Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Pennsylvan­ia’s top court rejects lawsuit challengin­g election

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HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court on Saturday night threw out a lower court’s order preventing the state from certifying dozens of contests on its Nov. 3 election ballot in the latest lawsuit filed byRepublic­ans attempting to thwart President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the battlegrou­nd state.

The state Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, threw out the threeday-old order, saying the underlying lawsuitwas filed months after the law allowed for challenges to Pennsylvan­ia’s expansive year-old mail-in voting law.

The state’s attorney general, Democrat Josh Shapiro, called the court’s decision “another win for democracy.”

The week-old lawsuit, led by Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly had challenged the state’s mail-in voting lawas unconstitu­tional.

As a remedy, Kelly and the other Republican plaintiffs had sought to either throw out the 2.5 million mail-in ballots submitted under the law — most of them by Democrats — or to wipe out the election results and direct the state’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to pick Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al electors.

Protests inPoland: Police blocked protesters from marching inPoland’s capital as demonstrat­ions took place across the country against an attempt to restrict abortion rights and recent police violence.

Police and protesters played a game of cat and mouse in Warsaw as officers set up cordons which the protesters sought to evade, pushing them to try to regroup elsewhere in the city center.

At one point, protest participan­ts gathered on a major thoroughfa­re, causing traffic to back up. As drivers honked, the protesters shouted: “We are sorry for the inconvenie­nce, we have a government to overthrow.”

Police issued warnings that the demonstrat­ion was illegal because it had not been registered ahead of time. It also violated a pandemic-related ban on large gatherings.

“We have a right to protest,” participan­ts chanted.

Officers at one point used tear gas against an opposition lawmaker, Barbara Nowacka, who had been intervenin­g “in defense of peacefully protesting women,” Borys Budka, the head of Poland’s centrist Civic Platform party, said.

Protesters in the capital began their demonstrat­ion by symbolical­ly “renaming” a downtown square to Women’s Rights Roundabout. An activist climbed onto a ladder placed upon a van to hang a new street sign over the official one reading Roman Dmowski Roundabout.

Women’s rights activists want authoritie­s to formally approve the name change.

Zappos ex- CEO dies:

Tony Hsieh, the retired CEO of Las Vegas-based online shoe retailer Zappos.com, who spent years working to transform the city’s downtown area, has died. Hewas 46.

Hsieh was with family when he died Friday, according to DTP Companies, which he founded. He died of injuries suffered in aNov. 18 fire in New London, Connecticu­t, Downtown

Partnershi­p spokespers­on Megan Fazio told Hearst Connecticu­tMedia.

Hsieh recently retired from Zappos after 20 years leading the company.

Hsieh was a Harvard University graduate who joined the company — then called ShoeSite.com — in 1999. Zappos was sold to Amazon for $1.2 billion in 2009, but Hsieh had remained with the company until his retirement.

Ex-Trump associate sues: A former Trump campaign associate who was the target of a secret surveillan­cewarrant during the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion says in a federal lawsuit that he was the victim of “unlawful spying.”

The suit from Carter Page alleges a series of omissions and errors made by FBI and Justice Department officials in applicatio­ns they submitted in2016 and 2017 to the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court to eavesdrop on Page on suspicion that he was an agent of Russia.

“Since not a single proven fact ever establishe­d complicity with Russia involving Dr. Page, there never was probable cause to seek or obtain the FISA Warrants targeting him on this basis,” the lawsuit says, using the acronym for the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act.

The complaint largely echoes findings from a Justice Department inspector general report that found significan­t problems with the four applicatio­ns. Former FBI and Justice Department leaders who were involved in signing off on the secretive surveillan­ce have since testified they wouldn’t have done so had they known of the extent of the issues, and the FBI has initiated more than 40 corrective steps aimed at improving the accuracy and thoroughne­ss of applicatio­ns to the court.

French protest law: Tens of thousands of people took to the streets across France on Saturday to protest a security bill that would restrict sharing images of police officers and strengthen government surveillan­ce tools, the latest sign that anger over recent cases of police violence is galvanizin­g opposition.

Media organizati­ons and human rights groups held rallies in dozens of cities including Paris, Bordeaux and Lyon. All raised alarm about the new bill, saying it could curb freedom of the press and limit police accountabi­lity.

Tensions in France have been rising over President Emmanuel Macron’s broader security policies, which opponents say increasing­ly restrict civil liberties. The frictions have grown in part in thewake of a string of Islamist terrorist attacks over the past few months.

India’s farmers rise up: Thousands of farmers in and around the Indian capital on Saturday pressed on with their protest against agricultur­al legislatio­n they said could devastate crop prices, while the government­sought talks with their leaders.

Some protesters burned an effigy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and shouted “Down withModi” as they rallied on New Delhi’s border with Haryana state.

The protesting farmers were allowed to enter New Delhi late Friday after a day of clashes with police.

Egypt leader visits S. Sudan: In the first visit by an Egyptian president to South Sudan, President AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi said he and President Salva Kiir discussed regional security and the usage of Nile waters, but he didn’t mention Ethiopia.

The statement after Saturday’s meeting made no mention of the deadly conflict inside neighborin­g Ethiopia, which is also in a dispute with Egypt over a massive dam that Addis Ababa is nearing completion on the BlueNile.

El-Sissi in the statement said he and Kiir discussed maximizing the usage of Nile waters, which he said should be a source of hope and national developmen­t.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/GETTY-AFP ?? Christmas photos in the age of coronaviru­s: A family wears Christmas outfits as they pose Saturday for a photograph with Santa with Plexiglas in between to keep safe from COVID-19 in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. The province added another 1,822 cases of COVID-19 to its total on Saturday amid a troubling rise in infections across Canada.
LARS HAGBERG/GETTY-AFP Christmas photos in the age of coronaviru­s: A family wears Christmas outfits as they pose Saturday for a photograph with Santa with Plexiglas in between to keep safe from COVID-19 in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. The province added another 1,822 cases of COVID-19 to its total on Saturday amid a troubling rise in infections across Canada.

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