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USA: Trump attacks in state climate laws – 04/09/2025 – Environment
USA: Trump attacks in state climate laws – 04/09/2025 – Environment
– Catch up on breaking White House updates, U.S. political headlines, and the latest celebrity drama shaping America’s entertainment world.
The Trump government is intensifying attacks against laws and lawsuits that seek to oblige fossil fuel companies to bear the costs of climate change.
There are dozens of legal disputes ongoing in the United States, which have gained importance as the government weakens federal efforts to combat global warming.
Last Friday (29), the Justice Department asked a judge to permanently block the new New York Climate Superfundo Law, which requires oil companies to pay billions of dollars to finance extreme heat protection projects, flood fires, and other climate damage.
“New York has declared war against those responsible for providing reliable and accessible energy to the country,” wrote government lawyers.
Governor Kathy Hochul’s advisor Ken Lovet has countered that the law aims to “protect ordinary New Yorkers, not corporate polluters,” and accused the federal government of “abuse of authority.”
In addition to New York, the Justice Department also sued Vermont, the only other state with a similar law. Similar proposals are under discussion in California, Maryland, Massachusetts and New Jersey.
On the other hand, the government adopted an unusual legal tactic: it pre -tried the states of Hawaii and Michigan to prevent them from processing oil companies.
Legal experts were surprised by this approach, considered extraordinary. In the case of Hawaii, the state filed its action the next day, accusing companies such as BP, Chevron and Exxon Mobil to hide information on climate change and demanding that they share damage costs. Michigan also promised not to be intimidated.
The companies asked the court to suspend the lawsuits while the federal case follows.
Hawaii governor Josh Green said the action seeks to “pass on the costs of the climate crisis to those who have caused them and protect citizens.” The complaint highlights the vulnerability of Hawaii to floods and fires, such as May 2023.
Business lawyers claim that the state depends strongly on oil and that local law considers the proper supply of fuels as essential for the health and safety of the population.
The Trump administration and its allies say these lawsuits threaten energy industry and national security.
There is also a movement to pass in Congress a federal law that protects fossil fuel companies against processes, similar to the immunization that immunizes arms manufacturers. In June, 16 Republican prosecutors asked the Justice Department to support this protection.
The government did not comment on the request.
These prosecutors also suggested cutting federal funds from states that hold businesses for the climate – which would affect New York and Vermont.
Industry groups and republican prosecutors have also filed on climate measurement, claiming that they function as disguised regulations and that federal laws are precedence over the state. They also say that penalizing companies would increase energy prices.
This claim is challenged. In an opinion in the case of Vermont, economists – in the case of Nobel Procurement Joseph Stiglitz – argued that prices are defined by supply, demand and cost of production, and not for punctual payments such as those required by law.
States argue that they have the authority to protect their citizens. In Vermont, environmental groups support the law, calling it “constitutional exercise of state sovereignty to raise resources and protect the health and well-being of the population.”
Since 2017, about 36 oils against oil companies have been opened in the US. None have been trial yet, but some advance after years of jurisdiction disputes.
The Supreme Court may end up getting involved, especially in the face of conflicting decisions in state courts. In October, the Maryland Court will review a Baltimore appeal after the rejection of its case. The Justice Department has asked the decision to be upheld.
Meanwhile, Republican prosecutors intensify efforts to block processes. The legal shield proposal for oil companies is inspired by a 2005 law that protects arms manufacturers.
Environmental groups and local governments are already opposed to the idea. “It’s a continuous attempt by the oil and gas industry to escape legal consequences,” said Richard Wiles, from the Integrated to Climate Center.
This year, almost 200 NGOs asked Democrats to reject the legal shield. The National Candidos Association also approved a resolution against any legislation that limits access to justice or grants immunity to companies.
“There are growing damage in all parts of the country,” said Brigid Shea, the commissioner of Travis County in Texas. “And there is still a lack of political will to act. Going to justice is one of the few tools we have.”
USA: Trump attacks in state climate laws – 04/09/2025 – Environment
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World News
Skewed journalism – 11/14/2025 – Hélio Schwartsman
Skewed journalism – 11/14/2025 – Hélio Schwartsman
– Catch up on breaking White House updates, U.S. political headlines, and the latest celebrity drama shaping America’s entertainment world.
The BBC committed bad journalism by biasedly editing two different speeches by Donald Trump, giving the false impression that he made a direct call for violent action on the day of the invasion of the Capitol, in 2021. The story has already cost two of the broadcaster’s positions their jobs and could leave a huge bill for the British taxpayer. Agent Orange threatens to sue the BBC for US$1 billion in damages.
Journalism, as it tries to draft the story in real time, is an activity more prone to errors than occupations that deal with repetitive and more easily “protocolizable” tasks, such as surgeries or air transport. The problem is not so much making mistakes, but always erring towards the same side on politically charged issues.
