Archive
Media Mentions
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Grondahl: Constitutional scholar outlines impeachable offenses
November 5, 2019
Cass Sunstein, a Harvard Law School professor and a leading constitutional law scholar, has written one of the most compelling books on impeachment. Just don’t ask him if President Donald Trump should be impeached. “Of course he should be,” Sunstein writes in the preface to a newly reprinted edition of his book, “Impeachment: A Citizen's Guide.” He adds, “He obstructed justice not once but ten times.” In the next paragraph Sunstein writes: “Alternatively: Of course he shouldn’t be. The very question is ridiculous.” He adds, “This book does not choose between these two views. It does not say whether President Donald Trump should be impeached.”
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Aux États-Unis, « les efforts visant à saper la réglementation climatique sont menés sur tous les fronts »
November 5, 2019
Interview with Laura Bloomer, Legal Fellow at the HLS Environmental & Energy Law Program: Depuis son arrivée à la Maison-Blanche, Donald Trump accumule les mesures de détricotage des réglementations environnementales américaines. Lundi 4 novembre, il a officiellement informé les Nations Unies la sortie des États-Unis de l’accord de Paris, retrait qui doit prendre effet dans un an, le 4 novembre 2020. Laura Bloomer, conseillère juridique au sein du programme pour l’environnement et l’énergie d’Harvard, suit ces dossiers de très près.
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Trump carbon rule defense: A double-edged sword?
November 5, 2019
The Trump administration's courtroom defense of its Clean Power Plan repeal could blunt its own efforts to craft standards for carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, legal experts say. EPA has taken an unexpected approach to defending its rollback of the Obama-era rule against challenges by states, environmental groups, public health organizations, and even industry and conservative groups in federal court, Joseph Goffman and Caitlin McCoy of Harvard University's Environmental and Energy Law Program wrote in a recent analysis...When an agency presents an argument that it is making a reasonable interpretation of the law, courts will often defer to the agency's expertise under the doctrine known as Chevron deference. But EPA might have trouble defending a rule that says the best approach for states to reduce emissions from existing power plants is to take action at the facility level, or "inside the fence line," Goffman and other legal experts said. EPA could have argued both that the Clean Air Act compelled the agency's interpretation that power plant regulations could only use an "inside the fence line" approach, and that — even in the event that it didn't — EPA had selected a reasonable option among a number of possibilities in developing the ACE rule, Goffman said. "The riddle is, why didn't they do that?" he said. "Why did they just argue that the statutory language is compelled and not argue that it is reasonable?"
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Trump Formally Begins U.S. Withdrawal From Paris Climate Agreement in Latest Effort to Roll Back Regulations
November 5, 2019
President Donald Trump formally began the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the Paris climate accord on Monday, a move announced in 2017 that will take another year to complete. The State Department formally submitted a request to withdraw from the pact signed by roughly 200 countries on Monday, the earliest date Trump can make the official notification. “With or without the paperwork the administration is doing to withdraw from Paris, they have effectively withdrawn from any kind of commitment already,” said Joe Goffman, executive director of the Environmental and Energy Law Program at Harvard Law School.
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MSNBC LIVE | Impeachment: The White House in Crisis
November 5, 2019
HLS Visiting Professor Jennifer Taub comments on impeachment inquiry.
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Our unrepresentative representative government
November 4, 2019
Lawrence Lessig says voter suppression, gerrymandering, big-money politics, and the Electoral College are undermining our democracy…
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Laurence Tribe: Comparing Nixon to Trump Is ‘Like Comparing Apples to an Apple Orchard’
November 4, 2019
Harvard Law Professor Laurence H. Tribe on Friday spoke with CNN chief legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin in a wide-ranging discussion, beginning with Tribe’s formative academic years as a mathematician and ending with an in-depth discussion of President Donald Trump’s tumultuous tenure in office. Tribe, who wrote the 2018 book “To End a Presidency: The Power of Impeachment” — which he co-authored with attorney Joshua Matz, the latest addition to House Democrats’ impeachment legal team — has made no secret of his opposition to President Trump. The constitutional scholar on Friday made his case for impeachment, addressing some of the common defenses against it as he went.
