fully to the people what is going on. This long history of such concealment no doubt informs the public and the medias skeptical dissection of every update on Trumps condition.

    The first presidential health scare came very early, when George Washington contracted influenza and pneumonia in 1790. Rumors circulated around Congress, at that point located in New York City, that the president was sure to die, or that if he lived, he would be deaf. But Washington recovered, and the executive administration of the government was not interrupted. In the summer of 1813, Madison became extremely ill during a special session of Congress called to deal with the problems of the War of 1812. Madison usually fled the swampy climate of Washington, D.C., for the more pleasant environment of his Montpelier estate, located in the Virginia piedmont, but he had stayed to give direction to Congress when he became severely ill. Again, rumors swirled that the president was not long for the world, and since Vice President Elbridge Gerry was recovering from a stroke (and would die the following year), there was the possibility of two vacancies in the executive. But Madison recovered, never yielded the executive authority, and indeed never fully disclosed to Congress what had afflicted him.

    The first real succession crisis occurred with the assassination of President James A. Garfield in 1881. Charles Guiteau shot Garfield at a train station in Washington, D.C., on July 2, but the president did not die right away. In fact, the early prognosis seemed hopeful, but the efforts of the presidents doctors to remove the bullet only made matters worse, and he died on Sept. 19. All the while, Vice President Chester A. Arthur was waiting in the wings but unwilling to take over the executive duties officially, lest he appear to be grasping for power even though Garfield was too weak to carry them out.

    Arthurs successor in the White House, Democrat Grover Cleveland, would also have a health scare during his second term. Clevelands doctors discovered an abnormal growth in his mouth in 1893, at which point the country was sinking into the worst economic downturn outside of the Great Depression. Doctors performed a secret surgery on the president aboard a boat, under the cover story that the president was vacationing. Cleveland had part of his jaw removed and later was given a rubberized prothesis as a replacement. When the press grew suspicious, the administration leaked false information that he merely had two bad teeth replaced.

    In 1919, Woodrow Wilson was barnstorming the country in support of the Treaty of Versailles, which ended World War I and created the League of Nations. Exhausted from the tour, Wilson returned home in September, only to suffer a severe stroke the next month, which left him partially paralyzed. Not only was the country at large not informed of the presidents condition, Wilson himself was never told how badly he had been injured. Political insiders knew of the graveness of his condition, but Vice President Thomas Marshall refused to assert a constitutional claim to the presidency.

    Wilsons assistant secretary of the navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, would go on to become president some 13 years later, and remain in office for more than a decade thereafter, guiding the country through both the Great Depression and World War II. All this had a terribly debilitating effect on the presidents well-being, which is evident when one compares pictures of him at the start of his presidency in 1933 to those at the end, in 1945. Like Wilson, FDR was not fully informed by his doctors how badly his health had suffered. And there were certainly no details leaked to the public. Indeed, FDR had carefully hidden the ravages of polio from the people, taking care never to be pictured in his wheelchair. Still, political insiders who spent any time with the president knew there was a high chance he would die in office, which led to one of the most consequential vice presidential nominations in 1944, as party insiders competed with one another to secure the preferred candidate. Ultimately, the bosses chose Harry Truman because they could all live with him.

    President Dwight Eisenhower, who had served under FDR as the supreme commander of allied forces, became president in 1953. He had a serious heart attack in 1955 that left him hospitalized for six weeks. During that period, Vice President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State John Dulles took on most administrative duties in the executive branch. Later in his administration, Eisenhower suffered a stroke and also had surgery due to Crohns disease.

    In 1981, President Ronald Reagan was shot by John Hinckley. Though this occurred after the enactment of the 25th Amendment, power was never officially transferred to Vice President George H.W. Bush, and there was a great deal of confusion in the immediate aftermath. When Reagan was struck, the vice president was in Texas, and Secretary of State Alexander Haig, speaking to the press, assured the country that he was in control here, in the White House, although technically he was fourth in the line of succession.

    Ironically, for all the drama surrounding presidential health and successions up until the enactment of the 25th Amendment, its invocations have been anodyne. President Reagan formally transferred power under it to Vice President Bush in 1985 to have colon surgery, and President George W. Bush invoked it twice, in 2002 and 2007, when he underwent colonoscopies. It likely should have been invoked when Reagan was shot in 1981, but the confusion surrounding the assassination kept the Cabinet from acting swiftly.

