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271 Sentences With "preempted"

How to use preempted in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "preempted" and check conjugation/comparative form for "preempted". Mastering all the usages of "preempted" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Short answer: A planned joint disclosure was preempted by reporters.
The change has preempted each of the last seven recessions.
None of those policy debates have been preempted or silenced.
SB: We won't ... Stupid sportball preempted us last week, so.
The cable networks preempted Hillary Clinton's speech for Trump's press conference.
But Conte's resignation effectively preempted the vote, upending the government anyway.
Pai also called the legislation illegal because it's preempted by federal law.
You could then be preempted with advertisements to change your mind entirely.
Jackson said the news conference preempted a scheduled meeting at the Governor's mansion.
The company preempted lenders with a lawsuit asserting the transfer was bona fide.
He spoke those words in a nationally televised address that preempted normal network programming.
But Sanders, I think, has preempted all that: He's made the goal single-payer.
CNN media writer Brian Stelter confirms that Matthews preempted being fired by departing voluntarily.
Had House Democrats alleged specific crimes, they would have preempted this line of defense.
Koeltl also dismissed several state law claims, saying they were preempted by federal law.
United States, which struck down stringent Arizona immigration laws as preempted under the Supremacy Clause.
They argued that a state law legalizing sports betting is preempted by existing federal law.
United States, which found Arizona's restrictive immigration laws to be preempted by federal immigration policy.
They argue that a state law legalizing sports betting is preempted by existing federal law.
The FCC preempted those laws in the name of increasing Internet service throughout the country.
As it happened, the senator preempted me; the speech that he actually gave was magnificent.
But a federal judge ruled that the local laws are preempted by federal labor law.
But the decade was also the crossover of sportswear that preempted today's yoga-pant revolution.
But easily arresting Koresh that day would have preempted the biggest raid in ATF history.
Some market commentators said Trump preempted his speech to Congress by announcing part of his plans.
The Justice Department is arguing that these laws are preempted by federal law in different ways.
The Justice Department in its lawsuit argues that Senate Bill 50 is preempted by federal law.
In Texas, a state Senate bill passed last year laid out clear rules and preempted local laws.
He also preempted a common criticism in the US that such regulation is a barrier to innovation.
He has the power to determine if a state consumer finance law is preempted by federal law.
Brady said that discussions among members of the OECD shouldn't be preempted by actions from individual countries.
Trump preempted the event with a tweet Thursday morning, endorsing Saccone in the March 13 special election.
Fireworks and family picnics preempted last week's episode of The Bachelorette, but JoJo and her "boys" are back.
But McConnell's action galvanized GOP senators and preempted their possible support for Obama's March 24.5 choice of Garland.
Even the anticipated alteration to the antenna lines was already preempted by the Meizu Pro 6 in April.
It might have anticipated the blowback from decisions about presenters and preempted said blowback with clearly stated rationale.
He added that "local entities do in fact get preempted with some of those decisions" on national security.
They argued that such a measure is clearly preempted by federal law, which should solely dictate immigration policy.
Sessions might prevail on these issues by claiming that the relevant state statutes are "preempted" by federal law.
Trump and his campaign have preempted the visit with battles with local government officials and the city's police department.
But in most places, officials hesitate because they worry they will be preempted by Washington or worse, get sued.
They preempted the next round on a series B because they could see the numbers before anybody else could.
But it would have given Americans a much-needed exit from its longest war—and preempted, untold additional bloodshed.
The statement preempted the National Enquirer tabloid&aposs story describing intimate texts and photos from Bezos&apos extramarital affair.
Trump's team preempted Mueller's report with its own interpretations and then, when the special counsel testified, he wasn't persuasive.
Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal said he would oppose any bill that preempted state laws with a weaker federal bill, however.
GFG had already preempted that challenge by discarding some of its unprofitable business units in Southeast Asia — does that sound familiar?!
Once again, Trump preempted local police—this time in London—and called an attack "terrorism" before an official announcement was made.
One of those was in Florida, which preempted local bag laws as part of a wide-ranging energy bill in 2008.
Judge Hill ruled that all of North Dakota's state-law claims were preempted because the Food and Drug Administration regulates Purdue's labeling.
Friends later said that Pai was enraged that his speech on internet freedom was preempted, but he smiled and gave awkward thanks.
But the results of the investigation appeared to have been preempted by the head of the military, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.
Somewhere out there is an alternative timeline where the dual-screen booklet PC preempted the whole two-in-one tablet/PC boom.
The Justice Department could file lawsuits on the grounds that state laws regulating pot are unconstitutional because they are preempted by federal law.
But whatever they had decided was preempted by Trump's attempt to save face by firing people who had or were likely to quit.
For two of the songs, Bey preempted the DJ by performing them a capella, only to replay them with the music immediately thereafter.
The unanimous decision in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit said the program is not preempted by federal electricity law.
She also preempted the strike by cancelling classes Thursday last week — before the union had officially announced that it would go on strike.
While other courts have recently found state-law claims over Essure preempted by federal law, Alameda County Judge Winifred Smith's ruling on Aug.
U.S. District Judge David Hale ruled on Wednesday evening that local regulation of union agreements is preempted by the National Labor Relations Act.
Sources also tell me the startup had nearly closed a Series A round before Xometry preempted the investment by making an acquisition offer.
