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Moment of big opportunity and high risk for Marine Le Pen

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Moment of big opportunity and high risk for Marine Le Pen


The no-confidence vote facing French Prime Minister Michel Barnier is a high-stakes moment for Marine Le Pen.

It could be her best chance of power yet as head of France’s far-right National Rally.

Before she decided to push for the downfall of Michel Barnier, she said she wasn’t “the master of the clocks” – the one who dictated the agenda.

But that may well be exactly what she becomes, by bringing down Emmanuel Macron’s second government since he beat her to the presidency for a second time in 2022.

As his presidency looks ever weaker, it is Le Pen who appears to have the upper hand.

However, this situation is not without immense risks for her too.

Le Pen has played a waiting game for years as National Rally’s leader. She may be tantalisingly close to power now – but she is having to make big choices.

Pushing for a no-confidence vote “comes as a considerable risk because people are now wondering if she’s really acting in the interests of the country or her own, personal interests,” says Prof Armin Steinbach of HEC business school in Paris.

“What is obvious is that it’s not about Barnier… it’s about her trying to overthrow and weaken Macron, obviously for her personal ambitions to herself become the next president,” he told the BBC.

Le Pen has long sought to “normalise” National Rally (RN) in the eyes of the French people, rebranding it six years ago from her father’s old National Front.

Jump back a few months to France’s snap parliamentary elections when RN came first with 32% of the vote. Her mission appeared almost complete, even if it could only manage third place in the run-off round.

Now in the dying days of 2024, she is taking a gamble on whether French voters will see her as acting in the national interest in bringing down a weakened government because she objects to its 2025 budget that aims to bring down France’s budget deficit from 6% of national output, or GDP.

Barnier had already agreed to several of her demands on social security – but Le Pen decided it was not enough.

There are real economic risks for France, as well as real political risks for Le Pen in backing a left-sponsored vote of no confidence.

After only three months in the job, Barnier has appealed to MPs to act in France’s greater interest, but Le Pen’s party leader Jordan Bardella has accused him of adopting a “strategy of fear”.

Le Pen’s colleagues are sensing Macron’s potential downfall.

RN adviser Philippe Olivier told Le Monde the president was “a fallen republican monarch, advancing with his shirt open and a rope around his neck up to the next dissolution [of parliament]”.

It was Macron’s surprise decision to call an early parliamentary election in June that has left France in the political deadlock it finds itself now.

Le Pen’s argument is that Barnier didn’t include enough of her demands in his budget, while Barnier said his budget wasn’t “aimed to please” – and he accused her of “trying to get into a kind of bidding war” during their negotiations.

The RN leader could end up plunging France “into the great political and financial unknown”, in the words of Le Figaro deputy editor Vincent Trémolet de Villers.

She won’t want to be labelled as the politician who pushed France into economic turbulence when in her eyes it is Macron who is to blame for France’s economic state.

“It’s a result of seven years of amateurism and a spectacular drift in our public finances,” she has said.

There are plenty of French voters who want Macron gone before his term ends in 2027. Recent polls suggest at least 62% of the electorate think the president should resign if the Barnier government falls.

National Rally would arguably be in line with the broader electorate if it pushed for that, even if Le Pen has not yet done so.

But the RN leader has other issues going on behind the scenes which her critics believe might be influencing her judgement.

On 31 March, a French court will rule in a long-running trial against her and other party figures on allegations of misuse of European Parliament funding.

Prosecutors want her to go to jail and face a five-year ban in public office.

If that were to happen, her hopes of winning the presidency would be dashed.

For Marine Le Pen this moment really could be now or never.

Three times she has run for the top job. If she does get to run a fourth time in the coming months she is in with a strong chance of winning.

Jordan Bardella is already considered more popular than Le Pen both within National Rally and beyond, and if Macron does see out his term, the 29-year-old party chief would be favourite to run in 2027.

No French government has fallen after a no-confidence vote since 1962.

Get this wrong and Le Pen may not be forgiven next time France goes to the ballot box.



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9 states poised to end coverage for millions if Trump cuts Medicaid funding

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9 states poised to end coverage for millions if Trump cuts Medicaid funding


With Donald Trump’s return to the White House and Republicans taking full control of Congress in 2025, the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion is back on the chopping block.

More than 3 million adults in nine states would be at immediate risk of losing their health coverage should the GOP reduce the extra federal Medicaid funding that’s enabled states to widen eligibility, according to KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News, and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families. That’s because the states have trigger laws that would swiftly end their Medicaid expansions if federal funding falls.

