93

Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




93

BÁN ĐẤT KINH DOANH 167m2 MẶT TIỀN TỈNH LỘ 8, TÂN QUY 14tr5/mét LH: 0904585839

Chính chủ kẹt tiền bán gấp Diện tích: 4,5x40 (169m2) Thổ cư, SHR Mặt tiền đường nhựa 10m thuận tiện kinh doanh buôn bán Gía 2ty4 bớt lộc. Cách ngã 4 tân quy 800m, bán kính 1km có ủy ban xã, trường học, trạm xá, TGDD...... Bao giấy phép xây dựng. Ngoài ra còn nhiều lô đất đẹp ở Qu...




93

CHINH CHỦ BÁN GẤP 3 NỀN ĐẤT LIỀN KỀ ĐỐI DIỆN BỆNH VIỆN CHỢ RẪY 2 TIỆN KINH DOANH DA NGÀNH NGHỀ

CHINH CHỦ BÁN GẤP 3 NỀN ĐẤT LIỀN KỀ ĐỐI DIỆN BỆNH VIỆN CHỢ RẪY 2, đường 20m, Sổ hồng riêng, Xây dựng tự do, Tiện xây kinh doanh, Làm văn phòng, Gần Aeon Mall Tên Lửa. - DT: 5x28.4m, 142m2, giá 4.260 tỷ/nền đường 20m - Đất ở đô thị, không khống chế thời gian xây dựng, xây x...




93

Bán đất mặt tiền nhựa 30m sau chợ Tân Phú Trung, Củ Chi - DT 160m2 - 1,2tỷ LH: 0931.405.875

Tôi cần bán lô đất thổ cư mặt tiền đường nhựa 30m, gần Hồ Văn Tắng, Xã Tân Phú Trung, huyện Củ Chi (Ngay Ngã 4 Bầu Đá). - Diện tích: 160m2, sổ hồng riêng, ngang 10m dài 16m. - Đường nhựa 30m, gần chợ Tân Phú Trung, tiện kinh doanh mua bán. - Bán kính 500m, có trường học, KCN, bện...




93

53 tr/m2 có ngay lô đất đường 12m Đỗ Xuân Hợp, P. Phước Long B, Q. 9 - Giá bao tốt nhất 0909368111

Giá chưa bao giờ tốt hơn bây giờ, mua ngay lô đất để có cơ hội sinh lời tốt trong tương lai. Do hiện nay, tôi đang có công việc nên cần tiền phải bán gấp lô đất biệt thự như sau:- Vị trí: Đường 12m Đỗ Xuân Hợp, Phường Phước Long B, Q9, TP. HCM (đối diện khu Him Lam City, gần các dự án lớn như Lakeview Novaland, Palm City, Sport City, Trung tâm thể dục thể thao Rạch Chiếc, Khan...




93

Siêu phẩm Nam Hội An City- Đất nền ven sông Phố Cổ Hội An chỉ với 25tr/m2. Hotline: 0934.815.552

Công ty Cổ Phần Đầu Tư Ý An Khang chính thức cho ra mắt siêu phẩm ven sông Hội An với dự án "Nam Hội An City Khu phố tây giữa lòng di sản" - Sở hữu nhiều lợi thế về vị trí đắc địa và định hướng mới góp phần vào sự phát triển ngành Du lịch của Quảng Nam và Hội An. - Nam Hội ...




93

BÁN ĐẤT Ở 2 MẶT TIỀN đường chính Phú Mỹ - tóc tiên đường 81 cũ, 225.9m2, 11.5tr/m2

BÁN ĐẤT Ở 2 MẶT TIỀN đường chính Phú Mỹ - tóc tiên đường 81 cũ, 225.9m2, 11.5tr/m2 - Vị trí nằm trục đường chính Phú Mỹ - tóc tiên đường 81 cũ Xã tóc tiên - thị xã Phú Mỹ - BRVT 2 mặt tiền đường nhựa lớn, ngay quốc lộ, cơ sở hạ tầng đầy đủ Diện tích 225,9m2 - Thổ cư 70m2 Cá...




93

Bán biệt thự Vinhomes Central Park villa liền kề căn góc đơn lập, giá chính chủ ĐT - 0931.288.***

Rất hân hạnh được phục vụ quý khách hàng. Tìm được cho quý khách căn hộ đẹp ưng ý là niềm hạnh phúc của em. Cần biết thêm thông tin LH: Mr Dũng (Viber - Zalo) 0931288***. Quản lý 100% biệt thự Vinhomes Central Park bán: 0931288***. 1. CPV: 01 - XX - hướng TN - TB. Song lập. DT: 323m2. Giá: 98,9 tỷ.2. CPV: 01 - XX - hướng TN. Song lập. DT: 236m2. Giá: 83 tỷ.3. CPV: 02 - XX - hướ...




93

TRỰC TIẾP CĐT BITEXCO, SHOPHOUSE - BIỆT THỰ DỰ ÁN THE MANOR NGUYỄN XIỂN, CK 12%, 4 CÂY VÀNG, HTLS 0

TRỰC TIẾP CĐT BITEXCO, SHOPHOUSE - BIỆT THỰ DỰ ÁN THE MANOR NGUYỄN XIỂN, CK 12%, 4 CÂY VÀNG, HTLS 0%.1. Tổng quan: - Tên dự án: The Manor Central Park. - Chủ đầu tư: Tập đoàn Bitexco. - Vị trí: Nguyễn Xiển, Hoàng Mai, Hà Nội. - Tư vấn và thiết kế: EE&K công ty Carlos Zapata. - Tổ...




93

BÁN ĐẤT THỔ CƯ 100%, NGAY RESORT BIỂN DỐC LẾT.XÂY KHÁCH SẠN, NHÀ HÀNG RẤT TỐT.

