N.Y. Attorney General Orders Hospital to Resume Youth Transgender Care
N.Y. Attorney General Orders Hospital to Resume Youth Transgender Care
Be sure to follow any specific instructions provided by these agencies to protect your sensitive information and prevent further fraudulent activity.
Read more đ https://lttr.ai/Aoftc
#FederalTradeCommission #AntiPhishingWorkingGroup #SpecificInstructionsProvided
Politics: US trade watchdog sends stern letter regarding Apple News
FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson believes Apple disadvantages conservative media with its algorithm. The consequences are still unclear.
#FederalTradeCommission #Medien #Politik #TimCook #DonaldTrump #Wirtschaft #news
Politik: US-Handelsaufsicht schreibt bösen Brief wegen Apple News
FTC-Vorsitzender Andrew Ferguson glaubt, dass Apple mit seinem Algorithmus konservative Medien benachteiligt. Welche Konsequenzen das hat, ist noch unklar.
#FederalTradeCommission #Medien #Politik #TimCook #DonaldTrump #Wirtschaft #news
FTC Chairman Warns Apple Over News Choices On Its Aggregation Site
#News #Politics #AndrewFerguson #Apple #AppleNews #ElectionLine #FederalTradeCommission #FTC #TimCook
https://deadline.com/2026/02/ftc-apple-news-tim-cook-letter-1236716669/
Media Ratings Site NewsGuard Sues Trump FTC, Claims Unconstitutional Effort âTo Censor Speechâ
#News #Politics #AndrewFerguson #ElectionLine #FederalTradeCommission #FTC #NewsGuard #Newsmax
https://deadline.com/2026/02/newsguard-trump-ftc-lawsuit-1236711308/
â#TrumpMobileâ â #FTC soll Werbeversprechen prĂŒfen | heise online https://www.heise.de/news/US-Handelsaufsicht-soll-Trump-Phone-auf-irrefuehrendes-Marketing-pruefen-11144824.html #TrumpPhone #DonaldTrump #FederalTradeCommission
US trade oversight to examine "Trump Phone" for misleading marketing
Members of Congress and Senators are turning to the FTC, partly because "Made in USA" was promised for the golden smartphone.
#DonaldTrump #FederalTradeCommission #Journal #Mobiles #Smartphone #Wirtschaft #news
US-Handelsaufsicht soll âTrump Phoneâ auf irrefĂŒhrendes Marketing prĂŒfen
Kongressabgeordnete und Senatoren wenden sich an die FTC, unter anderem, weil âMade in USAâ fĂŒr das goldene Smartphone versprochen wurde.
#DonaldTrump #FederalTradeCommission #Journal #Mobiles #Smartphone #Wirtschaft #news
Instacart agrees to refund subscribers $60 million in FTC settlement The grocery app will also stop hiding refund options and obscuring delivery costs. https://s.faithcollapsing.com/g5flt#consumer-protection #federal-trade-commission #ftc #grocery-delivery #instacart #policy
Instacart agrees to refund subscribers $60 million in FTC settlement https://arstechni.ca/5U4Q #federaltradecommission #Consumerprotection #grocerydelivery #instacart #Policy #FTC
Federal Agencies May Soon Lose Power to Regulate Independently of Trumpâs Will
SCOTUS has signaled a willingness to no longer insulate agency personnel from decisions made by the executive branch.Asserting a Personal Role in Warner Bros. Battle, Trump Seeks to Expand His Powers Again
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/us/politics/trump-warner-bros.html
Supreme Court Struggles With How to Insulate the Federal Reserve From Politics
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/us/politics/supreme-court-fed.html
The F.T.C. Chairman Who Tilted the Agency to #Trump
#AndrewFerguson , the chairman of the #FederalTradeCommission , during a #HouseAppropriationsSubcommittee on #FinancialServices and General Government hearing in May.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/08/technology/ftc-andrew-ferguson-regulator.html
Same Product, Same Store, but on Instacart, Prices Might Differ
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/business/instacart-algorithmic-pricing.html
A Key Question for the Supreme Court: What About the Fed?
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/us/supreme-court-fed.html
Civil Discourse â Monday in Court and Beyond â Joyce Vance
Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance
Monday in Court and Beyond
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.comBy Joyce Vance, Dec 08, 2025
Your paid subscription makes Civil Discourse possibleâindependent, informed analysis in a moment when noise can drown out reason. Join a community that refuses to give up on democracyâor on understanding it. âJoyce Vance
Donald Trump fired Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter earlier this year. She sued.
In a landmark 1935 decision, Humphreyâs Executor, the Supreme Court held that Congress could put limits on the presidentâs authority to remove certain executive branch officials. That longstanding precedent has been on a collision course with Donald Trumpâs quest for maximal power for as long as heâs been in office. Today, a Court that has been very sympathetic to Trump heard argument in Slaughterâs case.