The states are Arizona, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Utah and Virginia.

The 2010 Affordable Care Act encouraged states to expand Medicaid programs to cover more low-income Americans who didn’t get health insurance through their jobs. Forty states and the District of Columbia agreed, extending health insurance since 2014 to an estimated 21 million people and helping drive the U.S. uninsured rate to record lows.

In exchange, the federal government pays 90% of the cost to cover the expanded population. That’s far higher than the federal match for other Medicaid beneficiaries, which averages about 57% nationwide.

Conservative policy groups, which generally have opposed the ACA, say the program costs too much and covers too many people. Democrats say the Medicaid expansion has saved lives and helped communities by widening coverage to people who could not afford private insurance.

If Congress cuts federal funding, Medicaid expansion would be at risk in all states that have opted into it — even those without trigger laws — because state legislatures would be forced to make up the difference, said Renuka Tipirneni, an associate professor at the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health.

Decisions to keep or roll back the expansion “would depend on the politics at the state level,” Tipirneni said. 

For instance, Michigan approved a trigger as part of its Medicaid expansion in 2013, when it was controlled by a Republican governor and legislature. Last year, with the government controlled by Democrats, the state eliminated its funding trigger.

Six of the nine states with trigger laws — Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Montana, North Carolina and Utah — went for Trump in the 2024 election.

Most of the nine states’ triggers kick in if federal funding falls below the 90% threshold. Arizona’s trigger would eliminate its expansion if funding falls below 80%. 

Montana’s law rolls back expansion below 90% funding but allows it to continue if lawmakers identify additional funding. Under state law, Montana lawmakers must reauthorize its Medicaid expansion in 2025 or the expansion will end.

Across the states with triggers, between 3.1 million and 3.7 million people would swiftly lose their coverage, researchers at KFF and the Georgetown center estimate. The difference depends on how states treat people who were added to Medicaid before the ACA expansion; they may continue to qualify even if the expansion ends.

Three other states — Iowa, Idaho and New Mexico— have laws that require their governments to mitigate the financial impact of losing federal Medicaid expansion funding but would not automatically end expansions. With those three states included, about 4.3 million Medicaid expansion enrollees would be at risk of losing coverage, according to KFF. 

The ACA allowed Medicaid expansions to adults with incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level, or about $20,783 for an individual in 2024.

Nearly a quarter of the 81 million people enrolled in Medicaid nationally are in the program due to expansions.

“With a reduction in the expansion match rate, it is likely that all states would need to evaluate whether to continue expansion coverage because it would require a significant increase in state spending,” said Robin Rudowitz, vice president and director of the Program on Medicaid and the Uninsured at KFF. “If states drop coverage, it is likely that there would be an increase in the number of uninsured, and that would limit access to care across red and blue states that have adopted expansion.”

States rarely cut eligibility for social programs such as Medicaid once it’s been granted.

The triggers make it politically easier for state lawmakers to end Medicaid expansion because they would not have to take any new action to cut coverage, said Edwin Park, a research professor at the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families.

To see the impact of trigger laws, consider what happened after the Supreme Court in 2022 struck down Roe v. Wade and, with it, the constitutional right to an abortion. Conservative lawmakers in 13 states had crafted trigger laws that would automatically implement bans in the event a national right to abortion were struck down. Those state laws resulted in restrictions taking effect immediately after the court ruling, or shortly thereafter.

States adopted triggers as part of Medicaid expansion to win over lawmakers skeptical of putting state dollars on the hook for a federal program unpopular with most Republicans.

It’s unclear what Trump and congressional Republicans will do with Medicaid after he takes office in January, but one indicator could be a recent recommendation from the Paragon Health Institute, a leading conservative policy organization led by former Trump health adviser Brian Blase.

Paragon has proposed that starting in 2026 the federal government would phase down the 90% federal match for expansion until 2034, when it would reach parity with each state’s federal match for its traditional enrollees. Under that plan, states could still get ACA Medicaid expansion funding but restrict coverage to enrollees with incomes up to the federal poverty level. Currently, to receive expansion funding, states must offer coverage to everyone up to 138% of the poverty level.

Daniel Derksen, director of the Center for Rural Health at the University of Arizona, said it’s unlikely Arizona would move to eliminate its trigger and make up for lost federal funds. “It would be a tough sell right now as it would put a big strain on the budget,” he said.