" Yet Facebook has just one vote in controlling the currency, and the Libra Association preempted these criticisms, writing, "We welcome public inquiry and accountability.
Oh, and CalPERS spent a fortune on an internal fee reporting system that could have been preempted had someone just bought Excel for Dummies.
And it created a revised set of rules under which the OCC can review state banking laws to determine if they should be preempted.
When the WB preempted the May 25, 1999 season finale of Buffy over concerns of its portrayal of high school violence, fans went nuts.
Preempted by the New Deal and discredited by Nikita Khrushchev's condemnation of communist atrocities, the "old" socialists ran their last presidential candidate in 1956.
Tensions escalated in August and nearly erupted when Israeli jets preempted an Iranian drone attack from Syria that could easily have triggered a war.
The company contested the state's authority to enact the ban enacted in 1982, saying the state policy should have been preempted by federal law.
Today's version and the earlier ones differ on important details, including how much money is rebated back and whether climate-change-related regulations are preempted.
In January 2015, U.S. District Judge Stephen Wilson in Los Angeles agreed with the law's opponents that the federal Poultry Products Inspection Act preempted it.
AND I KNOW YOU, I KNOW YOU WOULD BRING IT UP SOONER OR LATER SO I PREEMPTED IT. WAPNER: I'LL TAKE THAT AS A COMPLIMENT.
The FCC recently preempted a pair of state laws in North Carolina and Tennessee so that cities there could expand the service outside their borders.
When cities pass laws that Uber opposes, the company commonly seeks to have them preempted with Uber-approved state law or repealed through voter referenda.
We exist in a timeline where "The West Wing" has been preempted by "The Celebrity Apprentice," and bipartisanship is both a myth and a trap.
Creditors can claim that transactions put together before a bankruptcy deprived them of value and preempted court proceedings that are meant to determine their repayment.
" She added that "following a recent federal court ruling, we consider the few remaining environmental claims pending in state courts to be preempted by federal law.
Uber and Lyft only resumed operations in Austin in May 2017 after the state of Texas preempted the city's rules cracking down on ride-hail companies.
As such, the Act unquestionably treats platforms such as Airbnb as the publisher or speaker of third-party content and is completely preempted by the CDA.
Merck, which denies the allegations, argued the lawsuits should be preempted because the FDA did not require an additional fracture warning in the drug's prescribing information.
But in a statement Wednesday afternoon (preempted by a lengthy paragraph of praise for Isakson), Ayers shut the door on accepting an appointment to the Senate.
Phil Murphy vetoed a measure that imposed a fee on plastic bags and preempted localities from passing their own bag bans — a tactic favored by industry.
Trump administration attorneys argued in a "statement of interest" that the state couldn't pursue legal claims against the servicer because they are preempted by federal law.
Kelly was supposed to announce he was leaving at a staff meeting on Monday, but Trump preempted him, telling reporters on Saturday that Kelly was leaving.
We won't know until we see the regulations how much the traditional state authority to regulate association health plans and short-term insurance will be preempted.
Any regulations or laws that restrict where drones can actually fly would likely not stand up to court scrutiny and would likely be preempted by FAA authority.
That December ruling rolled back nationwide net neutrality protections, but also included a clause which preempted any net neutrality legislation from being put forth by the states.
A unanimous three-judge panel at the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said claims against GSK were preempted by federal law and U.S. Supreme Court rulings.
The court threw out the part of the order that barred all states from setting net neutrality rules and argued that states were preempted by federal law.
The issue has derailed several other spending bills in the past two weeks, and preempted the Senate Appropriations Committee from debating bills on health and military construction.
The company, seeking to exploit the deposit, contested Virginia's power to enact the ban, saying the policy should have been preempted by federal law governing nuclear energy.
It explicitly clarifies that state BDS laws are "not preempted by any Federal law" in Subsection E, giving them free rein to continue pursuing anti-BDS action.
The Court should declare that the Executive Order and S. 289 are preempted and unconstitutional, and should permanently enjoin the Defendants from enforcing or giving effect to them.
The official declined to be identified, but senior party leader and former minister Anand Sharma said the BJP had "preempted everything" ahead of the election due by May.
A Jones event Wednesday was preempted by a meeting of the Alabama GOP steering committee, the body that has the power to withdraw the Republican nomination from Moore.
The tour reviews were in (ecstatic), the celebrity guest established (Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau), Olympics coverage politely preempted (there was a Hip watch party in Rio, too).
Teeter said Ogles failed to offer enough evidence that the annuity he bought was fraudulently designed, and said one of his legal theories was preempted by state law.
Nelson County's regulation is preempted because it conflicts with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's October 2017 approval of the pipeline from West Virginia to North Carolina, Moon wrote.
All policy business interruption exclusions should be temporarily preempted by Congress with regard to COVID-19 to allow the PRFC to step in and preform this important function.
Apple's reliance on China means it's likely been bracing for a worst-case scenario far earlier than most, and its moves have largely preempted broader changes and developments.
Sandford that said blacks could not be citizens, as he asserted that the current majority had preempted the political process in the states and undermined the constitutional order.
Felder said he would wait until after the April 24 election to make his decision — but he preempted any election night celebrations by announcing his decision Tuesday afternoon.
President Donald Trump preempted the automaker's announcement over Twitter about an hour beforehand, thanking Barra for selling the plant to Workhorse and reinvesting money in other facilities in Ohio.