    Indeed, the events of 1981 probably serve as a lesson for why it would be hard in practice to declare a presidential disability in an orderly fashion. It is the flip side of the virtues of a unitary executive. The Founding Fathers wanted a single person to be president rather than a council because he can provide vigor, direction, and swift action when it is called for. The 25th Amendment, meanwhile, empowers a council the presidential Cabinet that will inevitably be slow to act relative to what the president can do as a single individual. Factoring in the presidents desire to keep physical weakness as quiet as possible, the vice president not wanting to look like hes grasping for power, and the doctrine of separation of powers that keeps Congress mostly out of these considerations, it is hard to see anything but confusion surrounding presidential health scares. The 25th Amendment offers guidance and clarity, but it is just a text that has to be carried out by people in the midst of a crisis with multiple competing interests. Each such crisis is unique but similarly confounding.

    Jay Cost is a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a visiting scholar at Grove City College.

    Original post:
    COVID in the capital - Washington Examiner

    The Constitutional Amendments in the 2020 Florida General Election – coralgableslove.com - October 13, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    # 1 Constitutional Amendment, Article VI, Section 2: NO

    The ACLU recommends to vote NO:

    Vote No on ballot initiative 1, the so-called Citizenship Requirement to Vote in Florida Elections. The amendment purports to limit voting toonlyU.S. citizens. However, federal and state law are already clear voting rights are strictly for U.S. citizens, and there are no movements to expand voting rights to noncitizens in Florida.This amendment is xenophobic and unpatriotriotic. It fails to strengthen our democracy or protect our elections. Instead, it opens the door for additional measures that would subvert and endanger the right of every citizen to vote.

    RECOMMENDED READING: Florida General Election November 2020: Who To Vote For In Coral Gables & Miami-Dade County

    The League of Women Voters recommends to vote YES:

    Raises minimum wage to $10 per hour effective September 30th,2021. Each September 30th thereafter, minimum wage shall increase by $1 perhour until the minimum wage reaches $15 per hour on September 30th, 2026. Fromthat point forward, future minimum wage increases shall revert to being adjustedannually for inflation starting September 30th, 2027.

    Support.The League supports secure equal rights and equal opportunity for all, and promotes social and economic justice for all Americans. Floridas present minimum wage yields $17,800 a year for a full-time worker, which doesnt come close to a living wage for a family of four.

    RECOMMENDED READING: Use This Checklist to Prepare For The Florida General Election November 2020

    The ACLU recommends to vote NO:

    Vote No on ballot initiative #3, misleadingly titled, All Voters Vote in Primary Elections for State Legislature, Governor and Cabinet. This amendment would have a negative impact on Black voters and effectively silence their voices. Additionally, it would create a top-two electoral system that could prevent voters in the general election from voting for members of their own party in state legislative, governor and cabinet races. The measure also raises First Amendment concerns by hindering political dissent and a political partys freedom of association, as well as the ability to select its candidates and messaging.

    The ACLU recommends to vote NO:

    Vote No on ballot Initiative #4, disingenuously and misleadingly titled Voter Approval of Constitutional Amendments. This amendment is a political effort to obstruct voters ability to pass future constitutional amendments, even those with support from a supermajority of voters. This ballot initiative disregards the will of the people and renders their voices mute on the issues Floridians care about most.

    The League of Women Voters recommends to vote NO:

    Proposing an amendment to the State Constitution, effectivedate January 1, 2021, to increase, from 2 years to 3 years, the period of time duringwhich accrued Save-Our-Homes benefits may be transferred from a priorhomestead to a new homestead.

    Oppose.The League has a position that no tax sources or revenue should be specified, limited, exempted, or prohibited in the Constitution.

    The League of Women Voters recommends to vote NO:

    This would amend Section 6 of Article 7 of the Florida Constitution toallow a homestead property tax discount to be transferred to the surviving spouseof a deceased veteran. This would be in effect until the spouse remarries, sells ordisposes of the property.

    Oppose.The League has a position that no tax sources or revenue should be specified, limited, exempted, or prohibited in the Constitution.

    Referendum: Shall the County Charter be amended to create an Independent Office of Inspector General who shall, at a minimum, be empowered to perform investigations, audits, reviews and oversight of County and County-funded contracts, programs, and projects for abuse, waste and mismanagement, and provide Inspector General services to other governmental entities, with such offices appointment, term, powers, duties and responsibilities to be further established by Ordinance?