Medicaid has been in the crosshairs of Republicans in Washington before. Republican congressional leaders in 2017 proposed legislation to cut federal expansion funding, a move that would have shifted billions in costs to states. That plan, part of a strategy to repeal Obamacare, ultimately failed.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling and journalism.



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Hidden DNA in plants reveals secrets of photosynthesis

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Hidden DNA in plants reveals secrets of photosynthesis


Hidden DNA in plants reveals secrets of photosynthesis
Phylogenetic analyses of organellar diversity in A. thaliana based on chloroplast genome variation. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2414024121

Scientists have uncovered genetic variation in the unexplored DNA of the photosynthetic and energy factories of Arabidopsis plants, which plays a crucial role in the efficiency of photosynthesis in plants. These insights—published Nov. 27 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences—pave the way for more productive, climate-resilient crops that could contribute to sustainable global food security.

In addition to chromosomes, plant cells contain organelles in their nuclei. These are small specialized compartments with specific functions, such as chloroplasts for photosynthesis (capturing solar energy and CO₂ to produce sugars) and mitochondria (releasing energy from sugars). Both chloroplasts and mitochondria each contain about 100–150 genes that code for proteins essential to their function.

Uncharted territory of organellar genetic variation

For plants to function properly, optimal coordination between chromosomal, chloroplastic, and mitochondrial genes is essential. However, until now, little was known about the significance of organellar genetic variation and how it influences plant performance.

Researchers from Wageningen University & Research (WUR) and Michigan State University are changing that. In their study, they demonstrate that genetic variation in chloroplast and mitochondrial DNA plays a key role in the variation in photosynthesis among Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) plants.

“The role of variation in chloroplasts and mitochondria, particularly in energy production and photosynthesis, is something that could not be studied before—but now it can,” explains Mark Aarts, professor of Plant Genetics at WUR, who supervised the research.

Analysis of 240 ‘cybrid’ Arabidopsis lines

For their research, the authors developed a new method for generating so-called cybrids on a large scale. In a cybrid, the original chloroplasts and mitochondria are all replaced by those from another plant.

“By combining the chromosomes of one of four different Arabidopsis plants with the chloroplasts and mitochondria of one of 60 other Arabidopsis plants, we were able to create 240 unique cybrids,” says Aarts.

The plants used in the study originate from a wide range of locations across Europe, Asia, and Africa, Arabidopsis’ natural range.

This is the first time such a large set of cybrids has been produced. According to Aarts, this demonstrates that this approach could also be applied to , bringing a similar method within reach for plant breeding companies.

“In the past it was very complicated and time consuming to study the contribution of chloroplastic and mitochondrial variation to energy production and photosynthesis in plants—but now it is feasible.”

Toward more efficient photosynthesis and plant growth

The efficiency of plant photosynthesis in the field is quite low when compared to . Crops utilize on average only about 1% of the solar energy that reaches the plant. Earlier research has shown that this efficiency could, in principle, be 5 to 6 times higher. Unlocking that potential is the focus of ongoing research at the Jan IngenHousz Institute in Wageningen, where two of the paper’s authors are currently based.

In the past, efforts to improve photosynthesis focused primarily on utilizing in chromosomes. According to Mark Aarts, this discovery expands the possibilities for plant scientists and breeders to explore and enhance energy production and . This can contribute to future crop varieties that better equipped to capture and utilize energy for optimal growth.

Aarts states, “Enhancing the ability of crops to capture and produce reliable yields under varying is crucial for feeding a growing global population with climate-resilient, robust crops that are grown sustainably.”

More information:
Tom P. J. M. Theeuwen et al, Species-wide inventory of Arabidopsis thaliana organellar variation reveals ample phenotypic variation for photosynthetic performance, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2414024121

Citation:
Hidden DNA in plants reveals secrets of photosynthesis (2024, December 2)
retrieved 4 December 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-12-hidden-dna-reveals-secrets-photosynthesis.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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Tech Life: How green is AI?

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Tech Life: How green is AI?



Tech Life meets leading AI scientist Sasha Luccioni, one of the BBC’s 100 Women 2024.



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Massive asteroid impacts did not change Earth’s climate in the long term, research finds

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Massive asteroid impacts did not change Earth’s climate in the long term, research finds


Massive asteroid impacts did not change Earth's climate in the long term
Microscope image of silica droplets, or microspherules, found in the rock, this time cropped to be a landscape image and with a plain black background. Credit: Natalie Cheng / Bridget Wade

Two massive asteroids hit Earth around 35.65 million years ago, but did not lead to any lasting changes in the Earth’s climate, according to a study by UCL researchers.

