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Tag: court ruling

  • Analysis: How did Trump, Abbott screw up Texas redistricting so badly? | Opinion

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    Gov. Greg Abbott gives remarks with former President Donald Trump in Edinburg at the South Texas International airport in November 2023.

    Gov. Greg Abbott gives remarks with former President Donald Trump in Edinburg at the South Texas International airport in November 2023.

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    Gov. Greg Abbott and other Texas Republican leaders learned an important, and perhaps costly, lesson Tuesday when a federal court stopped the state from using a new map of congressional districts for next year’s elections: If you’re going to a partisan knife fight, you’d better bring your most useful blade.

    And at the risk of mixing metaphors, the Trump Justice Department isn’t exactly the sharpest tool in the shed.

    The court ruled Tuesday that Texas cannot use the map legislators approved in a special session for next year’s midterm elections. The state must stick with current districts, which were enacted in 2021. Republicans, prodded by President Donald Trump, sought to make five more of the state’s 38 U.S. House districts more likely to elect a Republican. The party fears that without them, it will have difficulty holding control of Congress for the final two years of Trump’s term.

    So, the politics were always clear. What’s telling is the rationale that the court laid out. A coalition of minority-rights groups argued, in suing the state over the map, that it deliberately targeted the voting strength of racial minorities, chiefly Black and Hispanic voters. Two of three federal judges empaneled to hear the case agreed.

    Gov. Abbott’s unusual call for mid-decade redistricting

    They noted that Abbott’s initial stated reason for calling lawmakers back to draw a new map — highly unusual in the middle of a decade — was a hand-slap from the Justice Department over districts that might violate a recent court ruling.

    The law is complicated here but, essentially, a federal appeals court ruled in a different Texas case that states cannot be required to create “coalition districts.” Those are maps under which more than one racial or ethnic minority group, acting in concert, can determine a winner.

    Opponents of Texas’ mid-decade redistricting plan rally at the Texas Capitol on Aug. 20, 2025.
    Opponents of Texas’ mid-decade redistricting plan rally at the Texas Capitol on Aug. 20, 2025. Eleanor Dearman

    But the ruling didn’t say states couldn’t choose on their own to create such districts. Think of the difference between eating your broccoli because Mom said so or having it because you like it or think it’s good for you.

    Texas devoured the broccoli. Tuesday’s ruling found, quite logically, that the state’s consideration of race probably went overboard.

    The court’s 160-page ruling is a breathtaking slap at Trump’s Justice Department. It’s hard to determine what the department wanted, the judges said, because its letter to Texas officials “contains so many factual, legal, and typographical errors.” Lawyers working for Attorney General Ken Paxton described the DOJ guidance as “ ‘legally unsound, baseless, erroneous, ham-fisted and a mess.’ ”

    Folks, when Paxton thinks you’re sloppy, it’s time to reconsider your life’s work.

    Supreme Court allows redistricting for partisan gain

    At the same time, to explain the redraw, Republicans often pointed to the Supreme Court’s decision that federal courts cannot step in when states change maps expressly for partisan intent. So, two paths were available to justify what Trump was asking for. Texas and the Justice Department picked the wrong one.

    Politically, it could go down as a backfire worthy of a 1974 El Camino.

    California and other Democratic-dominated states used Texas’ step as a reason to do their own — on a partisan basis. Those will probably stand, while Abbott’s new map is, at best, on life support.

    Texas will appeal quickly, and the case probably goes directly to the Supreme Court. The justices could delay the primaries currently set for March and ultimately allow the new map. If they don’t, it just got considerably harder for Republicans to keep the House majority — the exact opposite of what Trump was asking for.

    If the court does act and primaries must be delayed, there could be all sorts of unforeseen political consequences. The last time it happened, in 2012, primaries were just after Memorial Day, with runoffs at the end of July. That’s a recipe for low voter turnout, which, along with more time to campaign, helped an upstart conservative beat the sitting lieutenant governor and, against great odds, ultimately win a U.S. Senate seat.

    That candidate? You know him as Sen. Ted Cruz.

