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4dOpinion
MedPage Today on MSNImpending Supreme Court Decision Could Upend Planned Parenthood FundingThis term, in Medina v. Planned Parenthood, the Supreme Court will decide whether Medicaid beneficiaries may rely on a ...
A firing squad executed a South Carolina man who killed an off-duty police officer, the second time the rare execution method ...
In a brief order, the court directed the Trump administration not to remove Venezuelans held in the Bluebonnet Detention ...
Ten SC Methodist churches say they should be allowed to severe their connection to the national church amid disputes over ...
South Carolina’s highest court has rejected the last major appeal from Mikal Mahdi, who is scheduled to die by firing squad ...
Under the state's execution protocols, the firing squad will put a hood over Mahdi's head and shoot him in the heart ...
In the South Carolina case, a federal judge ruled in Planned Parenthood's favor, finding that Medicaid recipients may sue under the 1871 law and that the state's move to defund the organization ...
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Wednesday in a case that, at first glance, appears to involve only a technical interpretation of the federal Medicaid Act. But the dispute has drawn wides ...
Opinion
1don MSNOpinion
Why should Democratic Gov. Josh Stein feel bound by anything such an openly-corrupt court says? Why should anyone? | Opinion ...
South Carolina prison officials put a man to death by firing squad for the second time in just over a month when they ...
If the Supreme Court sides with South Carolina, many GOP-led states are expected to likewise block Planned Parenthood from participating in Medicaid.
Supporters of Planned Parenthood argue the state violated the Medicare and Medicaid Act of 1965, which states beneficiaries ...
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