legislation, by the women s health protection act, that will have a national standard guaranteeing abortion rights access. in the meantime, we re seeing the devastating consequences of abortion bans, kate cox s story, one story, just the tip of the iceberg. and we have this bell tool going on right now at the supreme court, yesterday, having agreed to hear a case out of idaho. about whether women, who have emergencies are in the e.r. in idaho should get stabilizing treatment, which might include abortion for the pregnancy complications. let me get to that, that prohibits doctors from performing abortions even in medical i m urgencies. what does that mean in the state of idaho? idaho is claiming that only if your at death s door can you get an abortion. and they re fighting, there s a national law that says every person who is having any kind
voting, against labor laws, and holding back people getting it adequate. by exposing the changes in legislation, and alerting the public of the need for urgencies of those issues. 60 years later, next weekend, thousands will head to washington to deal with the issues that we confront today, and to continue the same spirit that civil rights and labor leaders, and others stood for 60 years ago the same weekend. we will be in washington meadows the first big national gathering since affirmative action was just about destroyed by the supreme court. as women s right to choose, hate crimes against blacks, jews, gays, lgbtq, it s risen. higher percentages than we have seen.
game names that you put up on the board. i think we have a very compelling story to tell. i am the only hispanic candidate from either party, that s running, i think that s important, i think that is an important voice for the republican party on issues like the one we are discussing, such as immigration. but other issues that are important for me to be part of the conversation. we had a great first ten days of fundraising, we raised 1 million dollars in ten days. if you extrapolate that over the course of an entire quarter, that is $9 million in our hard money account. we showed that committees that were supporting my candidacy had roughly 13 and a half million dollars. when you consider the hard money that we also raised. and i think that it is really important for candidates like me to have an opportunity to tell our story, the story of miami is a story of low taxes, of increased wage growth, of the lowest unemployment in america and one of the major urgencies that has seen a precip
discussions are not only how are we gonna generate real savings. short term, probably through discretionary spending. longer time, with everything on the table. but also, we need a commitment that there is no additional borrowing until our structural situation is under control other than from urgencies. my, how we got about a minute left. if you are brought to the negotiating table, what s the one thing each side would absolutely have to give up? they re going to have to come into the middle between what the house republicans are asking for and a clean debt ceiling the democrats wanted. i think what they absolutely need to do is extend the debt ceiling for a longer than just one year. this has to go past the election. and during that period, we re gonna have to talk about the real issues at play. avoiding insolvency, raising revenues, both sides have to stop telling stories that just aren t sure what their fiscal situation. we are gonna have to raise taxes. we re gonna have to rais
offering treatment that they feel is right for a patient against the risk of legal repercussions. that might cost them their livelihoods or even land them in prison. they ve been soliciting the opinions of hospital lawyers and ethicists. they ve been considering institutional liability and struggling to reinterpret concepts, such as due diligence. in short, in a context of fear and bureaucratic anxiety, they have been scrambling, trying to reconcile abortion law language with the daily urgencies of women. they are encountering on gurneys in emergency room cubicles. just how endangered does a sick patient have to be before her doctor can intervene? and how much time can a doctor and her colleagues take in deciding before it is too late for a patient? let s start right there because when a woman s enduring sepsis,