" Besides invoking a 130-year-old agreement, AT&T also notes that the "ordinance conflicts with and is preempted by the pole attachment regulations of the Federal Communications Commission.
Supporters have applauded those moves but warn that they are susceptible to legal challenges given that the FCC preempted the states from filling the void with their own rules.
A U.S. appeals court has ruled a lawsuit accusing nutritional supplement maker MusclePharm Corp of misleading consumers about the source of its protein powder was not preempted by federal law.
On Wednesday, he will make the anti-Clinton speech that was supposed to have been delivered last Monday, before he preempted himself with a post-Orlando cavalcade of fear-mongering.
The company had argued that the lawsuits were preempted by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations on changing drug labels, claiming that the FDA would not have approved the change.
Alibaba -Lazada preempted Amazon's arrival with the acquisition of Singapore-based e-grocery company Redmart, and the introduction of a Prime-like membership service in partnership with Uber and Netflix.
But he rejected the state's arguments that the CTA lacked standing to bring the lawsuit, and that AB5 was not preempted because it does not specifically regulate the trucking industry.
Most outrageous, Barr preempted and misrepresented special counsel Robert Mueller's report on behalf of Trump, suggesting, falsely, that it cleared the president and that there was no case for obstruction.
The Pennsylvania Superior Court rejected J&J's arguments that Andrew Yount's claims under Tennessee law that the drugmaker failed to warn of the drug's risks were preempted by federal law.
Chase had argued that the California law is preempted by the federal Home Owners Loan Act (HOLA), which governs thrift banks, including the original issuer of the borrowers' mortgages, Washington Mutual.
A fired UPS driver's race-discrimination claims under the Arkansas Civil Rights Act are preempted by the federal Labor Management Relations Act, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held Tuesday.
Hubble's challenge Cosmologists characterise the universe&aposs expansion in a simple law known as  Hubble&aposs Law  (named after  Edwin Hubble  – although in fact  many other people  preempted Hubble&aposs discovery).
The forecasts remain well below the central bank's inflation target of below but close to 2 percent, however, they were widely expected following a leak on Wednesday which preempted the plans.
In addition to Harris-Perry, José Díaz-Balart's weekday morning show on MSNBC has been preempted for 2016 presidential campaign coverage, and Alex Wagner will not be getting a planned show.
She found that they were preempted under the doctrine of "impossibility preemption": GSK is bound by state laws, but it is ultimately required to defer to the FDA on drug labeling.
As the Supreme Court has largely preempted the ability to cap political spending by the wealthy, public financing is moreover one of the few avenues left to meaningfully improve campaign financing.
This year, the High Sparrow seemed more formidable than ever, as he won over both Queen Margaery and King Tommen to his side and preempted a Lannister /Tyrell attempt to depose him.
The results on rent control, however, were less clear, with a state measure to repeal state rent control limits losing in California, which preempted a local vote on rent control in Berkeley.
Bloomberg preempted his own November announcement with an apology for stop and frisk at a black church, and reiterated his remorse in televised interviews and to reporters trailing him on the road.
The allegations against Seacrest, which he had preempted with a denial back in November before Hardy's full accusations were published in Variety in February, have been dogging him throughout this awards season.
Sprint has said the 2002 state law in question is preempted by a federal law called the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act, enacted in 2000, that regulates state taxation of mobile telecommunications services.
But abandoning any efforts to sustain his life at that point would have preempted the chance for him to see, say good-bye to, and express his deep love for his family.
On Saturday they seized a major gas field in Deir al-Zor province from Islamic State militants in rapid advances that preempted the Syrian government that was also heading in that direction.
If the company has to defend U.S. cases, it would likely argue that claims against it are preempted because the FAA had approved the plane's design, said Justin Green, a plaintiffs lawyer.
The company's suit makes three claims, first that San Francisco's rules are preempted by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects internet platforms from liability for what their users say.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Mary Matson's hostile work environment claim brought under Washington state law was not preempted by federal law.
Last summer, Congress passed legislation that preempted state laws and made GMO disclosure mandatory, though food companies have flexibility in how to present the information, whether on packaging or digitally via smartphone.
The previous day Cohen had preempted Pelosi and six committee chairs set to announce the articles of impeachment by flashing two fingers to reporters -- signaling there would be just two, not three.
I think there are pretty technical legal issues that may arise regarding preemption, but I would be very surprised if the New York courts would allow the state claims to be preempted.
Four women have withdrawn cases alleging they were injured by Bayer Corp's Essure contraceptive device, after a federal judge in California ruled that one plaintiff's state-law claims were preempted by federal law.
The panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that a lower court judge had incorrectly found that most of the case against Gaspari Nutrition Inc was preempted by federal law.
Early last year, a magisterial district judge in Camp Hill preempted the wedding of a Tajik couple by calling ICE on the groom and his best man, who were led away in handcuffs.
A California judge has ruled that a woman's state-law claims that the label for Boehringer Ingelheim's blood thinner Pradaxa did not adequately warn of its bleeding risks are preempted by federal law.
In his earlier dismissal, Meyer said the plaintiffs were trying merely to enforce guidelines for spring water under the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, and that this preempted their state law claims.