    Expect a big fight over the Voting Rights Act

    Longer-term, there could be an epic fight over the rules for redistricting. Right now, the playing field is a mess. States can be dinged for not considering race enough, lest too few Black and Hispanic candidates win elections. But they can’t take race into account too much, or they get reprimanded like Texas did Tuesday.

    If Democratic states can draw maps that eliminate Republican districts but red states can’t act in kind, the GOP won’t stand for that very long. Redistricting is a never-ending arms race. Eventually, Republicans could seek to finally end the Voting Rights Act and let the constitutional chips fall where they may.

    That’s a long way down the road, though. Today, Texas Republicans should consider why their leaders bungled this so badly — particularly when Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Attorney General Ken Paxton love to brag about how easy it is for them to get Trump on the phone.

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    This story was originally published November 18, 2025 at 2:36 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ryan J. Rusak is opinion editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He grew up in Benbrook and is a TCU graduate. He spent more than 15 years as a political journalist, overseeing coverage of four presidential elections and several sessions of the Texas Legislature. He writes about Fort Worth/Tarrant County politics and government, along with Texas and national politics, education, social and cultural issues, and occasionally sports, music and pop culture. Rusak, who lives in east Fort Worth, was recently named Star Opinion Writer of the Year for 2024 by Texas Managing Editors, a news industry group.

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  • Colorado wins legal battle to cap interest rates on consumer loans

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    Colorado can now move forward with a cap on what some out-of-state lenders can charge borrowers in interest after the U.S Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit rejected a lower court ruling that blocked state efforts to set a limit.

    At question were consumer loans that nonbank lenders were issuing through banks chartered in other states with no caps or very high caps on interest rates. Some lenders were just above the state’s limit of 36%, while others were charging rates approaching 200% a year.

    “This is about consumers being protected from these harmful loans. It is also about state rights and whether Colorado can decide if the usury laws can apply to its residents,” said Andrew Kushner, senior policy counsel for the Center for Responsible Lending, one of several consumer groups supporting Colorado in its legal battle.

    As lending has moved increasingly online, and as the bar on what was considered an acceptable interest rate has continued to move higher, Colorado has taken steps to protect consumers, especially in the areas of payday, alternative and installment loans, said Andrea Kuwik, director of policy and research at the Bell Policy Center in Denver.

    Colorado voters in 2018 passed Proposition 111, which capped short-term payday loans at a maximum rate of 36%, down from the 186% a year borrowers had been paying a year on average between interest and fees. That measure garnered 77% support, an unusually high share for a ballot measure.

    But lenders pivoted and began offering more “alternative” loan products with short terms and triple-digit interest rates. The Colorado Attorney General reached agreements with a couple of the more aggressive out-of-state banks. In 2023, the Colorado legislature sought to execute an opt-out provision in federal banking law to bring more of the banks into compliance, which triggered a lawsuit.

    “These are the limits that are right for Coloradans and voters have made this a priority. The ruling gives them back their power,” Kuwik said. She adds that other states have been watching the case and could be encouraged to follow Colorado’s lead.

    Consumer lending can be viewed as a three-tier cake. At the top are nationally chartered banks, which issue the majority of credit cards and have the best name recognition. Although they follow federal banking rules, including on disclosure, when it comes to limits on interest rates, they are under the “usury” laws of their home states.

    The closest thing to a national usury law is a 36% cap on loans made to active duty military personnel and their dependents, but otherwise, national banks can charge what their home states allow. And no surprise, national banks tend to locate in the state with the loosest regulations on interest rates and consumer protections.

    In the middle are state-chartered banks. Under the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act (DIDMCA) of 1980, state-chartered banks can make loans in other states, provided they follow the rules, usury and otherwise, of their home state.

    At the bottom are nonbank lenders who must comply with state lending rules and licensing requirements. Technology has made it much easier for “fintech” companies to reach consumers nationwide, and some firms have found a willing market among consumers facing financial distress.

    To get around state restrictions, fintech companies partnered with state-chartered banks in places like Utah, which doesn’t have a set cap on interest rates. Critics argue these “rent-a-bank” arrangements allow fintech companies to skirt the consumer protections states have sought to erect.

    For example, Utah’s only limits are against “unconscionable” interest rates, but that term remains undefined and rarely enforced in a court system that has shown a propensity to side with lenders.

