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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

US House approves year-round E15 gasoline sale

 The United States House of Representatives passed a bill to approve year-round sales of higher-ethanol E15 gasoline, sending it to the Senate.

The 218-203 vote came after US President Donald Trump called on lawmakers in January to "find a deal that works for farmers, consumers and refiners" on the fuel blend that contains 15% ethanol and 85% gasoline.

Trump said at the time he would sign such a deal "without delay."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/US-House-approves-year-round-E15-gasoline-sale/66291278

Tennessee Republicans show how to handle Dem reps who foment chaos

 by Monty L. Donohew

In a refreshing display of backbone, Tennessee House speaker Cameron Sexton delivered a clear message to the Democrat caucus: Political terrorism will not be tolerated in the Volunteer State.  As Sean Davis of The Federalist reported Tuesday, every single member of the House Democratic Caucus has been stripped of all standing committee and subcommittee assignments following their disgraceful conduct during last week’s special session on congressional redistricting.  The offenses?  Coordinated disruptions inside the Capitol, including setting fires, attacking law enforcement officers, and turning the legislative chamber into a circus. 

Tennessee Republicans, wielding their well earned supermajority, moved swiftly after the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling against racial gerrymandering to pass a new congressional map.  The map eliminates the state’s lone majority-black district in Memphis, carved out under decades of race-based mapmaking, and redraws lines to better reflect Tennessee’s overwhelmingly conservative electorate.  The result could deliver a clean 9-0 Republican delegation in November’s midterms.  Democrats, predictably, lost their minds.

The actual outrageous acts are worth cataloging in detail because the corporate media won’t.

Elected Democrat representatives, including the usual suspects Reps. Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, locked arms in the well of the House chamber, physically blocking proceedings and refusing to yield.  They coordinated with raucous protesters packed into the gallery, who blasted air horns and noisemakers in an orchestrated attempt to drown out the vote.  When troopers moved to enforce order and clear the chamber, confrontations escalated — pushing, shoving, and outright resistance that led to arrests, including of Pearson’s brother.  And in a moment of pure symbolism that perfectly captured the left’s priorities, Rep. Jones burned a Confederate flag replica inside the Capitol building itself, later railing against Republicans as a “white sheet caucus.”

These were sitting legislators and their allies hijacking the people’s House, disrupting a lawful legislative session, and committing acts of vandalism and defiance inside a government building.  Setting fires in the Capitol is irresponsible and dangerous arson.  No matter how common the Dems attempt to make such acts, attacking or resisting law enforcement is an open assault on the rule of law, and it threatens the lives and health of innocent citizens.

Contrast this with the endless Democrat and media hysteria over January 6, 2021.  For years, the left has insisted that the “riot” at the U.S. Capitol was an “armed insurrection” that threatened the very foundation of American democracy.  They’ve used that narrative to justify show trials, solitary confinement for nonviolent defendants, and a perpetual purge of political opponents.  Yet what happened in Tennessee last week was arguably more extreme in key respects: elected officials leading the disruption from inside the chamber itself, during an active legislative session, complete with fires and direct confrontations with officers.

No one burned documents or flags on the floor of Congress during the 2021 Electoral College certification in quite this coordinated, inside-job fashion.  Nor did the January 6 crowd include sitting members of Congress orchestrating the chaos in real time. 

Yet the media labeled J6 an existential threat while shrugging off or actively excusing Tennessee Democrats’ behavior as “passionate advocacy.”  Where are the breathless headlines calling this an “insurrection” against the Tennessee General Assembly?  Crickets.  The double-standard is glaring and indefensible.

Tennessee Republicans deserve national applause for refusing to play the spineless game so common in Washington.  Instead of issuing toothless censures or endless “investigations,” they exercised the power voters gave them.  Removing the entire Democrat caucus from committees is accountability.  It sends an unmistakable signal: If you treat the people’s Legislature like your personal protest zone, you forfeit the privileges of participation.  No more using committee perches to grandstand while undermining the very process that elected you.

Tennessee’s decisive action reveals a broader and long-overdue reformation necessary in Republican governance: The era of rolling over is over.  Republicans must finally commit to wield the power voters entrusted to them.  After years of watching Democrats weaponize every lever of power, from lawfare to street theater to procedural sabotage, red-state majorities are finally learning that appeasement and surrender in battle after battle emboldens the opponent and makes the war harder to win. 

