LGBTQ people and those with low incomes, especially women of color, rely on Obamacare's birth control benefit and other preventive services, but advocates say the Trump administration is targeting their ability to access health care, even if Republicans can't repeal the law entirely.
LGBTQ right advocates excoriated the Trump administration following Roger Severino's appointment, accusing the administration of putting "the fox in charge of the hen house.”
The Department of Justice will review pre-existing agreements to reform police departments nationwide, but a district court judge says there's no need to scrutinize and delay in Baltimore.
“This bill is ridiculously vague and could be used against anyone maliciously,” Amy Bright, executive director of New Greenville, said of a pair of bills introduced this week by North Carolina Republicans.
I'd like us to question not just whether such a device is necessary—given that people have been boning for millennia without tracking their genital data—but if it's even wise.
The case provides greater employment protections for people who aren't straight, at least in the states in the Seventh Circuit. But what it doesn't do is make the thorny issue of figuring out how to consistently apply Title VII any easier.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said he'll examine all 1,442 citations giving him discretion in regulating Obamacare for ways to dismantle the health-care reform law.