    Colorado isn’t on the low end among states that have issued interest rate caps, according to a comparison from the National Consumer Law Center. But residents carry some of the highest debt burdens of any state, and lawmakers have fought back against lending practices considered predatory. In 2023, the state legislature enacted an opt-out clause under DIDMCA to prevent state-chartered banks from “exporting” higher-rate loans into Colorado. Iowa is the only other state that has an active opt-out provision.

    Colorado’s law was set to take effect on July 1, 2024, but in March, the National Association of Industrial Bankers, the American Financial Services Association, and the American Fintech Council sued to prevent its implementation.

    In June, right before implementation, U.S. District Judge Daniel Domenico ruled that under DIDMCA, a loan is granted in the state where the lender is located, not where the borrower resides, and issued a preliminary injunction. On appeal, a panel of three judges in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned Domenico’s ruling and issued a 2-1 ruling in Colorado’s favor on Monday.

    Key to the case was an interpretation of the term “loans made in such states.” The majority opinion concluded that the phrase could be interpreted to include where the borrower is located, not just where the bank is based.

    “Likewise, the public interest counsels against enjoining a validly enacted law from a democratically elected state legislature,” they stated.

    Defenders of the high-rate loan products argued that state-chartered lenders would be harmed financially and put at a competitive disadvantage to the national banks. They also argued Colorado was limiting the credit extended to an underserved part of the population and thus harming them.

    For example, borrowing money to cover a car repair could allow someone to keep their job, and borrowing to make the monthly rent payment could prevent an eviction and a cascading series of problems.

    “This decision puts Colorado consumers — especially low- and moderate-income families — at risk of being cut off from safe, regulated financial services at a time when they need them most. It also puts Colorado’s local banks at a disadvantage, making it harder to attract responsible fintech providers and stifling innovative partnerships that help community banks remain competitive,” Phil Goldfeder, CEO of the American Fintech Council, said in a statement.

    The American Financial Services Association (AFSA) has also criticized the ruling and warned it could undermine the nation’s dual banking system that allows for state and national charters. DIDMCA was created, in part, to allow state-chartered banks to compete more effectively with national banks. One way it does so is by giving them a consistent set of regulations to work under rather than a patchwork of varying state regulations.

    “In short, Colorado should be able to oversee Colorado banks, but Colorado should not be able to tell a state-chartered bank properly overseen by regulators in Arizona, California, or Nevada under what terms it can serve consumers,” the AFSA said in a statement.

    So why isn’t an interest rate of 36% high enough? The typical loss rate for credit card issuers is in the 2% to 5% range, and reached as high as 10% during the Great Recession, according to the Federal Reserve. But the large nonbank lenders that partner with state-chartered banks suffered loss rates of 55% in 2022, according to their public filings.

    The reason they can afford to absorb those kinds of losses and lend to whoever shows up is that they are charging loans with annual percentage rates of 100% or more. Borrowers are made aware of what they will be paying and it is up to them to weigh the pros and cons.

    But consumer advocates counter that those in a desperate financial situation may fail to appreciate how much high rates may end up costing them in the long term and fail to pursue other alternatives like pawning items or turning to friends and family. Kushner argues that some loans are so harmful to consumers that they shouldn’t be allowed.

    “A credit product won’t solve the problem of someone not making enough money,” he said. “Being given a loan you can’t afford to repay is an injury. It isn’t a gift in any sense.”

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    Aldo Svaldi

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  • McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

    McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

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    NEW YORK — A broken McDonald’s McFlurry machine, arguably one of life’s greatest nuisances, has finally been solved thanks to a court ruling.

    McDonald’s franchises haven’t been able to fix the soft serve ice cream machines on their own because manufacturing company Taylor owns the copyright and exclusive rights to fix the machines – until now.

    The United States Copyright Office granted a copyright exemption last week that gives restaurants the “right to repair” the machines by bypassing the digital locks that prevented them from being fixed. The inability to make timely fixes has been a bane of the customers’ existence, so much so, that there’s a third-party website called McBroken.com that tracks their availability.

    The exemption, which goes into effect Monday, was requested by advocacy group Public Knowledge and repairs website iFixIt to allow third parties to circumvent digital locks on the machines for repairs. Although the full request wasn’t granted, commercial restaurant equipment received a narrow exemption.