Tennessee’s action echoes the spirit of the Supreme Court’s recent rebuke of racial gerrymandering and the aggressive redistricting pushes underway in states like Indiana and Ohio.  When leftists lose under colorblind rules, they don’t accept defeat gracefully; they burn flags and attack cops.  Republicans must respond with strength, not lectures, seminars on “democracy,” and “strongly worded letters” in the form of impotent pleas to mainstream media outlets. 

National Republicans, take note, as Sean Davis urged.  Imagine if House speaker Mike Johnson or Senate leader John Thune showed this level of resolve against the Squad’s antics, performative outbursts, and obstructive temper tantrums.  Imagine statehouses from Texas to Florida adopting the Tennessee model: no tolerance for walkouts, no platform for chaos, and swift consequences for those who turn legislative debate into political arson. 

Tennessee Republicans have drawn a line.  Political terrorism in the statehouse ends here.  The rest of the GOP would do well to follow their lead.  The voters who delivered supermajorities didn’t send Republicans to Nashville, or to Washington, to cower.  The people sent representatives to govern.  Governing means enforcing order when the other side chooses disorder.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/05/tennessee_republicans_show_how_to_handle_dem_reps_who_foment_chaos.html

CMS taps 30 healthcare organizations for prior authorization initiative

 The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is launching a new initiative aimed at accelerating adoption of electronic prior authorization tools ahead of federal requirements set to take effect in 2027.

CMS said May 13 that 30 healthcare organizations, including health systems, EHR developers, physician practices, networks and digital health developers, have joined its Electronic Prior Authorization Acceleration initiative as early adopters, according to a news release.

The initiative is part of CMS’ broader Health Tech Ecosystem effort and is designed to address workflow, technical and operational challenges that have slowed adoption of electronic prior authorization across the healthcare system.

Health systems and provider organizations participating as early adopters include Cleveland Clinic, Providence in Renton, Wash., Ochsner Health in New Orleans, Rush University System for Health in Chicago and Sanford Health in Sioux Falls, S.D., among others. EHR companies joining the effort include Epic, Oracle, Athenahealth and Meditech.

The organizations join several health plans that previously signed a CMS pledge related to prior authorization modernization last year, including Aetna, Cigna, Humana and UnitedHealthcare, according to the release.

CMS said the initiative is intended to help healthcare organizations prepare for requirements established under the agency’s Interoperability and Prior Authorization final rule, which takes effect Jan. 1, 2027. The rule requires certain payers to support electronic prior authorization for medical items and services through API-enabled data exchange using FHIR-based standards, defined decision timeframes and public reporting of prior authorization metrics.

According to the release, participating organizations in the acceleration initiative will work to integrate electronic prior authorization into clinical and administrative systems, reduce reliance on manual processes such as fax-based workflows, increase visibility into authorization status and improve technical handoffs across systems.

CMS said additional organizations are expected to join the initiative as it expands.

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/healthcare-information-technology/cms-taps-29-healthcare-organizations-for-prior-authorization-initiative/

Hantavirus response spans 2 US biocontainment facilities

 The hantavirus outbreak linked to the MV Hondius cruise ship has prompted a two-facility response across the U.S., with American passengers now being monitored and treated at both the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha and Emory University Hospital in Atlanta. The CDC classified the outbreak as a level 3 emergency response and 17 Americans arrived at UNMC on May 11 for monitoring. 

Here are six updates:

1. The response has been split between UNMC and Emory due to capacity. 

Sixteen of the 18 people being monitored in U.S. medical facilities are at UNMC — one person who tested positive in the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit and 15 in the National Quarantine Unit. The Georgia Department of Public Health confirmed May 11 that two individuals who disembarked the MV Hondius are being transported to Emory University’s Serious Communicable Diseases Unit, with federal healthcare workers taking every precaution. The transfer was part of contingency planning, as UNMC’s biocontainment unit does not have enough capacity for all passengers currently under monitoring.

2. Emory’s symptomatic patient has tested negative. 

The symptomatic patient transferred to Emory’s biocontainment unit has tested negative for hantavirus. HHS confirmed the two Emory patients are a couple, according to a May 11 CBS News report. The Georgia Department of Public Health said there is no risk to the public. 

