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    SCOTUS drama, ceasefire tests and Giuliani’s illness

     
    TODAY’S ELECTIONS story

    Supreme Court boosts Louisiana gerrymander race

    What happened
    The Supreme Court yesterday evening agreed to put last week’s ruling overturning Louisiana’s congressional map into immediate effect, waiving its customary 32-day waiting period. The unsigned order removed a legal obstacle to Louisiana Republicans redrawing districts for the 2026 midterms to eliminate one or both of the state’s majority Black districts. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson issued a pointed dissent, prompting pushback from conservative Justice Samuel Alito (pictured above, below Jackson) and exposing “tension” that was “more notable” than the “technical decision itself,” CNN said.

    Who said what
    Gov. Jeff Landry (R) moved to pause Louisiana’s May 16 U.S. House primaries right after the court’s April 29 Louisiana v. Callais ruling, but early voting began May 2 and thousands of voters have cast ballots. Under the Supreme Court’s “Purcell principle,” federal courts aren’t supposed to interfere with voting rules too close to an election. But this court has shown an “inconsistency” in applying that rule that “has the remarkably coincidental effect of benefitting Republicans,” Georgetown Law Professor Steve Vladeck said at One First. 

    By helping Louisiana “​​rush to pause the ongoing election” to pass a new map, the court’s conservative wing discarded “principles” for “power,” Brown wrote. “Not content to have decided the law, it now takes steps to influence its implementation.” Jackson’s quibbles are “trivial at best,” Alito said in a concurrence joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, and her charge of “an unprincipled use of power” is “ground­less and utterly irresponsible.”

    What next?
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) yesterday signed a GOP-boosting gerrymander and Alabama’s GOP legislature began a special session to redraw its 2026 maps; Tennessee follows suit today. 

     
     
    TODAY’S IRAN WAR story

    US-Iran truce teeters after Trump’s Hormuz push

    What happened
    The four-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran faltered yesterday as President Donald Trump’s attempts to reopen traffic through the Strait of Hormuz prompted Iranian attacks on U.S. warships and commercial ships. The United Arab Emirates and Oman also reported the first strikes on their territories since the ceasefire began, and the UAE blamed Iran. U.S. Central Command said that two U.S.-flagged merchant ships passed through the strait and that U.S. military helicopters sank six Iranian military speedboats; Iran said none of its boats were destroyed. 

    Who said what
    Tehran “did not outright confirm or deny” its attacks, The Associated Press said, and CENTCOM said it had shot down all Iranian missiles and drones fired at U.S. Navy ships and the commercial vessels they were guiding through a passage it had “successfully opened” through the strait. Trump appeared “willing to look past” Iran’s attacks,” The Wall Street Journal said. But yesterday’s violence put his “desire to end the Iran war” to the test. 

    What next?
    Shipping companies said yesterday that Trump’s “offer to provide them safe passage” through the strait “fell short of the sort of arrangements that would persuade them to make the trip,” The New York Times said. 

     
     
    TODAY’S POLITICS Story

    Rudy Giuliani hospitalized with pneumonia

    What happened
    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is in critical condition in a Florida hospital as he recovers from pneumonia, but he “is now breathing on his own” after requiring a ventilator, spokesperson Ted Goodman said yesterday. Giuliani, 81, is the “ultimate fighter” and “he is winning this battle.” 

    Who said what
    Giuliani, once hailed as “America’s Mayor” for his response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York City, has “struggled with legal and financial problems in recent years,” The New York Times said. Last year he “suffered a fractured vertebra” from a car crash in New Hampshire, and he “made at least one public appearance in a wheelchair.” On his podcast Friday, Giuliani said his voice was “a little under the weather.” Goodman yesterday said Giuliani had been diagnosed with restrictive airway disease stemming from his proximity to Ground Zero on 9/11, and “this condition adds complications to any respiratory illness.”

    What next?
    Giuliani’s health had “concerned those around him” recently, People said, citing a source close to the Trump administration. He “isn’t in good shape,” the source said.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A new endometriosis ultrasound simulator could help teach doctors how to spot the frequently painful disease, which often takes years to diagnose, if it’s identified at all. The condition occurs when tissue similar to uterine lining grows in the abdomen or pelvis. The ultrasound simulator, designed by Sweden’s Surgical Science, includes a feature that can help detect deep endometriosis, which causes scar tissue. In testing, 92% of clinicians reported an increased understanding of endometriosis diagnosis.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Tanzania’s Star Homes brighten health outcomes

    Poor architecture can be a public health crisis. And in Tanzania, moving families into specially designed Star Homes has resulted in a marked reduction in the spread of deadly diseases among the children living in them. 

    Most houses in Tanzanian villages are made of “mud and thatch” and are “single-story, placing the sleeping spaces at-grade,” said The Architect’s Newspaper. These living arrangements likely contribute to the spread of malaria, diarrhea and acute respiratory infections (ARIs), which are the “major causes of mortality in young children in sub-Saharan Africa,” said a study published in the journal Nature Medicine. 

    Designed by researchers, Star Homes are “novel double-story” houses that “provide an insect-proof, cleaner, cooler and smoke-free environment, with a reliable supply of water and sanitation,” said the study. They can also be built with fewer resources than traditional mud brick houses while producing fewer carbon emissions.

    To test the new housing, scientists randomly placed households with children under age 13 in either 110 Star Homes or 513 traditional mud and thatched-roofed houses. After 36 months, children in Star Homes had a “significantly reduced risk of malaria (44% reduction), diarrhea (27%) and ARIs (18%) compared to children living in traditional mud and thatched-roof homes,” said the study. 

    The findings show that architecture can “function as a health intervention on a par with medicine when it’s developed and documented using scientific methods,” said Jakob Knudsen, the lead architect of the Star Homes, to The Architect’s Newspaper.

     
     
    On this day

    May 5, 1973

    Secretariat won the 99th Kentucky Derby, the first victory in the thoroughbred’s historic Triple Crown sweep. Secretariat is widely ranked among the greatest racehorses of all time. Almost all of the 18 horses that ran this past weekend’s Kentucky Derby are his descendants, including the winner, Golden Tempo.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Simmering anger’

    “Court restores abortion pill by mail,” The Minnesota Star Tribune says on Tuesday’s front page. “Simmering anger fills Supreme Court,” the Los Angeles Times says. “Wave of strikes in Gulf strains a fragile truce,” The New York Times says. “Yo-yo prices vex gas station owners,” The Boston Globe says. “Gas prices could fuel voter anger come fall,” the Detroit Free Press says. “Georgia Republican voters are still all-in for Trump’s agenda,” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says. “ICE’s use of force in facilities accelerates,” The Washington Post says. “Most — except a few sharks — lose on prediction markets,” says The Wall Street Journal. “Microplastics may play part in global warming,” says USA Today.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Domesticated disturbance

    An Indiana sheriff’s deputy answering a call about an animal in the road instead found dozens of chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks and goats. The animals had escaped from a nearby farm, and the deputy quickly got to work herding the absconders and safely returning them home. “In law enforcement, you truly never know what the next call will bring,” the Grant County Sheriff’s Office said in a post with body-cam footage of the incident.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Jabin Botsford / The Washington Post via Getty Images; US Navy / Getty Images; Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images; Roberto Moiola / Sysaworld / Getty Images
     

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