The type of executive branch positions at stake are appointments to high-ranking positions in quasi-independent federal agencies like the FTC and others, including the Federal Reserve. The top line question is whether presidents can fire them in the absence of misconduct. We discussed the backstory to Humphreyâs Executor here, back in March. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt fired an FTC Commissioner, writing to him that âyour mind and my mind [donât] go along together on either the policies or the administering of the Federal Trade Commission.â The Court held that Congress intended to restrict a presidentâs power of removal to cases involving inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office, and that Roosevelt couldnât dismiss Humphrey simply because they were of different minds on policy.
That precedent is about as on-point as they come. It suggests that Slaughter, who had done nothing wrong, should win her case. She was advised of her termination in an email that said her âcontinued service on the FTC is inconsistent with [the Trump] Administrationâs priorities.â
But our tea leaf reading at the start of the term, which concluded that the Court would weigh in for Trump, appears to have been on target. We based that analysis on the fact that the Court declined to stay Slaughterâs dismissal from the FTC until it could hear the case. If there had been a majority, or something close to it, inclined to follow Humphreyâs Executor and rein Trump in, the Court would have prevented the firing from taking effect until it could hear the case. The fact that they allowed her dismissal to take effect implied the Court was prepared to undo the precedent that would have prohibited it. Oral argument bore out that conclusion.
Justice Kagan went straight to the heart of the matter when Solicitor General John Sauer argued the governmentâs case. She pointed out that âthe central proposition of your briefâ was that the Vesting Clause of the Constitution gives all of the executive power to the president. âOnce youâre down this road, itâs a little difficult to see how you stop,â Justice Kagan said. Sauer talked over her and around her, but never disagreed. The governmentâs position, even though it didnât go this far today, is that everything that happens in the executive branch is at the presidentâs pleasure. Everything. That could include matters like who DOJ indicts, what businesses the EPA regulates, and all sorts of individualized decisions that are currently made by people with expertise, guided by long-standing practices and ethical constraints.
âTo that point, when Justice Kagan asked whether a decision against Slaughter would apply to other similarly situated agencies, Sauer ducked. He told her the Court could just âreserveâ making a decision on other agencies because those cases were not in front of the Court today. Justice Kagan responded that âlogic has consequences,â and that even if the Court dropped a footnote saying it wasnât deciding other cases as Sauer suggested, it would just be a dodge; it wouldnât mean anything for future cases, where the government would be free to argue for an unprecedented level of control in the hands of the president, using Slaughter as support, if the Court decides it in the manner the government requested.â Joyce Vanceâs QuoteâŠ
Justice Sotomayor said to Sauer, âYouâre asking us to destroy the structure of government and to take away from Congress its ability to protect its idea that the government is better structured with some agencies that are independent.â Justice Alito invited Sauer to respond. âThe sky will not fall,â he said, adding, âThe entire government will move toward accountability to the people.â Justice Sotomayor ultimately responded, âWhat youâre saying is the president can do more than the law permits.â There was silence for a moment. Then Sauer hurriedly repeated a few of his earlier points and concluded that Humphrey should be reversed.
We donât know precisely how the Court will rule, but the Chief Justice tipped his hand a bit, saying âthe precedentâ had ânothing to do with what the FTC looks like today,â and claiming that the FTC back then was different, and âhad very little, if any executive power,â suggesting different rules might apply today for an agency that had become more powerful. Itâs the sophistic kind of reasoning we have seen before when the Roberts Court twists itself into pretzel logic so that it can reverse longstanding precedentâwhile pretending it is doing nothing of the sort.
A decision in this case is likely to come at the end of the term, late next June or the first week in July, although it could come at any time. It is likely to be one of the most consequential of this term.
A lot more happened today that is worthy of our attention. But because there is so much of it, instead of trying to cover it all, Iâll flag some of the most important developments here, and you can read further on any of them that interest you. We will take them up in more detail as they develop.
Editorâs Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Monday in Court and Beyond
#1935 #ChiefJusticeRoberts #CivilDiscourse #December82025 #DOJ #FBIAgents #FederalTradeCommission #FiredForKneeling #FTCCommissioner #HumphreySExecutor #JohnSauer #JoyceVance #JusticeAlito #JusticeKagan #JusticeSotomayor #MortgageFraudByTrump #ProPublica #RebeccaSlaughter #SCOTUS #USSupremeCourt
Supreme Court Seems Poised to Give Trump More Power to Fire Independent Officials
Who Is Andrew Ferguson, the FTC Chairman Who Tilted the Agency to Trump?