The internal report that highlighted the error in Trump’s case also identified biases in the BBC’s coverage of Gaza and trans people. What to do? Part of the problem is that different professions attract different audiences. It is common to see a greater concentration of leftists in activities such as journalism and academia and of rightists in military careers or in the financial market.
It is a self-selection process based on personality traits and tastes. I don’t see much that can be done to counter this. To make matters worse, we live in a moralistic era, which socially rewards engagement and militancy.
The path that seems feasible to me is to create a culture that clearly distinguishes the personal sphere, in which militancy is legitimate, from the professional one, which needs to be guided by technical rigor and distancing from preconceived positions.
The concern of reporters and editors when preparing texts for publication should be to inform their readers and not transform the world. They also need to develop a kind of professional paranoia, constantly asking themselves if they haven’t let themselves be carried away by their preferences and ended up crossing some red line.
Professional journalism, to fulfill its mission, needs to be different from social media.
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Skewed journalism – 11/14/2025 – Hélio Schwartsman
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World News
Tariffs: Trump ready to exempt coffee, cocoa and bananas – 11/14/2025 – Market
Tariffs: Trump ready to exempt coffee, cocoa and bananas – 11/14/2025 – Market
– Catch up on breaking White House updates, U.S. political headlines, and the latest celebrity drama shaping America’s entertainment world.
United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said this Friday (14) that President Donald Trump is ready to fulfill promises to grant tariff exemptions to some foods and other products that are not produced in the USA.
Greer told CNBC in a live interview that there are some “micro areas” of trade in non-U.S.-produced products, such as coffee, cocoa and bananas, where the U.S. doesn’t need tariffs.
He said the time is ripe for this, after approaching trade agreements with four Latin American countries on Thursday (13).
“And so the president has decided that now that we have this in place, we have these agreements in hand, it’s time to remove some of these tariffs on products. Products that we don’t make here.”
The White House announced on Thursday (13) that the country had reached preliminary understandings for trade agreements with Argentina, Ecuador, El Salvador and Guatemala.
According to the government, the agreements should be concluded in the next two weeks and open markets for US agricultural and industrial production. The four countries have committed not to impose taxes on digital services from big techs.
The White House indicated that the general tariffs of 10% imposed on products from Argentina, El Salvador and Guatemala, and 15% on those originating in Ecuador, will remain unchanged, but that there will be a reduction in a certain number of goods.
According to the White House, the American government has maintained good conversations with other countries in the region. Brazil, the target of 50% surcharges, was not mentioned in the agreements.
Tariffs: Trump ready to exempt coffee, cocoa and bananas – 11/14/2025 – Market
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US Senate approves agreement to end shutdown – 11/10/2025 – Market
US Senate approves agreement to end shutdown – 11/10/2025 – Market
– Catch up on breaking White House updates, U.S. political headlines, and the latest celebrity drama shaping America’s entertainment world.
The United States Senate approved this Monday (10) an agreement that ends the longest government shutdown in the country’s history, ending a weeks-long impasse that interrupted food benefits for millions of people, left hundreds of thousands of employees without pay and caused delays in air traffic.
The proposal, which had 60 votes in favor and 40 against, received support from almost all Republicans in the House and eight Democrats, who tried, unsuccessfully, to link government funding to the renewal of health subsidies that expire at the end of the year.
The agreement provides for a vote in December on these benefits, which serve 24 million Americans, but does not guarantee their extension.
The text restores resources for federal agencies whose budget expired on October 1st and suspends President Donald Trump’s campaign to reduce civil service, preventing layoffs until January 30th.
The bill now heads to the Republican-controlled House of Representatives. The President of the House, Mike Johnson, stated that he intends to approve it by Wednesday (12) and send it to Trump for sanction. The president classified the agreement to reopen the government as “very good”.
The agreement extends federal funding until January 30, keeping the government on track to add about $1.8 trillion a year to the public debt, which already totals $38 trillion.
The decision comes a week after Democrats won significant victories in state elections in New Jersey and Virginia and elected a democratic socialist as the new mayor of New York.
The outcome provoked irritation among Democratic parliamentarians, who point out the lack of guarantees that the Senate and the House, both under Republican control, agree to extend health subsidies.
“We wish we could do more,” said Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois, second in the Democratic leadership. “The government shutdown seemed like an opportunity to move forward with better policies. It didn’t work.”
A Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in late October showed that 50% of Americans blamed Republicans for the shutdown, while 43% blamed Democrats.
American stock markets rose this Monday, driven by news of progress in the agreement to reopen the government.
Trump had already unilaterally canceled billions of dollars in spending and reduced the federal payroll by hundreds of thousands of employees, interfering with Congress’s constitutional authority over the budget.
These measures violated previously passed budget laws, and some Democrats questioned why they should support new spending deals under these conditions.
The approved text does not include specific mechanisms to prevent Trump from promoting new budget cuts.
On the other hand, the agreement guarantees financing for the Snap food subsidy program until September 30 of next year, avoiding possible interruptions if Congress once again paralyzes the government during the period.
US Senate approves agreement to end shutdown – 11/10/2025 – Market
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