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Walmart’s Strategy When Wading Into Culture Wars: Offend Few
November 4, 2019
Walmart is getting out of the vaping business, but still sells cigarettes. It is working to reduce plastic packaging for the products on its shelves, but continues to use plastic grocery bags in its checkout lines. After a gunman killed 22 people at a Walmart in El Paso this summer, the retailer said it would no longer offer certain types of ammunition, but stopped short of banning customers from carrying their guns into stores. When navigating the nation’s culture wars, Walmart follows a strategy is has honed for years: alienate as few customers as possible and do no harm to its core business...The same year Walmart raised its starting wage, the company also eliminated health care coverage for tens of thousands of part-time employees. The company says it provides health insurance to 1.1 million workers and their family members. “Their strategy is to give a little here and there, but not provide the thing that is most valuable to workers, which is collective bargaining,” said Sharon Block, who ran the policy office at the Labor Department during the Obama administration and now teaches at Harvard Law School. “That is the only way Walmart workers are going to make any real gains.”
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Suing Big Oil Is How States Tackle Climate Change
November 4, 2019
An article by Noah Feldman: A growing number of cities and states want to turn climate change lawsuits against oil companies into the next tobacco or opioid litigation. In principle, that seems like a truly terrible idea. Such lawsuits will likely do even less to remedy the effects of climate change than similar suits did for lung cancer or opioid addiction. Yet on closer analysis, the climate change lawsuits may be the worst solution to mitigating climate change — except for all the others. The analogy to Winston Churchill’s notorious defense of democracy isn’t an accident. In the American form of democracy, oil companies enjoy an almost unparalleled capacity to influence Congress and federal government regulators.
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Conservatives Know the Value of Thinking Locally
November 4, 2019
An article by Cass Sunstein: What divides the right and the left? Not 50 years ago, or 20 or even 10 years ago, but right now? Here’s one speculation: Conservatives tend to be localists; they focus on their families, their towns, their states and their nation. Progressives are far more likely to be universalists who focus on human beings as such. New evidence strongly supports this speculation, and explains a lot about current political divisions, not only in the U.S. and Canada but also in Europe and elsewhere. It also offers concrete lessons for aspiring politicians, whether they’re on the right or the left.
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Congress Can Help Lower Your Hotel Bills
November 4, 2019
An article by Cass Sunstein: Why is it that when you check out of a hotel the bill is always so much larger than expected? It’s the assortment of unexpected fees — resort fees, destination fees, cleaning fees, hotel fees and more — that no one mentions until you’re leaving. Congress wants to do something about this. The House of Representatives is considering legislation that would increase transparency by requiring a room’s advertised rate to include all mandatory fees except those imposed by government. This bipartisan Hotel Transparency Act of 2019 is a terrific idea.
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Boeing just got grilled in Congress. Here are 3 takeaways.
November 4, 2019
An article by Ashley Nunes, Senior Research Associate, Labor and Worklife Program: Boeing executives faced a grilling on Capitol Hill this week. In separate hearings over two days, members of both the Senate Commerce Committee and the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee pressed chief executive Dennis Muilenburg and lead engineer John Hamilton about Boeing’s internal workings, its relationship with federal officials and its commitment to air safety. The hearings come after two Boeing jets — both the 737 Max model — crashed within months of each another. In Indonesia one year ago, the plane plungedinto the Java Sea shortly after takeoff, killing all 189 passengers and crew on board. In Ethiopia earlier this year, a similar crash killed all 157 people aboard. Government regulators including those in China, Canada and the United States banned the jet from flying in their airspace after both crashes were linked to the same automation system, effectively grounding the Max. U.S. lawmakers now want answers about what went wrong and how to fix the regulatory system to avert another crash.
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Column: In Corinthian Colleges fiasco, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ actions define ‘contempt’
November 1, 2019
As is true of many legal concepts, “contempt of court” can be inexact in its definitions or implications. But that doesn’t seem to be the case when it comes to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and her department’s treatment of thousands of students defrauded by the for-profit company Corinthian Colleges. U.S. Magistrate Judge Sallie Kim in San Francisco on Oct. 24 slapped DeVos and her agency with a $100,000 sanction for civil contempt. ... “The sector feels like they’ve never had a better friend in the federal government than Betsy DeVos,” says Eileen Connor of the Project on Predatory Student Lending at Harvard Law School, who represents plaintiffs in the lawsuit over the Corinthian settlement.
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Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey joined us Thursday for a regular check-in as the state's top law enforcement official. We discussed the recent impeachment vote in the House of Representatives, Governor Baker's vaping ban, and her office's lawsuits against Purdue Pharma and ExxonMobil. But, first, we hear the latest on impeachment from our legal analyst. Guests: ... Nancy Gertner, former Massachusetts federal judge, senior lecturer on law at Harvard Law School and WBUR legal analyst.