    It codifies it into the charter, rather than being something the mayor or the commissioners could change or get rid of, saidMonica Skoko Rodriguez, president of the Miami-Dade League of Women Voters. It secures that office.

    Click here to read The Miami Heralds complete breakdown of the Miami-Dade County referendums for the 2020 Florida General Election on November 3rd.

    Referendum: Shall the Charter be amended to require that when the Mayor or member of the County Commission resigns prospectively to run for another office the vacancy will be filled by election during the Primary and General Election rather than by appointment or by subsequent Special Election?

    Vote YES to avoidspecial elections. Special elections generally have lower voter turnout than primary and general elections. Plus, special elections incur additional costs to taxpayers.

    Doug Hanks from The Miami Herald further explains this referendum:

    Thesecond charter amendmenton the Miami-Dade ballot would end special elections to replace mayors or county commissioners when they resign in advance to run for a different office.

    State law requires local elected officials to give up their seats once they file to run for a different position (federal offices, such as Congress or president, are exempt from the rule). The resignations can take effect any time before the winner of the race would assume office. The proposed charter change would allow the county to elect a replacement for an outgoing commissioner or mayor in the same election that sparked the required resignation.

    Click here to read The Miami Heralds complete breakdown of the Miami-Dade County referendums for the 2020 Florida General Election on November 3rd.

    Referendum: Shall the Charter be amended to require, commencing with the qualifying for and holding of the General Election in 2024, that, contingent on a change to State law, the election of the Sheriff, Property Appraiser, Tax Collector, and Supervisor of Elections be conducted on a nonpartisan basis and that no ballot shall show the party designation of any candidate for those offices?

    This referendum would change the ballot to remove the REP or DEM label next to the candidates running for Sheriff, Property Appraiser, Tax Collector, and Supervisor of Elections.

    Click here to read The Miami Heralds complete breakdown of the Miami-Dade County referendums for the 2020 Florida General Election on November 3rd.

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    The Constitutional Amendments in the 2020 Florida General Election - coralgableslove.com

    The untold truth of Conan the Barbarian – Looper - October 13, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By the early 1930s, Robert E.Howard was already writing fantasy stories for pulp magazines like Weird Tales. He had previously created a barbarian hero named Kull, who lived in the legendary kingdom of Atlantis. In a 1931 story called "People of the Dark," which deals with reincarnation, Howard first mentioned a black-haired barbarian named Conan, who worshiped a god named Crom. He expanded on the character in 1932, when he rewrote a rejected Kull story into something new. He changed the title from "By This Ax, I Rule" to "The Phoenix on the Sword" and changed the hero from Kull to Conan.

    The two characters were similar in many respects, althoughConan was more interested in women. Also, whereas Kull hailed fromAtlantis and had adventures on that mythical continent, Conan came from a place called Cimmeria, but never visited it in any of Howard's stories.Conan was always a wanderer, an outsider in the kingdoms where he found himself. Even when he became a king, as he did in that first 1932 story, it was through a combination of circumstance and his martial skill, never anything to do with birthright or inheritance. Conan swore by a god named Crom, but didn't exactly worship him, because Crom was a colder, more distant god than that.

    Howard would go on to write a total of 17 Conan stories and novellas for Weird Tales, with the latter being serialized across multiple issues. An 18th Conan story by Howard was published in the magazine Fantasy Fan. By 1936, his interests as a writer had largely turned to Westerns, but that same year, upon learning that his mother was dying of tuberculosis and not expected to regain consciousness, Robert E. Howard died by suicide.

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    The untold truth of Conan the Barbarian - Looper

    House Democrats’ new bill on the 25th Amendment, explained – PolitiFact - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., unveiled a billOct. 9 to establish a commission that could be tasked with determining if a president is no longer fit for office.

    The bill from Raskin, a former constitutional scholar, comes on the heels of President Donald Trumps Oct. 2 announcement of his positive COVID-19 test. The bill would create what would be known as the Commission on Presidential Capacity to Discharge the Powers and Duties of the Office" in accordance with the 25th Amendment to the Constitution.

    The commission would not have the unilateral power to invoke the 25th Amendment and kick Trump or any future president out of the White House. Pelosi and Raskin insisted in a press conference that the move was unrelated to the election less than a month away.

    "This is not about President Trump," said Pelosi. "He will face the judgment of the voters. But he shows the need for us to create a process for future presidents."