BÁN ĐẤT THỔ CƯ 100%, NGAY RESORT BIỂN DỐC LẾT. **Dốc Lết là 1 trong những bãi biển ĐẸP nhất hành tinh. -DIỆN TÍCH: 245.3m2 - NGANG 12M - DÀI 22M. -VỊ TRÍ: Mặt tiền đường Mê Linh - Rộng 12 mét. Đường nhựa. ***Giá bán: 7,5 TRIỆU/M2 . Bao sang tên sổ hồng. CAM KẾT GIÁ THẤP HƠN THỊ T...




93

BÁN LIỀN KỀ BIỆT THỰ LOUIS CITY HOÀNG MAI, CẬP NHẬT MỚI NHẤT, KÝ HĐMB TRỰC TIẾP CĐT. LH: 0815338833

CÔNG TY CỔ PHẦN ĐẦU TƯ VÀ PHÁT TRIỂN ĐÔ THỊ HOÀNG MAI GỬI ĐẾN KHÁCH HÀNG SẢN PHẨM THẤP TẦNG ( LIỀN KỀ, BIỆT THỰ) - LOUIS CITY HOÀNG MAI. Sản phẩm được đánh giá là một trong những dự án đáng để chờ chợi và đầu tư nhất khu vực Hoàng Mai và các khu vực lân cận. Hotline Tư vấn bán hàng PKD: 0815 33 88 33. ------------------------------------------------------------------ LỢI T...




93

KHUYẾN MÃI CỰC LỚN KHI MUA LIỀN KỀ HIM LAM GREE PARK GIÁ CĐT LH 09790085907

Thông tin dự án. - Tên dự án: Him Lam Green Park. - Vị trí dự án: Phường Đại Phúc, Thành Phố Bắc Ninh, Tỉnh Bắc Ninh. - Chủ đầu tư: Công ty CP Him Lam (CN Bắc Ninh). - Quy mô dự án: 28.6 ha. - Sản phẩm: 666 căn liền kề, 22 căn biệt thự, 1.926 căn nhà ở xã hội. - Mặt hàng triển kh...




93

ĐẤT NỀN BECAMEX CHƠN THÀNH, 10 LÔ MẶT TIỀN QUỐC LỘ 14 GIÁ CHỈ 380 TRIỆU/NỀN

MỞ BÁN ĐẤT NỀN KDC CHƠN THÀNH Mặt tiền quốc lộ 14 GIÁ SIÊU RẺ, CHỈ 380-700 TRIỆU/NỀN NGAY TRUNG TÂM HUYỆN CHƠN THÀNH, BÌNH PHƯỚC Bán kính 800m đầy đủ tiện ích: - UBND xã Nha Bích - Chợ Nha Bích - Công viên - Trung tâm y tế Nha Bích - Trường cấp 1, 2 Nha Bích - Trường THCS, THPT N...




93

CENTANA CÓ SỔ HỒNG GIÁ TỐT NHẤT OT 1PN 1,75 TỶ, DUY NHẤT 2PN 2.75 TỶ, 88M2 3.2 TỶ, 97M2 3.6 TỶ

Cam kết giá tốt nhất thị trường có lợi cho KH mua ở, làm việc trực tiếp chủ nhà. Hãy liên hệ chúng tôi để chọn căn hợp với nhu cầu của quý khách. Cập nhật căn giá tốt tháng 2/2020: + Officetel 1PN: 1,75 tỷ (có thương lượng). Căn hộ đã có sổ hồng, công chứng sang tên. +...




93

TỔNG HỢP QUỸ CĂN HỘ TOPAZ ELITE GIÁ BÁN TỐT NHẤT THÁNG 5 - 2020 CHỈ 1TY980. GỌI NGAY: 0932.532.070

Bằng tất cả sự chân thành và tâm huyết với nghề em sẽ cố gắng mang lại điều tốt nhất cho quý khách hàng chọn mua Topaz Elite Quận 8. Em chuyên săn hàng chuyển nhượng từ CĐT và khách hàng thanh lý giá rẻ nhất không nơi đâu rẻ hơn. Anh chị chỉ cần nói nhu cầu cho em thì em sẽ cố gắ...




93

DUY NHẤT 300 CĂN NHÀ PHỐ VINHOMES GRAND PARK MỞ BÁN ĐỢT ĐẦU-THE MAHATTAN, CÒN 2 TUẦN CUỐI BOOKING

Duy nhất 300 căn nhà phố Vinhomes Grand Park mờ bán đợt đầu- Phân khu The Mahattan. Còn 2 tuần cuối nhận booking giữ chỗ, cơ hội chọn căn đẹp, vị trí và giá tốt nhất- Liên hệ PKD đại lí F1 Vinroup- Ms Như Phúc: 0767.3938.69 PHÂN KHU THE MAHATTAN - Vị trí: Nằm tại lõi trun...




93

CẦN LIÊN KẾT SÀN VÀ CỘNG TÁC VIÊN CHẠY 200 SẢN PHẨM CHUNG CƯ MINI Ở LONG AN LONG

Cần tìm SÀN + CTV Chạy 2000 sản phẩm Chung cư MiNi DIỆN TÍCH 30 -40 M2 Giá thị trường 295 / 305 TRIỆU (Giá Bao Gồm Full Nội Thất, Chưa chiếc khấu) Tất cả chung cư nằm 2 hướng . Hướng 1: Tỉnh lộ 10 KCN Tân Đức Long An sát Bình Tân. Hướng 2 : Khu dân cư Xuyên Á , Mỹ hạn...