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As Trump moves to bully witnesses and derail impeachment, Democrats see obstruction
November 1, 2019
President Trump has sought to intimidate witnesses in the impeachment inquiry, attacking them as “Never Trumpers” and badgering an anonymous whistleblower. He has directed the White House to withhold documents and block testimony requested by Congress. And he has labored to publicly discredit the investigation as a “scam” overseen by “a totally compromised kangaroo court.” ... Laurence Tribe, a constitutional law scholar at Harvard Law School who has informally advised some Democratic House leaders, said Trump’s actions are unprecedented. “I know of no instance when a president subject to a serious impeachment effort, whether Andrew Johnson or Richard Nixon or Bill Clinton, has essentially tried to lower the curtain entirely — treating the whole impeachment process as illegitimate, deriding it as a ‘lynching’ and calling it a ‘kangaroo court,’” Tribe said.
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Harvard Law asks students to stop feeding loose library bird
November 1, 2019
Officials at Harvard Law School in Massachusetts sent a message to students with an unusual request: please don't feed the loose bird in the library. Visitors to the Harvard Law School Library reported spotted a small bird flying around among the stacks in recent days, and officials said they are working on a plan to capture and remove the academic avian.
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One year after the Google walkout, key organizers reflect on the risk to their careers
November 1, 2019
One year ago on November 1, tens of thousands of Google workers spilled out of their offices around the world, protesting sexual harassment, misconduct and a lack of transparency at one of the most powerful tech companies in the world. In New York City, hundreds of workers gathered in a park near Google HQ, holding signs like "Women's rights are human rights" and chanting "time is up." Organizers took turns using a megaphone to address the crowd, reading anonymous stories from colleagues who said they'd been treated unfairly by the company. ... While the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 protects some organizing by employees outside of a union, the law has many weaknesses, said Sharon Block, an executive director of Harvard Law School's Labor and Worklife Program. "The law is pretty narrow," said Block, a former policy office head at the Department of Labor under President Barack Obama. She added that there's some understanding that workers are protected if they organize related to something that has an "immediate nexus to their working conditions."
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Students Suing Dept. Of Education Over Loan Relief Win Cert.
November 1, 2019
Former students who say they were defrauded by now-defunct, for-profit colleges can take on the U.S. Department of Education as a class in a suit alleging the agency is slow-rolling their loan forgiveness applications, a California federal judge ruled Wednesday. U.S. District Judge William Alsup certified a class that could encompass more than 150,000 borrowers who applied for loan relief but haven't gotten a decision yet from the Education Department. ... Toby Merrill, the director of the Project on Predatory Student Lending, which is part of Harvard Law School's Legal Services Center, told Law360 on Thursday that the student borrowers his organization is representing in the case are happy with the judge's decision. "These borrowers, the vast majority of whom attended for-profit schools, were cheated by their schools, and then ignored by their government," Merrill said. "This lawsuit asks the court to force Secretary DeVos to follow existing law, to stop ignoring borrowers' rights to loan cancellation, and to allow these people to go on with their lives."
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Medicine for an Ailing Democracy
November 1, 2019
Ask people in America whether “the people” rule, and “most would find the idea somewhat quaint,” writes Lawrence Lessig in the introduction to his new book They Don’t Represent Us (Dey St., $26.99), published for election day this year. “Everywhere, there is the view that democracy represents the elite.” He continues: That an oligarchy or a monarchy would reward an elite is understandable. It’s built into the DNA. For a democracy to favor the elite over the people is to add insult to suffering. It is to betray the very promise at the core of the institution. It is to reveal, in a word, that the institution has been corrupted. Lessig, who is Furman professor of law at Harvard Law School, argues that the responsibility for this failure lies partly with the system of elections in the United States, that elevates unrepresentative candidates to political office, and partly with “us,” the voters, who have become increasingly partisan and/or uninformed about critical issues.
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Laurence Tribe: Democrats Should Focus On Simple Story In Making Their Impeachment Case
November 1, 2019
The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday passed a resolution that formalizes the impeachment probe against President Trump. The resolution outlines the next steps of the inquiry, authorizing the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee to conduct open hearings and the president and his attorneys to cross-examine witnesses. ... For a discussion of the significance of the resolution, Harvard law professor and constitutional expert Laurence Tribe, who's long called for Trump's impeachment, joined WBUR's Morning Edition.
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Harvard Law’s Laurence Tribe Explains Significance Of Impeachment Probe’s Next Phase
October 31, 2019
The U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote Thursday on a resolution that moves its impeachment probe against President Trump into a new phase. The vote could clear the way for articles of impeachment against the president for allegedly withholding aid from Ukraine unless that country investigated Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden's family. For a look at the significance of the move, Harvard law professor and constitutional expert Laurence Tribe joined WBUR's Morning Edition host Bob Oakes.