By generalizing the law, said lobbyist David Mickenberg of Mickenberg Dunn Lachs & Smith, Vermont can argue that it's not preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act because it doesn't apply only to arbitration clauses.
A federal appeals court on Friday ruled that an Arkansas law that prohibited pharmacy benefits managers from reimbursing pharmacists for generic drugs at less than the wholesale cost was preempted by federal law.
The judge found that the litigation could be retaliatory, but she also should have found that it had no reasonable basis or was preempted in order to issue the injunction, the panel said.
Murphy is following the lead of his counterparts in New York and Montana, who are pushing back on the FCC order, which also expressly preempted states from implementing their own net neutrality regulations.
The AG's office filed an amended complaint in federal court in Sherman, Texas, claiming Dallas' ordinance is preempted by state minimum wage law and, because it exempts unionized businesses, discriminates against non-union workplaces.
Because New Jersey corporate law applies generally and doesn't even mention arbitration, state law does not disfavor arbitration and therefore, according to J&J and the pension funds, is not preempted by the FAA.
Energy Minister Temenuzhka Petkova will announce the bidders on Tuesday morning, the energy ministry said, a move preempted by Russia's state-owned Rosatom which said it had applied to take part in the project.
Every company tries to be the first with the biggest CES announcement, but Asus has been preempted today by hardware partner Qualcomm, which has revealed the upcoming ZenFone AR smartphone with Google Tango support.
A Manhattan federal judge has tossed 24 cases in the multidistrict litigation over blood thinner Eliquis, finding the plaintiffs' state law claims were preempted by the regulatory authority of the Food and Drug Administration.
A federal judge in Illinois has partly reversed a previous decision in consolidated litigation over testosterone products that found plaintiffs' state-law claims over generic versions of the drugs were preempted by federal law.
The FCC preempted those state laws in a party-line vote in 2015, arguing that it has a mandate to promote competition in the broadband market, and the states subsequently sued over the order.
Moore, who was in Washington only last week to visit the Senate and attend fundraisers with Republican senators, preempted the Washington Post report by denying the allegations to the far-right media outlet Breitbart.
"We conclude that aesthetics requirements are not preempted if they are (1) reasonable, (2) no more burdensome than those applied to other types of infrastructure deployments, and (3) published in advance," the order continues.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court on Friday unanimously held that most of a 2005 state law creating a presumption that all workers are employees was not preempted by the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act.
Imagine if Republicans as the "family values" party had preempted Democrats by asserting that the ultimate pro-family position would be to support same sex couples looking to pledge their love for each other.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the New Jersey Appellate Division rejected M&K Construction's claim that the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA), which outlaws marijuana, preempted a 2019 state law requiring the reimbursement.
On March 6th, the Department of Justice (DoJ) filed a lawsuit in a federal district court in Sacramento outlining three ways California has "preempted" federal immigration law and "impermissibly discriminate[d] against the United States".
Juul Labs, whose trendy, nicotine-rich products have been singled out as being especially enticing to teens, preempted the FDA's response by announcing they would pull most of their flavored products off physical store shelves.
U.S. District Judge John Copenhaver Jr on Friday sided with oil and gas producer EQT Production Co in finding parts of a Fayette County ordinance were preempted by state and federal law and therefore void.
U.S. District Judge Peter Sheridan in Trenton, New Jersey, on Tuesday rejected arguments by Pfizer that the state-law antitrust claims insurers and others who purchased Lipitor have made are preempted by federal patent law.
A divided U.S. appeals court has ruled that a Wisconsin law allowing workers to revoke their authorization to have union fees deducted from their pay with 30 days' notice is preempted by federal labor law.
Suffolk County Supreme Court Justice Jerry Garguilo on Monday rejected arguments by OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma LP and other companies that the counties' claims were either preempted by federal law, time-barred or insufficiently alleged.
John Thune, the Republican whip, preempted Brown's critiques on Monday, saying that about $1.2 trillion of the bill is targeted for individuals and families, health care workers and hospitals, health care providers and unemployed people.
John L. Culhane, Jr., a partner at Ballard Spahr LLP, who represents student loan servicers, said that the state-by-state effort to regulate the companies is "totally misguided" and "clearly" preempted by federal law.
A federal judge overseeing the multidistrict litigation of Volkswagen AG's manipulation of diesel engine emissions data dismissed lawsuits by counties in Florida and Utah, finding their claims to be preempted by the U.S. Clean Air Act.
U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni in Manhattan rejected claims that federal law preempted New York and its Public Service Commission from offering credits to promote clean energy and reduce reliance on fossil-fueled or gas plants.
The RNC lawsuit also alleges that the law violates the 14th Amendment, and Trump's lawsuit claims that the law is preempted by the Ethics and Government Act, which requires presidential candidates to submit financial-disclosure reports.
U.S. District Judge Vincent Briccetti in White Plains, New York on Tuesday said federal regulations governing what warnings generic drugmakers can make about their products preempted the plaintiffs' state-law failure-to-warn claims against Taro.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to review a decision involving Delta Airlines Inc that said a Rhode Island law mandating additional pay on Sundays and holidays is preempted by a federal law governing airlines.
Although Baltimore's political and social elite favored joining the Confederacy, their desires were preempted by President Abraham Lincoln who sent in federal troops to impose martial law and arrest confederate sympathizers during the war's early days.