93

NGỘP HÀNG. BÁN NHANH CĂN 2PN Q7 RIVERSIDE. GIÁ TỐT ĐỂ ĐẦU TƯ. LH 0886957979

Căn hộ nhiều tiện ích cao cấp Hiện tại, dự án căn hộ Q7 Saigon Riverside có giá bán tốt nhất khu vực đường Đào Trí. + Giá bán CĐT : Từ 1.716 tỷ/căn 2 PN 66m2. Tiến độ thanh toán dự án nhẹ nhàng. + Tính ra mỗi tháng (anh, chị) chỉ thanh toán 1.5% - 2.25% giá trị căn hộ. + N...




93

Giá cực tốt: Duplex 3PN 162m2, layout đẹp chỉ 6.75 tỷ, hàng hiếm - Duy nhất một căn. LH 0933223933

* Độc quyền duy nhất 1 căn tháp cao cấp Orchid. Thỏa sức sáng tạo căn nhà mơ ước với căn hộ bàn giao thô: - Duplex thông tầng 162m2 có ban công: 3 phòng ngủ + 2WC + phòng sinh hoạt gia đình (có thể thiết kế linh hoạt thêm 1 phòng ngủ) + bếp + phòng khách + logia giặt phơi được bố trí vô cùng hợp lý, tối ưu diện tích sử dụng. - Hướng cửa: Đông Nam. Ban công Tây Bắc, view nội khu...




93

BÁN 9 NỀN ĐẤT DỰ ÁN LUX HOME GARDEN MT AN DƯƠNG VƯƠNG SANG TÊN NGAY 4.1-4,2TY/NỀN LH: 0901467886

Bán 9 nền đất đã có sổ trong dự án Lux home garden giá 4.1-4.2ty/nền Tỗng khu 50 nền nhưng chỉ xây nhà phố còn 9 nền này không xây mà bán sổ đỏ cho khách khi nào xây thì hoàn công. Các nền xây nhà thì bán giá 7-8ty/căn. Tiện ích dự án đầy đủ: trường học, bệnh viện, chợ, siêu th...




93

SÀI GÒN GATEWAY - PKD CẬP NHẬP 100 CĂN ĐANG CHUYỂN NHƯỢNG 05/2020 FULL 2 THÁP A,B LH: 0931328880

HOTLINE PHÒNG KINH DOANH: 0931 32 8880 (Mr. Hà). - Email: cskh.saigongateway.vn@gmail.com Chuyên chuyển nhượng và nhận ký gửi chuyển nhượng dự án của Khang Điền: Safira Khang Điền, Jamila Khang Điền, Diamond Island / Đảo Kim Cương, Sài Gòn Gateway... Thủ tục nhanh chóng, giá ...




93

EASY HOUSING - KINH NGHIỆM, UY TÍN SUỐT 4 NĂM TẠI MASTERI THẢO ĐIỀN (CSKH 24/7: 0931633123)

Cám ơn anh chị đã ghé thăm tin đăng của em. Em bên PKD của Easy Housing chi nhánh Masteri Thảo Điền. Bên em hiện đang có rất nhiều sản phẩm giá tốt, rẻ hơn đến 300 triệu so với giá thị trường trước mùa dịch. Dành cho anh chị chưa biết đến Masteri Thảo Điền, em sẽ giới thiệu một c...




93

SWANBAY NHƠN TRẠCH ĐỒNG NAI. GIÁ RẺ HƠN CHỦ ĐẦU TƯ , ĐT: 0931007017

Tôi chính chủ 2 căn shophouse 6A.01.02 (6 tầng) và 6B.03.10 (6 tầng). Do kinh doanh bị ảnh hưởng đến dịch nên bán lại 1 trong 2 căn shophouse trên. Đã thanh toán 30%, được chiết khấu đến 7% (được ưu đãi). Tôi rất thích dự án Swan Bay nên tạm thời chỉ nhượng lại 1 căn trong 2 c...




93

Saigon Garden Riverside Village - The home of emotions. From 21 million/sqm. Hotline 0938169445

Saigon Garden Riverside Villas - From 21-28 Million/sqm. Hotline 0938169445 - Location: Long Phuoc Ward, District 9 - Ho Chi Minh City. - Project name: Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Location: Cau Dinh Street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9, HCM city. - Scale: 30 hectares - Numbe...




93

Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Land for sale by Hung Thinh Corporation. Contact: 0938169445

Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Land for sale by Hung Thinh Corporation. Only 21-28million For 1sqm- Name of Project: Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Location: Long Phuoc Ward, District 9, HCM City - Scale: 30 ha (the most prestigious Compound model in the area). - Quantity: ...




93

Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




93

सैन्य इंजीनियरिंग सेवा के 9304 पद खत्म, सरकार ने दी मंजूरी

सेना में सुधारों के लिए गठित शेकातकर समिति की सिफारिश पर मुहर लगाते हुए रक्षामंत्री राजनाथ सिंह ने बृहस्पतिवार को सैन्य इंजीनियरिंग सेवा के 9304 पदों को खत्म कर दिया।




93

kanpur: कोरोना पॉजिटिव का आंकड़ा बताने में घालमेल, सीएमओ कार्यालय ने कुल संक्रमितों की संख्या बताई 293

कानपुर में कोरोना संकट की शुरुआत से ही पॉजिटिव मरीजों की संख्या बताने में घालमेल चल रहा है। ये आंकड़े तीन स्तर से जारी हो रहे हैं। लेकिन इनमें कभी भी समानता नहीं होती। स्वास्थ्य विभाग भी आंकड़े स्पष्ट करने में कोताही बरतता आ रहा है।




93

RPGCast – Episode 293: “You Need A Fake ID?”

Nintendo announces some new consoles. Conan is the best source for reviews on the net. Microsoft’s business practices are best business practices. And if you...




93

RPGCast – Episode 393: “Plushie Pre-Nup”

Chris clicks, Anna Marie goes on a Pokédate, Alex turns into a van, and Kelley is a Yo-kai. Ok, that may not be entirely accurate....