    Trump responded to the news by tweeting that Pelosi is angling to one day replace Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden with his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris. There is no factual basis to support that claim, and Pelosi would not sit on the commission the bill would create.

    The Constitution allows for such a commission

    The 25th Amendment, established in 1967 after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, spelled out general procedures to guide the replacement of a president or vice president in the event of death, incapacitation, resignation or removal from office.

    RELATED: What happens if a president or nominee dies or is incapacitated? Around elections, it gets thorny

    The first three sections of the amendment lay out the succession plan for when these top two positions go vacant. They also allow the president to declare himself unable to carry out his duties and temporarily transfer the powers of the presidency to the vice president.

    The fourth and final section is whats relevant to Raskins bill. The section authorizes the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet, or "of such other body as Congress may by law provide," to declare a president "unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office."

    "Legislation like this is provided for in 4," tweeted Brian Kalt, a law professor at Michigan State University and the author of a book on the provision. "It says that the VP and Cabinet invoke 4, but that Congress can legislate a different body to substitute for the Cabinet in that process."

    "It gave Congress the power to replace the Cabinet with such other body as it might create by law," added Joel K. Goldstein, a professor of law emeritus at St. Louis University and the author of two books on the vice presidency, in an email. "If such a body was created, a majority of it would act with the vice president under section 4 of the amendment instead of the Cabinet."

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., gestures to a board displaying the fourth section of the 25th Amendment during a press conference at the Capitol in Washington on Oct. 9, 2020. (AP)

    The bipartisan commission outlined in Raskins bill would consist of 17 members, a mix of medical experts and former high-ranking officials selected by House and Senate leadership.

    The body would include eight physicians with each member of House and Senate leadership appointing two plus four former high-ranking executive branch officials selected by the Republican leaders and four former high-ranking officials chosen by the Democratic leaders.

    The final member, the chair, would be appointed separately by those 16 members.

    Currently, the congressional leadership is made up of Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer from the Democratic Party, along with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy from the Republican Party.

    What happens under the status quo

    The 25th Amendment says that a declaration that the president can no longer carry out his duties made by the vice president and a majority of either the Cabinet or another body determined by lawmakers would elevate the vice president to the position of acting president.

    The president could then restore his powers by declaring that no inability exists, but the same entity that initially transferred power to the vice president would be able to respond by doubling down on their declaration that the president is unable to discharge his duties.

    At that point, the vice president would continue to act as president if Congress, by a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate, agreed that the president remained unable to serve.

    The new panel would not cut the vice president out of the process. "It can act only in concert with the vice president, who is the key actor under the 25th Amendment," Raskin said.

    The process under current law would leave the Cabinet in the mix. "The situation without (Raskins bill) is the situation we have now," Kalt told PolitiFact in an email.

    "The Cabinet has a role in section 4 that this body would take over if the bill passed. Raskin and others feel that the Cabinet is too much under the presidents thumb to take a robust role under section 4," Kalt said. "A more independent group like this would not feel so constrained."

    Leaving the decision to the Cabinet does run the risk that loyalty to the president could override necessary action, Goldstein said. But a commission brimming with doctors carries its own risks, even if mental illness or physical incapacitation were front of mind for the amendments writers.

    RELATED: When can the 25th Amendment be used against a president?

    If, for example, the president were kidnapped, on a plane that went missing, or out of reliable communication, "medical expertise would not be called for," Goldstein said.

    Many in Congress at the time of the amendments writing had misgivings about the idea of a medical commission, Goldstein said. They thought a decision involving the Cabinet would carry more legitimacy, and they worried an independent body could be used to harass the president.

    They also left the language intentionally vague to account for scenarios they couldnt predict.

    "The framers knew that they were not addressing all problems," Goldstein said. "But they realized that if they tried to address everything, they would probably get nothing through."

    More:
    House Democrats' new bill on the 25th Amendment, explained - PolitiFact

    How the 25th Amendment to the Constitution works: A simplified look – New York Post - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Oct. 8 that shes preparing an announcement about the 25th Amendment exciting Democrats who consider the measure a way to depose President Trump.

    The less than 400-word constitutional amendment was ratified in 1967 after numerous concealed White House health issues, especially the heart ailments suffered by President Dwight Eisenhower.

    The amendment says a president can be involuntarily stripped of his powers if hes unable to fulfill his duties.

    Trump is back at the White House after three nights of hospitalization over the weekend for COVID-19 treatment.