The battle, as it were, began last week when Breitbart preempted the Post's scoop about Moore by running a story beforehand that appeared to be based on the Moore campaign leaking the newspaper's detailed request for comment.
Entertainment sources say that part of the problem was that Spicer effectively preempted his chances at remaining mysterious by sitting down for an interview with Fox News's Sean Hannity the night his departure was announced in July.
A Missouri electrical worker's discrimination claims against his union and the supervisor of its apprenticeship program were not preempted by U.S. labor laws and should have stayed in state court, a federal appeals court held on Thursday.
A unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found the MSPB erred in ruling that former Navy carpenter Philip Kerrigan's whistleblower retaliation action was preempted by the Federal Employee Compensation Act (FECA).
But the National Park Service has preempted any protest in front of the Lincoln or Washington memorials by filing a "massive omnibus blocking permit," reports the Guardian, that would take these spaces out of commission for months.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Pasadena, California said a lower court judge acted too quickly in saying federal copyright law preempted California state law claims by the plaintiffs, which owned the original analog recordings.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The world's marquee gay pride parade was preempted by thousands of anti-corporate dissidents who staged their own protest on Sunday, rejecting a uniformed police presence and commercial sponsorship while also demanding LGBTQ equality.
The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Paul, Minnesota said a lower court judge erred in concluding that the federal Locomotive Inspection Act ("LIA") preempted BNSF's product liability and breach of contract claims against Seats Inc.
PNC Financial Services has asked a federal judge to dismiss claims that it violated Pennsylvania law by considering job applicants' arrest records even if no conviction had occurred, arguing that the state act is preempted by federal law.
His interrogation of capitalism and visual culture preempted the work of theorists such as Jean Braudrillard and Jean-Francois Lyotard, each of whom dedicated their work to the frenetic and orgiastic world of images in which we live.
In Florida, cities are preempted by the state from raising their minimum wage, enacting paid sick days, restricting smoking in public areas, regulating the nutritional value of restaurant food, establishing public broadband networks, or regulating Uber and Airbnb.
"We have very strong arguments that the claims here are preempted ... and the recent EPA registration decision is an important aspect of that defense," William Hoffman, one of Bayer's lawyers, said during a call with reporters on Wednesday.
A federal judge on Friday ruled that claims contained in a proposed class action lawsuit alleging S.C. Johnson & Son's Raid-branded bug bomb is entirely ineffective at pest control are not preempted by a federal law governing pesticides.
In a decision on Friday, U.S. District Judge Cathy Seibel in White Plains, New York rejected arguments by Colgate that the lawsuit is preempted by the 1997 U.S. Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and should be dismissed outright.
In a decision on Monday, a three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of appeals said a lower court properly dismissed the lawsuit on the grounds that the state regulations are not preempted by federal law.
A federal judge in Pennsylvania has struck parts of a charter passed by Highland Township that barred oil and gas companies from storing fracking waste in the town, saying it was preempted by federal and state law and unconstitutional.
But lawyers for Garcia told the justices that he could not be convicted under state law because it is preempted by the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 that establishes a framework for the regulation of unauthorized employment.
A federal appeals court on Tuesday revived a Utah woman's lawsuit accusing Sanofi SA of failing to warn about the risks its infertility drug Clomid posed to fetuses but said some of her claims were preempted by federal law.
Last week, Chinese movie broadcaster China Central Television preempted scheduled programming of a red carpet premiere and science fiction and comedy films in favor of war films depicting Chinese and Korean forces prevailing over the U.S. An anti-U.
In a decision on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C. said the regulations are preempted by the U.S. Higher Education Act, which gives the federal government the right to contract with servicers for federal student loans.
A federal judge has temporarily blocked a new California law that would prohibit employers from requiring workers to agree to arbitrate employment-related legal dispute from taking effect, saying it is likely preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA).
"This arbitrary rule used a flawed economic model, did not take into account how drivers are affected by previous regulations, is preempted by the state and was voted on despite the objection of City Council members and community groups."
In a decision on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly in Chicago ruled that homeowners' state law claims for breach of contract and violations of the Illinois consumer fraud act could not go forward because they were preempted by federal law.
A federal appeals court affirmed the dismissal of a proposed class action lawsuit by parents who sued Abbott Laboratories Inc over the alleged false labeling of its baby food as organic, finding the claims to be preempted by federal law.
The California Trucking Association (CTA) has filed a challenge to the state's new law making it more difficult to classify workers as independent contractors, saying it is preempted by a federal law governing working standards in the trucking and airline industries.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday said a Seattle federal judge erred in finding that three of plaintiffs' breach of contract claims were preempted by the federal Home Owners Loan Act (HOLA).
In an unusual step, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) on Sunday preempted a European Commission antitrust decision, saying it was unlikely to give clearance for the merger after the London bourse had refused to sell an electronic trading platform in Italy.
A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday said claims by the former chief executive of Safelite Group Inc that the glass-repair company's deferred compensation plan caused him to incur tax penalties are preempted by the federal law governing employee pension plans.
U.S. District Judge Denise Cote in Manhattan on Monday said the drug's warning label was legally adequate and that state-law claims by California resident Charlie Utts that the companies failed to warn about Eliquis' risks were preempted by federal law.
