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Thursday, April 20, 2023

Supreme Court pauses action on mifepristone for a second time

Also: McCarthy's $4.5 trillion debt limit plan.

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The Daily Briefing

YOUR MORNING NEWS ROUNDUP

Thu Apr 20 2023

 

Nicole Fallert | Newsletter Writer

Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., center, chair of the House Pro-Choice Caucus, is joined by House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., far right, and members of the Democratic Women's Caucus at an event calling for access to abortion medication, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, April 19, 2023.

Also: McCarthy's $4.5 trillion debt limit plan.

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An administrative stay on restrictions to access to the abortion pill mifepristone has been extended through Friday. Also in the news: The GOP has unveiled a $4.5 trillion debt ceiling plan and the white homeowner charged in the shooting of a Black teen who knocked at the wrong address pleaded not guilty.

Now, here we go with Thursday's news.

Abortion pill restrictions will be on hold through Friday

Associate Justice Samuel Alito extended an administrative stay on restrictions on access to mifepristone that were set to take effect at midnight on Wednesday, including a requirement that Americans sit for in-person visits with doctors and a prohibition on the drug being dispensed through the mail. Now those restrictions will continue to be on hold until 11:59 p.m. Friday. The latest order from Alito does not signal which way the court is leaning but does temporarily delay restrictions abortion rights advocates warned could limit availability of the drug. Read more

Mifepristone is ''safer than Tylenol,'' experts say amid court battle over major abortion pill.
Republicans lean into anti-trans messaging ahead of 2024. But will it mobilize voters?
As states cut Medicaid, some fear they'll mistakenly end coverage for millions of eligible people.

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Director of the Christian Defense Coalition Rev. Patrick Mahoney sets signs up in front of the U.S. Supreme Court Building on April 19, 2023 in Washington, DC.

Anna Moneymaker, Getty Images

GOP debt limit plan proposes $4.5 trillion

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy unveiled a Republican debt ceiling plan Wednesday that includes $4.5 trillion in cuts, drawing immediate resistance from President Joe Biden as their standoff intensified before a potential government default this summer.

McCarthy's "Limit, Save, Grow Act" would return discretionary spending to Fiscal Year 2022 levels, limit the growth of spending to 1% per year, reallocate unspent COVID funds and limit other government spending, the speaker said. The cuts would be tied to a $1.5 trillion increase of the debt ceiling.

The debt ceiling is the maximum amount the U.S. government can spend on its existing obligations, including Social Security and military salaries. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified Congress at the start of this year that the U.S. could default on its debt as soon as June.  
Biden responded to McCarthy by reaffirming he won't negotiate the debt ceiling, which he's argued should be raised by Congress without parameters, like it has under past presidents including Donald Trump. 

More from Washington: President Joe Biden is set to meet Colombia's president Thursday despite odds in their approach to the war on drugs.

More news to know now

''They forced me to dig my own grave'': Ukrainian victims tell Congress of Russian torture.
Tyre Nichols' family filed a lawsuit against the Memphis police, citing multiple forms of negligence.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is the latest Democrat to challenge Biden in 2024.
Facebook could owe you money. Here's how to get cash from Meta's $725 million settlement.
On today's 5 Things podcast,USA TODAY White House Correspondent Joey Garrison outlines the debt limit fight in Congress.  Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify, or your smart speaker.

What's the weather today? Check your local forecast here.

Man charged with shooting Ralph Yarl pleads not guilty in first court appearance

Andrew Lester, the white homeowner charged in the shooting of Ralph Yarl, a Black teenager who mistakenly went to his home, pleaded not guilty on Wednesday during his first court appearance. Lester told investigators he saw a Black male pulling on his exterior door handle and fired two shots within seconds of opening the interior door. Lester said he was "scared to death" and thought someone was breaking in, the statement said. Yarl denied pulling a door handle. The shooting is one of three recent cases in which young people were shot after being in the wrong place.  Read more

In upstate New York, a 20-year-old woman was killed after the car she was riding in pulled into the wrong driveway.
Two cheerleaders in Texas were shot after one tried to get into the wrong car, thinking it was hers.
On race and social justice: White people were kept out of prison during COVID. Blacks and Latinos were left behind bars.

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Protesters attend a rally for Black teen Ralph Yarl in front of U.S. District Court on April 18, 2023 in Kansas City, Missouri.

Chase Castor, Getty Images

Third person charged with murder in mass shooting at Alabama Sweet 16 party

Two teen brothers and a 20-year-old man have been arrested and charged with murder in connection to a mass shooting at a Sweet 16 party in Alabama that killed four people and wounded dozens more, officials announced Wednesday. The men have each been charged with four counts of reckless murder in the Saturday shooting at the Dadeville birthday party that also injured 32, officials said at a press conference. More charges are likely, including charges related to the 32 victims who were injured, officials said. Read more

A man fired on motorists after killing four people, including his parents, in the Maine shooting on I-295.
If your missing child runs away from home, the police may not look for them.

Just for subscribers:

Bonded through atrocity, men set out to correct the record of Louisiana's Colfax Massacre.
''They couldn't find the keys'': How 40 migrants died in the Juárez fire.
The Louisville bank shooter's gun could return to the streets. Here's how to stop it.
Stolen bases are cool again! Here's how MLB's new rules created the perfect storm for would-be thieves.

These articles are for USA TODAY subscribers. You can sign up here

Deadly, record-smashing heat wave scorches Asia

Much of southern and southeastern Asia is enduring a deadly, record-smashing heat wave, one that's being called the continent's worst ever recorded in April. Several all-time record high temperatures have been broken, including a torrid 113.7 degrees in Tak, Thailand, the nation's hottest reading on record. In India, 13 people died of heat stroke, and 50 to 60 others were hospitalized after attending a ceremony in the city of Navi Mumbai, located in the western state of Maharashtra last Sunday. Meanwhile,  hundreds of weather stations across China broke their record for high temperature for April this week. Read more

What's trending

Is Temu legit? Cybersecurity expert warns it's not the bargain you want.
Frank Ocean canceled his Coachella Weekend two performance due to a leg injury.
There's now a ''Twilight'' TV series underway with Stephenie Meyer involved.
Alec Baldwin's movie ''Rust'' will restart filming after the prop gun shooting death of Halyna Hutchins.
Disney World is bringing back all annual passes for first time since 2021.

Photo of the day: 2023 NHL playoffs

Brandon Montour scored twice and the Florida Panthers had four third-period goals to beat the Presidents' Trophy-winning Bruins 6-3 on Wednesday night and send Boston to its first loss in 10 games. Click here for our recap of last night's competition and check out more photos from the 2023 NFL playoffs.

Nhl Stanley Cup Playoffs Florida Panthers At Boston Bruins

Game 2: Florida Panthers center Sam Bennett (9) pokes his stick at Boston Bruins left wing Tomas Nosek (92), who is exchanging words with Panthers left wing Matthew Tkachuk.

Winslow Townson, USA TODAY Sports

Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY, sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@usatoday.com or follow along with her musings on  Twitter. Support journalism like this – subscribe to USA TODAY here.

Associated Press contributed reporting.

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