    The president said Oct. 6 and Oct. 7 that he has no symptoms, but Pelosi on Oct. 7 said on The View that Trumps use of the steroid dexamethasone to combat the virus may impede his judgment.

    She raised the specter again the next day over Trumps comment to Fox Business, Im back because I am a perfect physical specimen and Im extremely young.

    There are four sections to the 25th Amendment, each dealing with a different aspect of presidential or vice presidential succession.

    Section 1 says the president is replaced by the vice president if he dies or resigns. Section 2 says replacement vice presidents must be confirmed by a majority of both chambers of Congress. Section 3 allows the president to voluntarily and temporarily transfer duties to the vice president.

    And Section 4 allows the vice president and cabinet or another entity chosen by Congress to take power from the president without the chief executives consent.

    There are two ways a president can be forcibly and temporarily stripped of power under Section 4 of the amendment.

    The amendment says the Vice President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments or of such other body as Congress may by law provide must make a written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.

    Spokespeople for Vice President Mike Pence did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but its unlikely that Pence and a majority of Trumps cabinet would strip him of power as they campaign together ahead of the Nov. 3 election.

    Congress has not passed a law describing an alternate entity authorized to make that decision, though the amendment allows lawmakers to do so.

    Michigan State University law professor Brian Kalt wrote in a Lawfare blog analysis in 2019 that Section 4 does empower Congress to replace the Cabinet by designating an alternative group through legislation, but Congress has never done so and the president would presumably veto any such attempt in the middle of an actual struggle.

    Its unclear if Pelosi intends to push for a new legislative procedure to oust a president. But even if such a bill passed the House, it would fail in the Republican-held Senate.

    Impeachment provides Congress a process to remove a president for undefined high crimes and misdemeanors, whereas Section 4 of the 25th Amendment allows only temporary removal of a president if they are unable to perform their duties.

    Under Section 4, a vice president would become Acting President if theres a declaration that the president cannot serve. Congress must review the finding of presidential incapacitation within 25 days and vote by two-thirds in each chamber that the president is indeed temporarily unable to serve.

    Theres legal debate about whether the amendment covers mental illness of a president.

    Saint Louis University law professor Joel K. Goldstein writes in a recent analysis, however, that [t]he legislative history confirms that mental incapacity was a primary concern of the Amendment, citing debate in Congress from the 1960s.

    House Democrats already impeached Trump in December, but the Republican-held Senate acquitted him of charges that he abused his power and obstructed Congress.

    Democrats impeached Trump on the non-criminal charges for encouraging Ukraine to investigate Democrats, including presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son Hunter, who earned a reported $83,000 a month on the board of energy company Burisma while his father led the Obama administrations Ukraine policy.

    Section 3 of the 25th Amendment was invoked several times, including in 2002 and 2007 when President George W. Bush underwent general anesthesia for colonoscopies. In 1985, President Ronald Reagan transferred his powers to Vice President George H.W. Bush for about eight hours when he had a precancerous lesion removed from his colon.

    In 1974, Gerald Ford became president pursuant to Section 1 when President Richard Nixon, facing impeachment, resigned. Four months later, Congress voted to approve, pursuant to Section 2, Fords nomination of former New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to be vice president.

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    How the 25th Amendment to the Constitution works: A simplified look - New York Post

    If you take this common medication, call your doctor and throw it out – BGR - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    If you struggle with chronic health issues like type 2 diabetes, you know how challenging it can be to just live a normal day-to-day life. Meds can help in a big way, and untold millions rely on medications to help them manage their conditions. However, drugs are only helpful if theyre both effective and safe, and a newly-expanded recall of a popular diabetes medication shows that the safe part can be somewhat hit-or-miss.

    In a new company announcement posted by the FDA, a company called Marksans Pharma Limited announces the expanded recall of its metformin hydrochloride extended-release tablets. The drugs are prescribed for the management of diabetes, but these tablets may be tainted with unacceptably high levels of NDMA, or N-Nitrosodimethylamine, a likely human carcinogen.

    The initial recall of the drug was announced way back in early June of this year, but after additional investigation, it became clear that more lots of the drug may have been contaminated with high levels of NDMA. The companys statement reads in part as follows:

    Marksans Pharma Limited, India is voluntarily expanding its earlier initiated recall on June 05, 2020 to include an additional 76 unexpired lots of Metformin Hydrochloride Extended-Release Tablets, USP 500mg, & 750mg to the consumer level. Marksans performed N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) testing of unexpired identified marketed lots and observed that NDMA content in some lots is exceeding the acceptable Daily Intake Limit (ADI) of 96ng/day, therefore, out of an abundance of caution, an additional 76 lots are being recalled.