In early April, Perry sent the energy world into a tizzy when he implied, in an onstage conversation at a BNEF energy conference, that state-level energy policies could be preempted by the feds on the grounds of national security.
Before the ordinance went into effect, the North Carolina state legislature convened a special session and passed the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act, otherwise known has HB2, that voided the ordinance and preempted similar efforts by localities in the future.
A New York state judge has ruled that a New York City law requiring predictable scheduling for fast-food and retail workers is not preempted by state wage laws, rejecting a challenge from several business groups represented by Littler Mendelson.
The California Trucking Association (CTA) has asked a federal judge to temporarily block the state's new law making it more difficult to classify workers as independent contractors, pending the outcome of its lawsuit claiming the measure is preempted by federal law.
More than a dozen plaintiffs on Tuesday asked a federal judge not to dismiss their claims over blood thinner Eliquis as preempted by federal law, saying a previous ruling on the issue in the multidistrict litigation did not apply to them.
The drugmaker laid out its position in a brief on Tuesday, nearly a week after a judge in Hartford found that some of the state-law warning claims asserted by a New York man at trial were preempted by federal law.
Monday's ruling added clarity to a powerful defense employed by drug makers that product liability claims brought under state law are preempted by the actions of a federal agency, because federal law generally trumps state law under the U.S. Constitution.
Under DeVos, the department ended an agreement with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to share information from loan companies, it's fought state oversight in court and last year it issued a rule that says state regulations are preempted by federal law.
In this case, it's possible that a court might hold that the state BDS laws are implicitly preempted by federal law, because foreign policy powers reside with the federal government and Congress has chosen to do nothing on this issue.
Trump's drumbeat has been adopted by his top economic advisers, Larry Kudlow, director of the National Economic Council, and Peter Navarro, the President's top trade adviser, who preempted Trump on Friday with their own calls for lower rates despite the strong jobs report.
Granting that Washington may have gone too far in its attempts to control China's economic policies, Beijing still could have – and should have – preempted all that by reducing its sales to the U.S. while stepping up purchases of American goods and services.
The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear the appeal of a ruling that found a plaintiff's state-law tort claims against Medtronic over injuries allegedly caused by an off-label use of its Infuse bone-graft device are preempted by federal law.
The 3rd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled last year that the claims could go before a jury, rejecting Merck's argument that the they were preempted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's 2009 rejection of a label change warning of the risk.
"It demonstrates a potential strike capability that couldn't be preempted by the US." US, Japanese and South Korean intelligence services -- as well as independent observers -- watch North Korea closely at all times for signs of potential groundwork for missile or nuclear tests.
De Leon supports the Employee Free Choice Act, which would have preempted a number of EPI's current proposals by requiring employers to reach a contract with unionized workers within a certain timeframe and increased penalties for employers who obstruct the organizing process.
But in a highly unusual step, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) on Sunday preempted a European Commission antitrust decision, saying it was unlikely to give clearance for the merger after the London bourse had refused to sell an electronic trading platform in Italy.
This soon landed on the desk of the Supreme Court, which, in a 5–3 ruling in 2012, said that while federal law preempted Arizona doling out such harsh punishments, officers could still ask about someone's immigration status when pulling them over.
Lake County Circuit Court judge Luis Berrones issued a permanent injunction blocking the measure from being enforced, finding that the gun owners who sued have "a clearly ascertainable right to not be subjected to a preempted and unenforceable ordinance," The Chicago Tribune reported.
A federal appeals court on Friday affirmed the dismissal of more than a thousand lawsuits by men who used Pfizer Inc testosterone replacement drug Depo-T, finding the claims were preempted by U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of the medication's label.
A federal appeals court has revived a proposed class action accusing Wisconsin-based student loan servicer Great Lakes Educational Loan Services of failing to counsel students about affordable payment options, saying a lower court erred in finding plaintiffs' claims preempted by federal law.
"Although US efforts to target key ISIS leaders and operatives had preempted what might have been any number of devastating terrorist attacks, the president&aposs lack of familiarity with their names made such efforts, and their accomplishments, less consequential to him," London wrote.
However, we would suggest they go further and clarify that states are not preempted from applying health insurance laws governing network participation, reimbursement, price transparency, and balance billing to air ambulance service, to better enable consumers to obtain coverage under their insurance. Sen.
The 3rd Circuit in the January decision said the state standard had too remote of an impact on the relationship between companies and truck drivers to be preempted by the FAAAA, which was designed to create uniform nationwide standards for the trucking industry.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a preliminary injunction against California SB 84, sometimes called the Oil by Rail Safety Act, finding that BNSF Railway and Union Pacific Railroad are likely to prevail on their claim that it is preempted by federal law.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday asked the U.S. solicitor general to weigh in on whether a state moratorium on uranium mining on private land is preempted by the U.S. Atomic Energy Act – a move that often signals the justices' interest in the case.
A federal judge has dismissed a proposed class action accusing Aetna Inc of violating a New Jersey regulation by trying to recoup money from its insureds' personal injury recoveries as preempted by the federal law, but suggested a way the litigation could move forward.
In 2005, when Noreika became a partner at Covington, the firm noted that "many of Mr. Noreika's cases have challenged the validity of state and local laws as preempted by the federal banking laws" and listed Wells Fargo and Bank of America as prominent clients.