93

RPGCast – Episode 493: “Skunk Trapper”

You won’t get skunked this week with a full-fledged RPGCast! We dissect the recent Nintendo Direct (BOWSER IS TAKING OVER), discuss our Now Playing (with a love-hate CompileHeart relationship), and have a heavy dose of fun feedback.




93

The Simpsons Predicted COVID-19 and Murder Hornets in 1993

The Simpsons has done it again, this time predicting the COVID-19 pandemic and murder hornets. Here are some other instances of The Simpsons predicting the future.




93

US woman, 93, receives 150 cans of beer after holding up 'I need more beer' sign

Follow our LIVE updates about the coronavirus outbreak here Coronavirus: The symptoms




93

'It's a ray of hope': 93-year-old great-grandmother beats coronavirus

Follow our live coronavirus updates here Coronavirus: the symptoms




93

UK's official coronavirus death toll nears 30,000 as further 693 deaths recorded

The number of people who have died across the UK after testing positive for coronavirus has increased by 693 to nearly 30,000.




93

Ranger Betty Soskin, 93, on the Rosie the Riveter national park, California

The oldest national park ranger in the US tells us why she’s proud of the second world war home front park in Richmond, just across the bay from San Francisco

I settled in the greater Bay Area as a six-year-old in 1927. When I graduated from high school in 1938, my two opportunities for employment were working in agriculture or being a domestic servant. At that time, labour unions weren’t racially integrated and, during the war, I worked as a clerk for the segregated boilermakers’ union.

Continue reading...




93

This Day in Black History: May 3, 1933



The "Godfather of Soul" James Brown was born.




93

Geneva Healthcare Garners $6,193,845 New Financing Round

Revolutionizing cardiac device data management




93

FDA Works - 24937541436

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration posted a photo:

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is a science-based regulatory agency working to protect the public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and veterinary drugs, biological products, and medical devices; and by ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and products that emit radiation.

This photo is free of all copyright restrictions and available for use and redistribution without permission. Credit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is appreciated but not required.




93

FDA Works - 24938398436

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration posted a photo:

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is a science-based regulatory agency working to protect the public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and veterinary drugs, biological products, and medical devices; and by ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and products that emit radiation.

This photo is free of all copyright restrictions and available for use and redistribution without permission. Credit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is appreciated but not required.




93

Four Men Sentenced to a Combined 293 Months in Prison for Election Night Assaults

The Department announced that four men who committed three hate crime assaults in response to President Barack Obama’s election victory were sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Carol B. Amon in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y.



  • OPA Press Releases

93

Duke Energy to Spend Approximately $93 Million to Resolve Clean Air Act Violations

“This important settlement resolves lengthy litigation on very favorable terms,” said Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.



  • OPA Press Releases

93

Daimler AG and Three Subsidiaries Resolve Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Investigation and Agree to Pay $93.6 Million in Criminal Penalties

Daimler AG, a German corporation, and three of its subsidiaries have resolved charges related to a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) investigation into the company’s worldwide sales practices.



  • OPA Press Releases

93

Verizon Communications Pays United States $93.5 Million to Resolve False Claims Act Allegations

Verizon Communications Inc. has paid the United States $93,525,410.96 in order to resolve allegations that the company overcharged the General Services Administration (GSA) on invoices dealing with government-wide voice and data telecommunications services contracts.



  • OPA Press Releases

93

<i>ATP7B</i> variant c.1934T &gt; G p.Met645Arg causes Wilson disease by promoting exon 6 skipping




93

Development of a laboratory scalable process for enhancing lentivirus production by transient transfection of HEK293 adherent cultures




93

2016: The most important election since 1932


The 2016 presidential election confronts the U.S. electorate with political choices more fundamental than any since 1964 and possibly since 1932. That statement may strike some as hyperbolic, but the policy differences between the two major parties and the positions of candidates vying for their presidential nominations support this claim.

A victorious Republican candidate would take office backed by a Republican-controlled Congress, possibly with heightened majorities and with the means to deliver on campaign promises. On the other hand, the coattails of a successful Democratic candidate might bring more Democrats to Congress, but that president would almost certainly have to work with a Republican House and, quite possibly, a still Republican Senate. The political wars would continue, but even a president engaged in continuous political trench warfare has the power to get a lot done.

Candidates always promise more than they can deliver and often deliver different policies from those they have promised. Every recent president has been buffeted by external events unanticipated when he took office. But this year, more than in half a century or more, the two parties offer a choice, not an echo. Here is a partial and selective list of key issues to illustrate what is at stake.

Health care 

The Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare or the ACA, passed both houses of Congress with not a single Republican vote. The five years since enactment of the ACA have not dampened Republican opposition.

The persistence and strength of opposition to the ACA is quite unlike post-enactment reactions to the Social Security Act of 1935 or the 1965 amendments that created Medicare. Both earlier programs were hotly debated and controversial. But a majority of both parties voted for the Social Security Act. A majority of House Republicans and a sizeable minority of Senate Republicans supported Medicare. In both cases, opponents not only became reconciled to the new laws but eventually participated in improving and extending them. Republican members of Congress overwhelmingly supported, and a Republican president endorsed, adding Disability Insurance to the Social Security Act.  In 2003, a Republican president proposed and fought for the addition of a drug benefit to Medicare.

The current situation bears no resemblance to those two situations. Five years after enactment of Obamacare, in contrast, every major candidate for the Republican presidential nomination has called for its repeal and replacement. So have the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives and Majority Leader in the Senate.  

Just what 'repeal and replace' might look like under a GOP president remains unclear as ACA critics have not agreed on an alternative. Some plans would do away with some of the elements of Obamacare and scale back others. Some proposals would repeal the mandate that people carry insurance, the bar on 'medical underwriting' (a once-routine practice under which insurers vary premiums based on expected use of medical care), or the requirement that insurers sell plans to all potential customers. Other proposals would retain tax credits to help make insurance affordable but reduce their size, or would end rules specifying what 'adequate' insurance plans must cover.