    NDMA is a contaminant that is found in many foods and even water. Its considered a probably human carcinogen, which means it likely promotes the odds of cancer development. However, its considered to be relatively safe in light concentrations. The issue for Marksans Pharma Limited is that its pills were shown to have an elevated level of the carcinogen, which is unacceptable for sale based on U.S. regulations.

    The FDAs official bulletin includes a full list of the products and lot numbers, ranging from 1,000-count packs of 500 mg tablets to 100-count packs of 750mg tablets. The lot numbers and product codes are also included. The pills were sold under the brand name Time-Cap Labs Inc., so if that sounds familiar and you have some of these pills sitting in your medicine cabinet, you should contact your doctor immediately to see how to proceed.

    Its unsafe to simply stop taking this medication without having an alternative lined up, so make sure you speak to your doctor and get another prescription before tossing these potentially tainted pills in the trash.

    Mike Wehner has reported on technology and video games for the past decade, covering breaking news and trends in VR, wearables, smartphones, and future tech. Most recently, Mike served as Tech Editor at The Daily Dot, and has been featured in USA Today, Time.com, and countless other web and print outlets. His love ofreporting is second only to his gaming addiction.

    Originally posted here:
    If you take this common medication, call your doctor and throw it out - BGR

    Local News In Brief: One-day closure of Ky. 773 – The Independent - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    GRAYSON

    The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet will temporarily close KY 773 near Grayson on Monday for road work at the Little Sandy River bridges.

    Beginning at 7 a.m. Monday, and continuing until about 7 p.m., crews will close Ky. 773 at Bucksaw Junction south of the bridges while contractors work to connect the new road on the bridge replacement project. From the Ky. 7 intersection, Ky. 773 will be open to local traffic access up to Bucksaw Junction. Motorists traveling to or from locations on Ky. 773 south of Bucksaw should detour using Ky. 1.

    Following the one-day closure, Ky. 773 will reopen with one-lane traffic controlled by temporary signal lights south of the bridges. Work in that area will continue over the next couple of weeks to complete the south tie in and the intersection with Bucksaw Junction. Traffic should expect delays and watch for changing traffic patterns.

    Road work schedules are subject to change depending on weather conditions. Motorists are asked to heed all warning signs, slow down in work zones and remain aware of workers and construction equipment when traveling.

    BCC bridge winners named

    ASHLAND

    Bellefonte Country Club bridge winners for Oct. 7 are: first Betty Cooper; second Norma Meek; third Juanita Ditty; fourth Clara Marcum.

    We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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    Local News In Brief: One-day closure of Ky. 773 - The Independent

    Govt to go for restructure, reform in IRSA – The Express Tribune - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    ISLAMABAD:

    The government has decided to remove the federal member of the Indus River System Authority (Irsa) after an inquiry held all the members responsible for sabotaging the telemetry system, aimed at fair distribution of water among provinces, with collaboration of other members.

    The report of the inquiry committee, headed by Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Dr Muhammad Jehanzeb Khan, has been submitted to the cabinet. It has pointed out that Irsa had not been able to put in place a system for monitoring the process of river flows.

    Following the report, the government decided to conduct forensic audit of Irsa through independent management consultancy firm. It also decided to introduce reforms through restructuring of Irsa and allow necessary amendments to the Irsa Act, 1992, in consultation with the provinces.

    The inquiry report pointed out that the PC-1 prepared by Irsa for installation of telemetry system was deficient in defining various hydraulic conditions experienced at the barrages. It further said that IRSA did not build its capacity for observations and measurements (O&M) of the telemetry system and despite experts warnings of short comings of the system installed in 2002, it did not take any action.

    International experts appointed by the World Bank for the assessment of the telemetry system had concluded that despite its faults, the telemetry system was capable of solving the problems if rectification was carried out.

    As the National Engineering Services Pakistan (Nespak) also concluded that the system had outlived its utility due to lack of maintenance, the World Bank arranged $2.5 million for seven pilot sites through the Water Sector Capacity Building and Advisory Services Project (WCAP) to equip Irsa with a modern telemetry system.