    Public Knowledge and iFixIt teamed together on the issue after the latter group broke apart an ice cream machine and found “lots of easily replaceable parts.”

    The decision will lead to an “overdue shake-up of the commercial food prep industry,” according to Meredith Rose, senior policy counsel at Public Knowledge.

    “There’s nothing vanilla about this victory; an exemption for retail-level commercial food preparation equipment will spark a flurry of third-party repair activity and enable businesses to better serve their customers,” Rose said in a statement.

    McDonald’s and Taylor didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Broken ice cream machines have been such a blemish on McDonald’s reputation that even competitors mock them for it. And perhaps a fix can’t come quick enough: Nearly 15% of ice cream machines are broken as of Monday, according to McBroken.

    The-CNN-Wire & 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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    CNNWire

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  • McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

    McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK — A broken McDonald’s McFlurry machine, arguably one of life’s greatest nuisances, has finally been solved thanks to a court ruling.

    McDonald’s franchises haven’t been able to fix the soft serve ice cream machines on their own because manufacturing company Taylor owns the copyright and exclusive rights to fix the machines – until now.

    The United States Copyright Office granted a copyright exemption last week that gives restaurants the “right to repair” the machines by bypassing the digital locks that prevented them from being fixed. The inability to make timely fixes has been a bane of the customers’ existence, so much so, that there’s a third-party website called McBroken.com that tracks their availability.

    The exemption, which goes into effect Monday, was requested by advocacy group Public Knowledge and repairs website iFixIt to allow third parties to circumvent digital locks on the machines for repairs. Although the full request wasn’t granted, commercial restaurant equipment received a narrow exemption.

    Public Knowledge and iFixIt teamed together on the issue after the latter group broke apart an ice cream machine and found “lots of easily replaceable parts.”

    The decision will lead to an “overdue shake-up of the commercial food prep industry,” according to Meredith Rose, senior policy counsel at Public Knowledge.

    “There’s nothing vanilla about this victory; an exemption for retail-level commercial food preparation equipment will spark a flurry of third-party repair activity and enable businesses to better serve their customers,” Rose said in a statement.

    McDonald’s and Taylor didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Broken ice cream machines have been such a blemish on McDonald’s reputation that even competitors mock them for it. And perhaps a fix can’t come quick enough: Nearly 15% of ice cream machines are broken as of Monday, according to McBroken.

    The-CNN-Wire & 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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    CNNWire

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  • McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

    McDonald’s restaurants finally have a solution to its busted McFlurry machine problem

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK — A broken McDonald’s McFlurry machine, arguably one of life’s greatest nuisances, has finally been solved thanks to a court ruling.

    McDonald’s franchises haven’t been able to fix the soft serve ice cream machines on their own because manufacturing company Taylor owns the copyright and exclusive rights to fix the machines – until now.

    The United States Copyright Office granted a copyright exemption last week that gives restaurants the “right to repair” the machines by bypassing the digital locks that prevented them from being fixed. The inability to make timely fixes has been a bane of the customers’ existence, so much so, that there’s a third-party website called McBroken.com that tracks their availability.

    The exemption, which goes into effect Monday, was requested by advocacy group Public Knowledge and repairs website iFixIt to allow third parties to circumvent digital locks on the machines for repairs. Although the full request wasn’t granted, commercial restaurant equipment received a narrow exemption.

    Public Knowledge and iFixIt teamed together on the issue after the latter group broke apart an ice cream machine and found “lots of easily replaceable parts.”

    The decision will lead to an “overdue shake-up of the commercial food prep industry,” according to Meredith Rose, senior policy counsel at Public Knowledge.

    “There’s nothing vanilla about this victory; an exemption for retail-level commercial food preparation equipment will spark a flurry of third-party repair activity and enable businesses to better serve their customers,” Rose said in a statement.

    McDonald’s and Taylor didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Broken ice cream machines have been such a blemish on McDonald’s reputation that even competitors mock them for it. And perhaps a fix can’t come quick enough: Nearly 15% of ice cream machines are broken as of Monday, according to McBroken.

    The-CNN-Wire & 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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    CNNWire

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