Repeal is hard to imagine if a Democrat wins the presidency in 2016. Even if repeal legislation could overcome a Senate filibuster, a Democratic president would likely veto it and an override would be improbable. 

But a compromise with horse-trading, once routine, might once again become possible. A Democratic president might agree to Republican-sponsored changes to the ACA, such as dropping the requirement that employers of 50 or more workers offer insurance to their employees, if Republicans agreed to changes in the ACA that supporters seek, such as the extension of tax credits to families now barred from them because one member has access to very costly employer-sponsored insurance.

In sum, the 2016 election will determine the future of the most far-reaching social insurance legislation in half a century.

Social Security

Social Security faces a projected long-term gap between what it takes in and what it is scheduled to pay out. Every major Republican candidate has called for cutting benefits below those promised under current law. None has suggested any increase in payroll tax rates. Each Democratic candidate has proposed raising both revenues and benefits. Within those broad outlines, the specific proposals differ.

Most Republican candidates would cut benefits across the board or selectively for high earners. For example, Senator Ted Cruz proposes to link benefits to prices rather than wages, a switch that would reduce Social Security benefits relative to current law by steadily larger amounts: an estimated 29 percent by 2065 and 46 percent by 2090. He would allow younger workers to shift payroll taxes to private accounts. Donald Trump has proposed no cuts in Social Security because, he says, proposing cuts is inconsistent with winning elections and because meeting current statutory commitments is 'honoring a deal.' Trump also favors letting people invest part of their payroll taxes in private securities. He has not explained how he would make up the funding gap that would result if current benefits are honored but revenues to support them are reduced. Senator Marco Rubio has endorsed general benefit cuts, but he has also proposed to increase the minimum benefit. Three Republican candidates have proposed ending payroll taxes for older workers, a step that would add to the projected funding gap.

Democratic candidates, in contrast, would raise benefits, across-the-board or for selected groups—care givers or survivors. They would switch the price index used to adjust benefits for inflation to one that is tailored to consumption of the elderly and that analysts believe would raise benefits more rapidly than the index now in use. All would raise the ceiling on earnings subject to the payroll tax. Two would broaden the payroll tax base.

As these examples indicate, the two parties have quite different visions for Social Security. Major changes, such as those envisioned by some Republican candidates, are not easily realized, however. Before he became president, Ronald Reagan in numerous speeches called for restructuring Social Security. Those statements did not stop him from signing a 1983 law that restored financial balance to the very program against which he had inveighed but with few structural changes. George W. Bush sought to partially privatize Social Security, to no avail. Now, however, Social Security faces a funding gap that must eventually be filled. The discipline of Trust Fund financing means that tax increases, benefit cuts, or some combination of the two are inescapable. Action may be delayed beyond the next presidency, as current projections indicate that the Social Security Trust Fund and current revenues can sustain scheduled benefits until the mid 2030s. But that is not what the candidates propose. Voters face a choice, clear and stark, between a Democratic president who would try to maintain or raise benefits and would increase payroll taxes to pay for it, and a Republican president who would seek to cut benefits, oppose tax increases, and might well try to partially privatize Social Security.

The Environment

On no other issue is the split between the two parties wider or the stakes in their disagreement higher than on measures to deal with global warming. Leading Republican candidates have denied that global warming is occurring (Trump), scorned evidence supporting the existence of global warming as bogus (Cruz), acknowledged that global warming is occurring but not because of human actions (Rubio, Carson), or admitted that it is occurring but dismissed it as not a pressing issue (Fiorina, Christie). Congressional Republicans oppose current Administration initiatives under the Clean Air Act to curb emission of greenhouse gases.

Democratic candidates uniformly agree that global warming is occurring and that it results from human activities. They support measures to lower those emissions by amounts similar to those embraced in the Paris accords of December 2015 as essential to curb the speed and ultimate extent of global warming.

Climate scientists and economists are nearly unanimous that unabated emissions of greenhouse gases pose serious risks of devastating and destabilizing outcomes—that climbing average temperatures could render some parts of the world uninhabitable, that increases in sea levels that will inundate coastal regions inhabited by tens of millions of people, and that storms, droughts, and other climatic events will be more frequent and more destructive. Immediate actions to curb emission of greenhouse gases can reduce these effects. But no actions can entirely avoid them, and delay is costly.  Environmental economists also agree, with little partisan division, that the way to proceed is to harness market forces to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.” 

The division between the parties on global warming is not new. In 2009, the House of Representatives narrowly passed the American Clean Energy and Security Act. That law would have capped and gradually lowered greenhouse gas emissions. Two hundred eleven Democrats but only 8 Republicans voted for the bill. The Senate took no action, and the proposal died.

Now Republicans are opposing the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, a set of regulations under the Clean Air Act to lower emissions by power plants, which account for 40 percent of the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere. The Clean Power Plan is a stop-gap measure. It applies only to power plants, not to other sources of emissions, and it is not nationally uniform. These shortcomings reflect the legislative authority on which the plan is based, the Clean Air Act. That law was designed to curb the local problem of air pollution, not the global damage from greenhouse gases. Environmental economists of both parties recognize that a tax or a cap on greenhouse gas emissions would be more effective and less costly than the current regulations, but superior alternatives are now politically unreachable.

Based on their statements, any of the current leading Republican candidates would back away from the recently negotiated Paris climate agreement, scuttle the Clean Power Plan, and resist any tax on greenhouse gas emissions. Any of the Democratic candidates would adhere to the Clean Power Plan and support the Paris climate agreement. One Democratic candidate has embraced a carbon tax. None has called for the extension of the Clean Power Plan to other emission sources, but such policies are consistent with their current statements.