    The report raised serious questions about evaluation methodology. It said that the consultant selection committee, comprising four Irsa members and the WCAP team leader, did not exercise due diligence. It pointed out that an international firm was top-ranked at the expression of interest (EOI) stage but was disqualified at the bid evaluation stage.

    The report said that Irsa, as an organisation, lacked expertise in the fields of hydraulics, electronics, software engineering, procurement and monitoring and evaluation (M&E) capacities. Its management structure needs to be realigned to ensure efficient performance of the obligatory functions.

    The report stressed the need for performance audit of Irsa through a reputed management consultancy firm and called for review of the criteria for appointment of the Irsa members. Maximum age limit for the members also needed to be revisited, in terms of their credentials, competence, it recommended.

    The committee held flawed approach of the Irsa members, Sher Zaman Khan of Balochistan, Raqib Khan of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Rao Irshad All Khan of Punjab and Mazhar Ali Shah of Sindh, responsible for aborting the project because of their incompetence, lack of knowledge and shyness from technology. However, the committee could not find any evidence that it was done through any systematic scheme.

    Suitability of current nominees to Irsa may be reassessed by the provincial and federal governments and, if found necessary, make appropriate replacements. It must be ensured that they have the leadership and competence to not only install the telemetry system but steer Irsa through much-needed reforms and restructuring, the report recommended.

    The Water Resources Division had sought approval of committees recommendations from the cabinet. On May 19, 2020, the Cabinet had accorded the approval, in principle, to initiate the process of removal of Irsa members in accordance with Section 6 of Irsa, Act 1992.

    Though, Irsa members from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan and Sindh have since retired after completing their terms, the competence of the incumbent member from Punjab needed to be reassessed for which the government of Punjab might be requested.

    The water resources division is of the view that the federal member of Irsa collaborated with other members in the cancellation of the procurement process. He lacked necessary technical knowledge to undertake the assignment and failed in discharging his duties in terms of Section 6(a) of Irsa Act 1992.

    Therefore, the water resources division said that federal government might serve a notice to the federal member in order to take further action for his replacement with a suitably-qualified and experienced engineer.

    The cabinet considered the water resources divisions summary titled Inquiry into Sabotaging the Installation of Telemetry System by IRSA dated 17th September,2020, and approved the proposal. Accordingly, the performance audit of the Irsa might be allowed through an independent management consultancy firm.

    During discussions, it was pointed out that the role of the federal Irsa member in sabotaging the activity was not clearly mentioned in the inquiry report, whereas the proposal suggested action against him. The water resources minister explained that he was also indirectly involved in slowing down the entire process.

    Read the original:
    Govt to go for restructure, reform in IRSA - The Express Tribune

    Taiwan explores options in case of Examination Yuan abolition – Taiwan News - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Examination Yuan can be abolished during current legislative session. Examination Yuan can be abolished during current legislative session. (CNA photo)

    TAIPEI (Taiwan News) As Taiwanese lawmakers explore replacement options for the Examination Yuan, which will likely be abolished during the current legislative session, the Cabinet said Monday (Oct. 5) that it can take over its responsibility and oversee all examination-related matters in the country.

    In September, the Legislative Yuan's Constitutional Amendment Committee was established to push for legal changes, including lowering the voting age from 20 to 18 and abolishing both the Control Yuan and Examination Yuan. The committee is bipartisan and consists of 22 lawmakers from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), 14 from the Kuomintang (KMT), two from the Taiwan People's Party (TPP), and one from the New Power Party (NPP).

    The lawmakers have pointed out that abolishing the two agencies could save more than NT$1.3 billion (US$44.6 million) annually. They have also stated that the responsibilities of the two Yuans would remain but be transferred to existing or new government organs.

    During a question-and-answer session at the Legislative Yuan on Monday, the Cabinet's personnel office head, Jay Shih (), emphasized that the decision to abolish the Examination Yuan should not be considered solely from an economic viewpoint. He said the discussions should focus on how the constitutional separation of powers can better apply to Taiwan.

    Shih said he will respect any decisions made by the Constitutional Amendment Committee, promising that the Cabinet will have no trouble handling examination-related matters if the proposed abolition passes a public referendum. He added that the Cabinet can set up a special unit to take over previous tasks controlled by the Examination Yuan and that he is confident there will be a smooth transition, reported CNA.

    Link:
    Taiwan explores options in case of Examination Yuan abolition - Taiwan News

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