The bills, which would have allowed concealed carry holders to bring their guns to church and other locations, blocked colleges from banning firearms on campus and preempted laws requiring electronic firearm tracking systems, were ostensibly delayed so that they could be heard alongside Democratic proposals.
Since Donald Trump preempted mass resignations from his business executive panels last week by disbanding two of them (on manufacturing and economic policy) and canceling a third (on infrastructure), pundits have fallen over themselves to praise CEOs as the moral conscience of the nation.
But lawyers for Garcia challenged the conviction, arguing that he could not be convicted under state law because it is preempted by the federal Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 that establishes a framework for the regulation of the employment of undocumented immigrants.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a case of first impression said that because the discrimination claims were brought under Michigan and not federal law, they were preempted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.
In addition to the EPA revoking this waiver, Trump's Transportation Department is expected to declare that California's efforts to set its own vehicle emissions standards are preempted by another federal law, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, under which such emissions standards are established.
A divided U.S. appeals court on Wednesday said an Alaska Airlines Inc flight attendant's claim that the company violated Washington state law by refusing to let her use accrued vacation time to care for her sick son was not preempted by federal labor law.
In addition to the EPA revoking this waiver, Trump's Transportation Department is expected to declare that California's efforts to set its own vehicle emissions standards are preempted by another federal law, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, under which such emissions standards are established.
In a 2-1 decision, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that Jill Sikkelee's claims against Avco Corp, which was acquired by Textron in 1984, were not preempted by federal law, reversing a grant of summary judgment for the company by the trial court.
Lastly, if you are not able to commit to expanding soccer coverage, please work to ensure that future matches that are featured or such high nature as the Champions League Final, are not preempted by other, less important matches, such as early round French Open Coverage.
That's because in a memo requesting the study and in a speech in late April, Energy Secretary Rick Perry has implied a preference for fossil fuels and nuclear power and suggested state policies supporting renewables may need to be preempted for the sake of grid reliability.
U.S. District Judge John Padova in Philadelphia ruled Tuesday that most of the plaintiffs' claims were either preempted by federal law or were not specific enough, though he allowed two state common law claims to go forward and gave the plaintiffs leave to replead several more.
A Minnesota state judge has rejected manufacturing company Graco Inc's challenge to a law that will raise Minneapolis' minimum wage to $15 an hour, in the latest decision to find that a city's law is not preempted by a state law mandating a lower minimum wage.
The judge tossed plaintiffs' claims of negligence per se, negligent marketing and breach of express warranty, but otherwise rejected arguments by Juul's lawyers at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher that (among other things) class representatives' claims were preempted by Food and Drug Administration regulations or were not adequately pleaded.
A federal judge in San Diego has trimmed a trucking industry group's legal challenge to AB5, a new California law making it more difficult to classify workers as independent contractors, but kept alive a central claim that the state law is preempted by federal regulations governing truckers.
U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez agreed with the California Trucking Association (CTA) and its lawyers at Ogletree Deakins that the law, known as AB5, was preempted by the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act (FAAAA), which applies to the airline and trucking industries, and issued a preliminary injunction.
The office of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra has told a U.S. appeals court that a judge was wrong to find that the state's new law on worker classification is likely preempted by federal law, and should not have temporarily blocked it from being applied to the trucking industry.
Circuit court of appeals in Philadelphia * Appeals court says lower court judge erred in dismissing claims on the ground they were preempted by federal law * Appeals court says plaintiffs can pursue claim that merck should have warned about risk of thigh bone fractures associated with fosamax * Further company coverage:
The office of California Attorney Xavier Becerra has told a federal judge that a controversial new state law on worker classification did not create an "all-or-nothing rule" requiring trucking firms to treat drivers as employees, and is not preempted by the federal law governing the industry.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday said it would not take up the question of whether New Jersey's test for determining whether workers are employees or independent contractors is preempted in cases involving truck drivers by a federal law governing work standards for the airline and transportation industries.
Last week, the EPA said it was taking the unprecedented step of revoking California's waiver under the Clean Air Act to set tailpipe emissions standards and require zero emission vehicles, while the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said California was preempted from take action on tailpipe emissions.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a 6-5 en banc decision said that because Laura Masserant's claim required the application of the state law, and did not implicate her union's collective bargaining agreement with the airline, it was not preempted by the federal Railway Labor Act.
In a decision written by Justice Stephen Breyer, the Supreme Court said a drug manufacturer must show it "fully informed" the FDA of the need for a warning before it was rebuffed and that judges, not juries, must decide whether such lawsuits are preempted, as Merck has claimed.
Preempted by CALEABoth the Apple brief in the California case and Orenstein's ruling have adopted the argument that because the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) does not authorize law enforcement to get the kind of order it is seeking in the iPhone cases, the All Writs Act doesn't, either.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ruled that a lower-court judge did not err in refusing to send 45 of them back to Delaware state court and in holding that all of the plaintiffs' state-law claims in the 60 cases were preempted by federal law.
He was also surely the best player with such a skill set available to the Galaxy, and was even affordable at some $500,000 for his first season, although a multi-million dollar bump would make him a Designated Player in his second year, which has now been preempted by his departure.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals reversed last year's dismissals of both actions by a federal judge in Ann Arbor, Michigan, who found the plaintiffs' civil rights' claims were preempted by a federal law that sets the standards for potable water.