The importance of global policy to curb greenhouse gas emissions is difficult to exaggerate. While the United States acting alone cannot entirely solve the problem, resolute action by the world’s largest economy and second largest greenhouse gas emitter is essential, in concert with other nations, to forestall climate catastrophe.

The Courts

If the next president serves two terms, as six of the last nine presidents have done, four currently sitting justices will be over age 86 and one over age 90 by the time that presidency ends—provided that they have not died or resigned.

The political views of the president have always shaped presidential choices regarding judicial appointments. As all carry life-time tenure, these appointments influence events long after the president has left office. The political importance of these appointments has always been enormous, but it is even greater now than in the past. One reason is that the jurisprudence of sitting Supreme Court justices now lines up more closely than in the past with that of the party of the president who appointed them. Republican presidents appointed all sitting justices identified as conservative; Democratic presidents appointed all sitting justices identified as liberal. The influence of the president’s politics extends to other judicial appointments as well.

A second reason is that recent judicial decisions have re-opened decisions once regarded as settled. The decision in the first case dealing with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), NFIB v. Sibelius is illustrative.

When the ACA was enacted, few observers doubted the power of the federal government to require people to carry health insurance. That power was based on a long line of decisions, dating back to the 1930s, under the Constitutional clause authorizing the federal government to regulate interstate commerce. In the 1930s, the Supreme Court rejected an older doctrine that had barred such regulations. The earlier doctrine dated from 1905 when the Court overturned a New York law that prohibited bakers from working more than 10 hours a day or 60 hours a week. The Court found in the 14th Amendment, which prohibits any state from ‘depriving any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law,’ a right to contract previously invisible to jurists which it said the New York law violated. In the early- and mid-1930s, the Court used this doctrine to invalidate some New Deal legislation. Then the Court changed course and authorized a vast range of regulations under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause.  It was on this line of cases that supporters of the ACA relied.

Nor did many observers doubt the power of Congress to require states to broaden Medicaid coverage as a condition for remaining in the Medicaid program and receiving federal matching grants to help them pay for required medical services.

To the surprise of most legal scholars, a 5-4 Supreme Court majority ruled in NFIB v. Sibelius that the Commerce Clause did not authorize the individual health insurance mandate. But it decided, also 5 to 4, that tax penalties could be imposed on those who fail to carry insurance. The tax saved the mandate. But the decision also raised questions about federal powers under the Commerce Clause. The Court also ruled that the Constitution barred the federal government from requiring states to expand Medicaid coverage as a condition for remaining in the program. This decision was odd, in that Congress certainly could constitutionally have achieved the same objective by repealing the old Medicaid program and enacting a new Medicaid program with the same rules as those contained in the ACA that states would have been free to join or not.

NFIB v. Sibelius and other cases the Court has recently heard or soon will hear raise questions about what additional attempts to regulate interstate commerce might be ruled unconstitutional and about what limits the Court might impose on Congress’s power to require states to implement legislated rules as a condition of receiving federal financial aid. The Court has also heard, or soon will hear, a series of cases of fundamental importance regarding campaign financing, same-sex marriage, affirmative action, abortion rights, the death penalty, the delegation of powers to federal regulatory agencies, voting rights, and rules under which people can seek redress in the courts for violation of their rights.

Throughout U.S. history, the American people have granted nine appointed judges the power to decide whether the actions taken by elected legislators are or are not consistent with a constitution written more than two centuries ago. As a practical matter, the Court could not maintain this sway if it deviated too far from public opinion. But the boundaries within which the Court has substantially unfettered discretion are wide, and within those limits the Supreme Court can profoundly limit or redirect the scope of legislative authority. The Supreme Court’s switch in the 1930s from doctrines under which much of the New Deal was found to be unconstitutional to other doctrines under which it was constitutional illustrates the Court’s sensitivity to public opinion and the profound influence of its decisions.

The bottom line is that the next president will likely appoint enough Supreme Court justices and other judges to shape the character of the Supreme Court and of lower courts with ramifications both broad and enduring on important aspects of every person’s life.

***

The next president will preside over critical decisions relating to health care policy, Social Security, and environmental policy, and will shape the character of the Supreme Court for the next generation. Profound differences distinguish the two major parties on these and many other issues. A recent survey of members of the House of Representatives found that on a scale of ‘liberal to conservative’ the most conservative Democrat was more liberal than the least conservative Republican. Whatever their source, these divisions are real.  The examples cited here are sufficient to show that the 2016 election richly merits the overworked term 'watershed'—it will be the most consequential presidential election in a very long time.

Authors

     
 
 




93

2016: The most important election since 1932


The 2016 presidential election confronts the U.S. electorate with political choices more fundamental than any since 1964 and possibly since 1932. That statement may strike some as hyperbolic, but the policy differences between the two major parties and the positions of candidates vying for their presidential nominations support this claim.

A victorious Republican candidate would take office backed by a Republican-controlled Congress, possibly with heightened majorities and with the means to deliver on campaign promises. On the other hand, the coattails of a successful Democratic candidate might bring more Democrats to Congress, but that president would almost certainly have to work with a Republican House and, quite possibly, a still Republican Senate. The political wars would continue, but even a president engaged in continuous political trench warfare has the power to get a lot done.

Candidates always promise more than they can deliver and often deliver different policies from those they have promised. Every recent president has been buffeted by external events unanticipated when he took office. But this year, more than in half a century or more, the two parties offer a choice, not an echo. Here is a partial and selective list of key issues to illustrate what is at stake.

Health care 

The Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare or the ACA, passed both houses of Congress with not a single Republican vote. The five years since enactment of the ACA have not dampened Republican opposition.