The rocks, both several miles wide, hit Earth about 25,000 years apart, leaving the 60-mile (100km) Popigai crater in Siberia, Russia, and the 25–55 mile (40–85km) crater in the Chesapeake Bay, in the United States—the fourth and fifth largest known asteroid craters on Earth.

The study, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, found no evidence of a lasting shift in climate in the 150,000 years that followed the impacts.

The researchers inferred the past climate by looking at isotopes (atom types) in the fossils of tiny, shelled organisms that lived in the sea or on the seafloor at the time. The pattern of isotopes reflects how warm the waters were when the organisms were alive.

Co-author Professor Bridget Wade (UCL Earth Sciences) said, “What is remarkable about our results is that there was no real change following the impacts. We expected the isotopes to shift in one direction or another, indicating warmer or cooler waters, but this did not happen. These large asteroid impacts occurred and, over the long term, our planet seemed to carry on as usual.

“However, our study would not have picked up shorter-term changes over tens or hundreds of years, as the samples were every 11,000 years. Over a human time scale, these asteroid impacts would be a disaster. They would create a massive shockwave and tsunami, there would be widespread fires, and large amounts of dust would be sent into the air, blocking out sunlight.

“Modeling studies of the larger Chicxulub impact, which killed off the dinosaurs, also suggest a shift in climate on a much smaller time scale of less than 25 years.

“So we still need to know what is coming and fund missions to prevent future collisions.”

The research team, including Professor Wade and MSc Geosciences student Natalie Cheng, analyzed isotopes in over 1,500 fossils of single-celled organisms called foraminifera, both those that lived close to the surface of the ocean (planktonic foraminifera) and on the seafloor (benthic foraminifera).

These fossils ranged from 35.5 to 35.9 million years old and were found embedded within three meters of a rock core taken from underneath the Gulf of Mexico by the scientific Deep Sea Drilling Project.

Massive asteroid impacts did not change Earth's climate in the long term
Microscope image of silica droplets, or microspherules, found in the rock. Credit: Natalie Cheng / Bridget Wade

The two major asteroids that hit during that time have been estimated to be 3–5 miles (5–8km) and 2–3 miles (3–5km) wide. The larger of the two, which created the Popigai crater, was about as wide as Everest is tall.

In addition to these two impacts, existing evidence suggests three smaller asteroids also hit Earth during this time—the late Eocene epoch—pointing to a disturbance in our solar system’s asteroid belt.

Previous investigations into the climate of the time had been inconclusive, the researchers noted, with some linking the asteroid impacts with accelerated cooling and others with episodes of warmer temperatures.

However, these studies were conducted at lower resolution, looking at samples at greater intervals than 11,000 years, and their analysis was more limited—for instance, only looking at species of benthic foraminifera that lived on the seafloor.

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By using fossils that lived at different ocean depths, the new study provides a more complete picture of how the oceans responded to the impact events.

The researchers looked at carbon and oxygen isotopes in multiple species of planktonic and benthic foraminifera.

They found shifts in isotopes about 100,000 years prior to the two asteroid impacts, suggesting a warming of about 2 degrees C in the surface ocean and a 1 degree C cooling in deep water. But no shifts were found around the time of the impacts or afterwards.

Within the rock, the researchers also found evidence of the two major impacts in the form of thousands of tiny droplets of glass, or silica. These form after silica-containing rocks get vaporized by an asteroid. The silica end up in the atmosphere, but solidify into droplets as they cool.

Co-author and MSc Geosciences graduate Natalie Cheng said, “Given that the Chicxulub impact likely led to a major extinction event, we were curious to investigate whether what appeared as a series of sizable asteroid impacts during the Eocene also caused long-lasting climate changes. We were surprised to discover that there were no significant climate responses to these impacts.

“It was fascinating to read Earth’s climate history from the chemistry preserved in microfossils. It was especially interesting to work with our selection of foraminifera species and discover beautiful specimens of microspherules along the way.”

More information:
No paleoclimatic anomalies are associated with the late Eocene extraterrestrial impact events, Communications Earth & Environment (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-024-01874-x

Citation:
Massive asteroid impacts did not change Earth’s climate in the long term, research finds (2024, December 4)
retrieved 4 December 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-12-massive-asteroid-impacts-earth-climate.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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