Kaniela Ing, a state representative who recently announced his intention to run for Congress, told me that in order to protect net neutrality in a way that is unlikely to be preempted by the Federal Communications Commission, he believes the state can incentivize the creation of locally owned internet infrastructure.
Once again, Android preempted the iPhone on this front, with the Meizu Pro 6 coming out with the same style back in April, but there's no denying that the iPhone's antennas are now better integrated into the phone's overall shape, and they essentially disappear on that gorgeous matte black iPhone.
A healthcare provider owed more than $51 million in legal judgments by Puerto Rico has sued the island to force it to pay, arguing a local law invoked to slash that amount to $3 million is preempted by the more recent law Congress approved to guide the territory's bankruptcy-like restructuring.
In a decision on Monday, U.S. District Judge Robert Mariani in Scranton rejected Navient's argument that the lawsuit is preempted by the federal Higher Education Act (HEA), ruling that the federal law only preempts state disclosure requirements, not the sort of unfair conduct alleged by Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro.
WASHINGTON, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Two U.S. agencies are preparing to submit for final White House regulatory review a plan to revoke California's authority to set its own vehicle greenhouse gas standards and declare that states are preempted from setting their own vehicle rules, two people briefed on the matter said Thursday.
The California Labor Commissioner and the Teamsters, which represents thousands of truck drivers, have asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule that state rest-break laws are not preempted by regulations created by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) simply because they impose more onerous requirements.
Avco is seeking to overturn last year's 2-1 decision by the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which found that Jill Sikkelee's claims were not preempted by federal law even though the Federal Aviation Administration had approved the engine's design and Avco could not change it without the agency's approval.
Preempted by CALEA Both the Apple brief in the California case and Orenstein's ruling have adopted the argument that because the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) does not authorize law enforcement to get the kind of order it is seeking in the iPhone cases, the All Writs Act doesn't, either.
The court denied a petition for certiorari by a group of Delta customer service agents at an airport in Warwick, Rhode Island who claimed the Rhode Island Supreme Court decision clashed with other rulings that said state and local employment laws were not preempted by the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 (ADA).
The office of Attorney General Xavier Becerra in a motion to dismiss filed in federal court in Los Angeles on Friday said that because California wage laws do not affect the "prices, routes, or services" offered by trucking companies, they are not preempted by the federal law governing truck drivers' working conditions.
In a case of first impression for the appellate court, the 9th Circuit said Nicole Weber's action was preempted by federal law because she had not shown that Allergan violated a condition of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's premarket approval of the implant or any other FDA regulation related to medical devices.
However, the White House preempted an effort by Democratic lawmakers to bolster proposed House legislation directing the administration to take action on the issue after the administration this month rolled out similar export and visa restriction policies just two weeks ago that had been under consideration for much of the past year.
Maine Public Advocate Barry Hobbins noted that providers had successfully argued that in other debates in the past, but the Federal Communications Commission told Hobbins in a letter that whether the state law would be preempted was "a question of first impression" and there were no commission rulings that address the a la carte issue.
" The California-related complaint alleges that the following state laws are preempted by federal law and therefore violate the Supremacy Clause of the U.S Constitution," which states that federal law is "the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby":   This case is very risky for Trump.
The board in a complaint filed in federal court in Eugene, Oregon on Friday said the 2010 state law is preempted by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), which permits so-called "captive audience" meetings, and has forced employers in several pending NLRB cases to choose between exercising their rights under federal law and complying with the state law.
In a ruling Monday, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly in the Northern District of Illinois said plaintiffs could move forward after all with claims that defendants who sold generic testosterone drugs fraudulently promoted them for off-label use, reversing his November ruling that those claims were preempted along with others regarding the adequacy of the products' labeling.
"Because the ban ... was motivated by concerns about the radiological safety of activities regulated by the federal government pursuant to the Atomic Energy Act, it is preempted under this Court's precedents and the uniform body of lower-court case law applying them," the companies wrote to the court last year in asking the justices to take the case.
The AG's office in a brief filed on Thursday said the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has already held that a prior, less-stringent test for determining whether workers in California are employees or independent contractors was not preempted by the federal law governing trucking companies, and should do so again with the new law known as AB5.
As holds on "nonessential" health care began to be rolled out in states across the country last week, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology preempted Republican and anti-abortion governors and attorneys general by issuing a joint statement imploring state governments not to categorize abortion as nonessential.
"If you come into this both as a trader and as a server of the market, I think you will do really well, because the volatility has nothing to do with Trump or Clinton, it has to do with a model that is preempted and trotted out by monetary policy that doesn't work and the lack of fiscal stimulus," he concluded.
The 11 drivers, represented by the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, said in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Seattle on Friday that the city's law violates their rights under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution by forcing them to join a union in order to work, and is preempted by the National Labor Relations Act.
VR was going to be the more imminent, consumer-accessible technology that preempted many of the headset AR use cases still a decade or so out, but the "magic window" into the world that you get when you hold your camera-equipped smartphone into the air may be all we really need until Magic Leap or Microsoft or Apple create the next device we all desperately need.
The Airline Service Providers Association and Airlines for America want the high court to review a 2017 ruling from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that said Los Angeles' 2014 rule requiring baggage-handling companies and other service providers at LAX, which is operated by the city, to enter into labor peace agreements with labor organizations that request them was not preempted by federal law.

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