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| Donald Trump said he was pleased with the court’s decision. Doug Mills/The New York Times |
The Supreme Court ruled that Trump can stay on ballots
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that states cannot bar Donald Trump from running for another term, rejecting a challenge from Colorado that threatened to remove the former president from ballots around the nation.
The decision, while not a surprise, is the most important ruling concerning a presidential election since George W. Bush prevailed in Bush v. Gore in 2000.
The case was based on a constitutional provision, Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, that prohibits insurrectionists from holding office. All the justices’ opinions focused on legal issues without taking a position on whether Trump had committed insurrection.
All nine justices said that states could not bar candidates from the presidency based on the provision, while five conservative justices ruled that Congress must act to give Section 3 force. Here are highlights from the ruling.
“I was very honored by a 9-to-nothing vote,” Trump said in an interview on a conservative radio show.
What’s next: The decision comes during a pivotal week for the presidential race: Today is Super Tuesday, when many states hold their presidential primaries, and on Thursday President Biden is scheduled to deliver the State of the Union address. In the coming months, the Supreme Court may rule on a host of other legal issues related to Trump.
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| People gathered at Trocadéro Square in Paris to watch live coverage of the voting. Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters |
France made abortion access a constitutional right
French legislators voted to explicitly enshrine access to abortion in the Constitution, making France the first country to take that step.
“We are sending the message to all women: Your body belongs to you, and no one has the right to control it in your stead,” Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said before lawmakers voted, 780 to 72, for the amendment.
The amendment declares abortion to be a “guaranteed freedom,” which means that future governments will not be able to drastically modify the current laws that fund abortion for women who seek it up to 14 weeks into their pregnancies, according to the French justice minister.
The decision to amend the Constitution was spurred in part by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, ending the constitutional right to abortion in America. But the move also reflects the widespread support for abortion in France, and a successful campaign by a coalition of feminist activists and lawmakers from multiple parties.
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| The U.N. found evidence of sexual violence at a rave in Israel. Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times |
The U.N. found evidence of sexual violence in Hamas attack
A U.N. report found “reasonable grounds” to believe that sexual violence was committed in multiple locations during the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack on Israel, and “clear and convincing information” that sexual violence was inflicted against some women and children while they were held hostage in the Gaza Strip.
It was compiled by a team of experts deployed by the U.N. to Israel and the West Bank. In the report, they said they had also heard accounts of sexual violence against Palestinians that implicated Israeli security forces and settlers.
At the White House, Vice President Kamala Harris pressed for a pause in fighting in Gaza in a meeting with a member of Israel’s war cabinet.Continue reading the main story
| THE LATEST NEWS |
Around the World
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| Jens Schlueter/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
| Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, was accused of revealing war secrets after he publicly suggested that Britain, France and the U.S. might be secretly helping Ukraine target powerful weapons.More “zombie fires” than usual are smoldering underground in Canada and may contribute to a record wildfire season there.Veterinarians are racing to save animals from Texas’ largest wildfire ever. |
Tech
| E.U. regulators fined Apple nearly $2 billion for thwarting competition among music streaming rivals. A patchwork of local rules is also upending Apple’s control of the App Store.Tech giants like Apple, Google and Microsoft are making noticeable shifts in their products to comply with new regulations around the world.Google has spent well over $1 billion to settle several relatively small cases and clear the decks for upcoming court fights that could reshape the entire internet industry. |
Asia
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| Yonhap/EPA, via Shutterstock |
| The South Korean government said that it was moving to suspend the licenses of thousands of doctors who walked off the job two weeks ago amid a dispute with the government over the future of health care in the country.China’s leaders said they hoped for about 5 percent economic growth this year, an ambitious target for an economy facing its biggest challenges in decades.Racial profiling is emerging as a flashpoint in Japan. |
What Else Is Happening
| Women are using new drugs like Ozempic to lose weight in order to increase their chances of conception and a healthy pregnancy, but little is known about the risk of taking the drugs before or during pregnancy.A Formula 1 driver’s Ferrari Testarossa, which was stolen in 1995, was finally recovered in Britain.Southeast London has temporarily lost one of its most famous residents: a giant stuffed walrus that has been on display at a taxidermy gallery for more than 100 years. |
A Morning Read
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| Thilo Parg |
Denisovans, a group of early humans that survived for hundreds of thousands of years before going extinct, are nowhere near as well known as their Neanderthal cousins.
But DNA evidence, found in teeth, bone fragments and the dirt of cave floors, shows that Denisovans may have covered far more ground than the Neanderthals did. Denisovans were able to thrive across thousands of miles and in diverse environments, displaying a versatility that rivaled our own.
| SPORTS NEWS |
A wild ending at Valencia: Jude Bellingham’s red card and the goal that never was.
“Poetry in motion”: A former junior coach of Phil Foden, the Manchester City star, watches his pupil.
Tensions escalate: Red Bull divisions remain with the Christian Horner controversy.
| ARTS AND IDEAS |
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| Todd Heisler/The New York Times |
It takes a team to make Oscar audiences laugh
About two dozen writers will contribute to Jimmy Kimmel’s script for the Oscars this Sunday, a little-heralded job that faces extra scrutiny this year after Jo Koy criticized his writers during an uncomfortable Golden Globes monologue in January.
Joke writers sometimes have to navigate a gantlet of publicists, managers and even family members before a performer sees their material and tries to get laughs from a self-conscious audience that grows more sour as losses mount. One writer likened writing for award shows to giving a best man’s speech at the world’s biggest wedding: “You want it to be a little bit edgy, but not so much that it turns off the grandparents.”
| RECOMMENDATIONS |
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| Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop Stylist: Andie McMahon. |
Cook: This take on ricotta toast roasts grapes with fresh thyme and salt until the skins pucker and the flesh grows slouchy.