The persistence and strength of opposition to the ACA is quite unlike post-enactment reactions to the Social Security Act of 1935 or the 1965 amendments that created Medicare. Both earlier programs were hotly debated and controversial. But a majority of both parties voted for the Social Security Act. A majority of House Republicans and a sizeable minority of Senate Republicans supported Medicare. In both cases, opponents not only became reconciled to the new laws but eventually participated in improving and extending them. Republican members of Congress overwhelmingly supported, and a Republican president endorsed, adding Disability Insurance to the Social Security Act.  In 2003, a Republican president proposed and fought for the addition of a drug benefit to Medicare.

The current situation bears no resemblance to those two situations. Five years after enactment of Obamacare, in contrast, every major candidate for the Republican presidential nomination has called for its repeal and replacement. So have the Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives and Majority Leader in the Senate.  

Just what 'repeal and replace' might look like under a GOP president remains unclear as ACA critics have not agreed on an alternative. Some plans would do away with some of the elements of Obamacare and scale back others. Some proposals would repeal the mandate that people carry insurance, the bar on 'medical underwriting' (a once-routine practice under which insurers vary premiums based on expected use of medical care), or the requirement that insurers sell plans to all potential customers. Other proposals would retain tax credits to help make insurance affordable but reduce their size, or would end rules specifying what 'adequate' insurance plans must cover.

Repeal is hard to imagine if a Democrat wins the presidency in 2016. Even if repeal legislation could overcome a Senate filibuster, a Democratic president would likely veto it and an override would be improbable. 

But a compromise with horse-trading, once routine, might once again become possible. A Democratic president might agree to Republican-sponsored changes to the ACA, such as dropping the requirement that employers of 50 or more workers offer insurance to their employees, if Republicans agreed to changes in the ACA that supporters seek, such as the extension of tax credits to families now barred from them because one member has access to very costly employer-sponsored insurance.

In sum, the 2016 election will determine the future of the most far-reaching social insurance legislation in half a century.

Social Security

Social Security faces a projected long-term gap between what it takes in and what it is scheduled to pay out. Every major Republican candidate has called for cutting benefits below those promised under current law. None has suggested any increase in payroll tax rates. Each Democratic candidate has proposed raising both revenues and benefits. Within those broad outlines, the specific proposals differ.

Most Republican candidates would cut benefits across the board or selectively for high earners. For example, Senator Ted Cruz proposes to link benefits to prices rather than wages, a switch that would reduce Social Security benefits relative to current law by steadily larger amounts: an estimated 29 percent by 2065 and 46 percent by 2090. He would allow younger workers to shift payroll taxes to private accounts. Donald Trump has proposed no cuts in Social Security because, he says, proposing cuts is inconsistent with winning elections and because meeting current statutory commitments is 'honoring a deal.' Trump also favors letting people invest part of their payroll taxes in private securities. He has not explained how he would make up the funding gap that would result if current benefits are honored but revenues to support them are reduced. Senator Marco Rubio has endorsed general benefit cuts, but he has also proposed to increase the minimum benefit. Three Republican candidates have proposed ending payroll taxes for older workers, a step that would add to the projected funding gap.

Democratic candidates, in contrast, would raise benefits, across-the-board or for selected groups—care givers or survivors. They would switch the price index used to adjust benefits for inflation to one that is tailored to consumption of the elderly and that analysts believe would raise benefits more rapidly than the index now in use. All would raise the ceiling on earnings subject to the payroll tax. Two would broaden the payroll tax base.

As these examples indicate, the two parties have quite different visions for Social Security. Major changes, such as those envisioned by some Republican candidates, are not easily realized, however. Before he became president, Ronald Reagan in numerous speeches called for restructuring Social Security. Those statements did not stop him from signing a 1983 law that restored financial balance to the very program against which he had inveighed but with few structural changes. George W. Bush sought to partially privatize Social Security, to no avail. Now, however, Social Security faces a funding gap that must eventually be filled. The discipline of Trust Fund financing means that tax increases, benefit cuts, or some combination of the two are inescapable. Action may be delayed beyond the next presidency, as current projections indicate that the Social Security Trust Fund and current revenues can sustain scheduled benefits until the mid 2030s. But that is not what the candidates propose. Voters face a choice, clear and stark, between a Democratic president who would try to maintain or raise benefits and would increase payroll taxes to pay for it, and a Republican president who would seek to cut benefits, oppose tax increases, and might well try to partially privatize Social Security.

The Environment

On no other issue is the split between the two parties wider or the stakes in their disagreement higher than on measures to deal with global warming. Leading Republican candidates have denied that global warming is occurring (Trump), scorned evidence supporting the existence of global warming as bogus (Cruz), acknowledged that global warming is occurring but not because of human actions (Rubio, Carson), or admitted that it is occurring but dismissed it as not a pressing issue (Fiorina, Christie). Congressional Republicans oppose current Administration initiatives under the Clean Air Act to curb emission of greenhouse gases.

Democratic candidates uniformly agree that global warming is occurring and that it results from human activities. They support measures to lower those emissions by amounts similar to those embraced in the Paris accords of December 2015 as essential to curb the speed and ultimate extent of global warming.

Climate scientists and economists are nearly unanimous that unabated emissions of greenhouse gases pose serious risks of devastating and destabilizing outcomes—that climbing average temperatures could render some parts of the world uninhabitable, that increases in sea levels that will inundate coastal regions inhabited by tens of millions of people, and that storms, droughts, and other climatic events will be more frequent and more destructive. Immediate actions to curb emission of greenhouse gases can reduce these effects. But no actions can entirely avoid them, and delay is costly.  Environmental economists also agree, with little partisan division, that the way to proceed is to harness market forces to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.” 

The division between the parties on global warming is not new. In 2009, the House of Representatives narrowly passed the American Clean Energy and Security Act. That law would have capped and gradually lowered greenhouse gas emissions. Two hundred eleven Democrats but only 8 Republicans voted for the bill. The Senate took no action, and the proposal died.

Now Republicans are opposing the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, a set of regulations under the Clean Air Act to lower emissions by power plants, which account for 40 percent of the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere. The Clean Power Plan is a stop-gap measure. It applies only to power plants, not to other sources of emissions, and it is not nationally uniform. These shortcomings reflect the legislative authority on which the plan is based, the Clean Air Act. That law was designed to curb the local problem of air pollution, not the global damage from greenhouse gases. Environmental economists of both parties recognize that a tax or a cap on greenhouse gas emissions would be more effective and less costly than the current regulations, but superior alternatives are now politically unreachable.

Based on their statements, any of the current leading Republican candidates would back away from the recently negotiated Paris climate agreement, scuttle the Clean Power Plan, and resist any tax on greenhouse gas emissions. Any of the Democratic candidates would adhere to the Clean Power Plan and support the Paris climate agreement. One Democratic candidate has embraced a carbon tax. None has called for the extension of the Clean Power Plan to other emission sources, but such policies are consistent with their current statements.

The importance of global policy to curb greenhouse gas emissions is difficult to exaggerate. While the United States acting alone cannot entirely solve the problem, resolute action by the world’s largest economy and second largest greenhouse gas emitter is essential, in concert with other nations, to forestall climate catastrophe.

The Courts

If the next president serves two terms, as six of the last nine presidents have done, four currently sitting justices will be over age 86 and one over age 90 by the time that presidency ends—provided that they have not died or resigned.

The political views of the president have always shaped presidential choices regarding judicial appointments. As all carry life-time tenure, these appointments influence events long after the president has left office. The political importance of these appointments has always been enormous, but it is even greater now than in the past. One reason is that the jurisprudence of sitting Supreme Court justices now lines up more closely than in the past with that of the party of the president who appointed them. Republican presidents appointed all sitting justices identified as conservative; Democratic presidents appointed all sitting justices identified as liberal. The influence of the president’s politics extends to other judicial appointments as well.

A second reason is that recent judicial decisions have re-opened decisions once regarded as settled. The decision in the first case dealing with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), NFIB v. Sibelius is illustrative.

When the ACA was enacted, few observers doubted the power of the federal government to require people to carry health insurance. That power was based on a long line of decisions, dating back to the 1930s, under the Constitutional clause authorizing the federal government to regulate interstate commerce. In the 1930s, the Supreme Court rejected an older doctrine that had barred such regulations. The earlier doctrine dated from 1905 when the Court overturned a New York law that prohibited bakers from working more than 10 hours a day or 60 hours a week. The Court found in the 14th Amendment, which prohibits any state from ‘depriving any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law,’ a right to contract previously invisible to jurists which it said the New York law violated. In the early- and mid-1930s, the Court used this doctrine to invalidate some New Deal legislation. Then the Court changed course and authorized a vast range of regulations under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause.  It was on this line of cases that supporters of the ACA relied.

Nor did many observers doubt the power of Congress to require states to broaden Medicaid coverage as a condition for remaining in the Medicaid program and receiving federal matching grants to help them pay for required medical services.

To the surprise of most legal scholars, a 5-4 Supreme Court majority ruled in NFIB v. Sibelius that the Commerce Clause did not authorize the individual health insurance mandate. But it decided, also 5 to 4, that tax penalties could be imposed on those who fail to carry insurance. The tax saved the mandate. But the decision also raised questions about federal powers under the Commerce Clause. The Court also ruled that the Constitution barred the federal government from requiring states to expand Medicaid coverage as a condition for remaining in the program. This decision was odd, in that Congress certainly could constitutionally have achieved the same objective by repealing the old Medicaid program and enacting a new Medicaid program with the same rules as those contained in the ACA that states would have been free to join or not.

NFIB v. Sibelius and other cases the Court has recently heard or soon will hear raise questions about what additional attempts to regulate interstate commerce might be ruled unconstitutional and about what limits the Court might impose on Congress’s power to require states to implement legislated rules as a condition of receiving federal financial aid. The Court has also heard, or soon will hear, a series of cases of fundamental importance regarding campaign financing, same-sex marriage, affirmative action, abortion rights, the death penalty, the delegation of powers to federal regulatory agencies, voting rights, and rules under which people can seek redress in the courts for violation of their rights.

Throughout U.S. history, the American people have granted nine appointed judges the power to decide whether the actions taken by elected legislators are or are not consistent with a constitution written more than two centuries ago. As a practical matter, the Court could not maintain this sway if it deviated too far from public opinion. But the boundaries within which the Court has substantially unfettered discretion are wide, and within those limits the Supreme Court can profoundly limit or redirect the scope of legislative authority. The Supreme Court’s switch in the 1930s from doctrines under which much of the New Deal was found to be unconstitutional to other doctrines under which it was constitutional illustrates the Court’s sensitivity to public opinion and the profound influence of its decisions.

The bottom line is that the next president will likely appoint enough Supreme Court justices and other judges to shape the character of the Supreme Court and of lower courts with ramifications both broad and enduring on important aspects of every person’s life.

***

The next president will preside over critical decisions relating to health care policy, Social Security, and environmental policy, and will shape the character of the Supreme Court for the next generation. Profound differences distinguish the two major parties on these and many other issues. A recent survey of members of the House of Representatives found that on a scale of ‘liberal to conservative’ the most conservative Democrat was more liberal than the least conservative Republican. Whatever their source, these divisions are real.  The examples cited here are sufficient to show that the 2016 election richly merits the overworked term 'watershed'—it will be the most consequential presidential election in a very long time.

Authors

      
 
 




93

Leonard Cohen 1934 – 2016

The poet and singer was often quoted in TreeHugger.




93

Hydrogen-powered e-bike cranked up to 93 mile range

E-bikes will eat cars, and H2 bikes will eat Toyotas.