3. The U.S. monitoring footprint grows to include Kansas and Minnesota. 

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is monitoring three individuals with high-risk exposure to a confirmed Andes hantavirus case — exposure that occurred internationally after contact with a MV Hondius passenger who later tested positive, according to a May 12 news release from the department. The three were not aboard the cruise ship and are not currently symptomatic. The health department noted that based on current knowledge of the Andes virus, individuals are not considered infectious unless they become symptomatic and assessed the risk to the public as extremely low.  

The Minnesota Department of Health is also monitoring one person who may have briefly been exposed overseas to a Hondius passenger who tested positive, and that the individual is cooperative, currently asymptomatic and being checked daily for symptoms, according to a May 12 news release from the department. An additional 12 U.S. residents are being monitored by state health departments. Seven were cruise passengers who disembarked early across Texas, Georgia, Virginia, Arizona and California, and five others were exposed to an infected individual during air travel across New Jersey, Maryland and California. None are symptomatic. 

4. Global case count rises to 11; no new deaths since May 2. 

As of May 12, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control has reported 11 total cases — nine confirmed and two probable — following completion of disembarkation and repatriation of all passengers on May 11. World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, PhD, said May 12 there have been no new deaths since May 2, when the WHO was first notified of the cluster, and that all cases have been isolated and managed under strict medical supervision. 

5. UNMC biocontainment patient identified as physician who treated fellow passengers. The passenger in UNMC’s biocontainment unit is Stephen Kornfeld, MD, an oncologist who stepped in to care for ill passengers after the ship’s own physician contracted the virus, according to a May 13 CNN report. Kornfeld told CNN he experienced night sweats, chills, mild respiratory symptoms and more than two weeks of severe fatigue aboard the ship. He is now asymptomatic. 

6. Illinois is investigating an unrelated domestic hantavirus case. 

Illinois is investigating a potential hantavirus case in a Winnebago County resident near Rockford who had not traveled internationally and had no contact with the cruise ship outbreak, according to a May 12 Illinois Department of Health news release. The suspected case involves a North American strain, believed to have been acquired while cleaning a home where rodent droppings were present. The patient experienced mild symptoms and did not require hospitalization. CDC confirmatory testing could take up to 10 days. Unlike the Andes strain driving the cruise ship outbreak, North American strains are not known to spread person to person.

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/quality/public-health/hantavirus-response-spans-2-us-biocontainment-facilities-6-updates/

Iowa governor signs law to reform prior authorization, out-of-network penalties

 Iowa Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a law May 13 that enacts prior authorization reforms and prohibits insurers from penalizing providers for out-of-network referrals, according to the Iowa Hospital Association.

Under the law, while initial prior authorization reviews can be done by AI, these algorithms and systems cannot be the sole basis for determining denials, downgrades or delays. Health insurance carriers cannot impose fines or other financial penalties due to a provider’s referral to an out-of-network provider, either.

Providers must submit prior authorization requests electronically. Providers will also receive written explanations of denials and downgrades. Prior authorization will not be required for emergency conditions that become apparent during inpatient care, as well some cancer-related screenings if recommended based on national comprehensive cancer network clinical guidelines.

The bill establishes audit timelines, as well. Provisions go into effect next year.

“By reducing red tape and improving accountability for insurers, hospitals and providers can spend more time caring for Iowans and less time and expense on paperwork,” IHA President and CEO Chris Mitchell said in a May 13 statement.

The governor signed another bill in April that protects patients’ coverage if an out-of-network primary care provider makes a referral. 

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/iowa-governor-signs-law-to-reform-prior-authorization-out-of-network-penalties/

White House freezes $1.3B in Medicaid payments to Cal.

 Vice President J.D. Vance said that the White House is withholding $1.3 billion in federal Medicaid reimbursements to California, alleging that the state is not taking Medicaid fraud “seriously,” NBC News reported May 13. 

CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, MD, said California’s Medicaid records “generated major red flags” and that the administration needs the state to clarify $630 million in billing, $500 million in home health service and $200 million in “questionable expenditures” allegedly linked to coverage for undocumented immigrants, according to the report. 

Dr. Oz said the $1.3 billion California withholding is the largest deferral the agency has ever made. In February, CMS announced it was freezing $259.5 million in Medicaid funding, citing unsupported or potentially fraudulent claims in the state’s program.

Messages left with California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office and California’s Department of Health Care Services were not immediately returned. 

Mr. Vance said the administration is also notifying all 50 states that it could freeze funding to their Medicaid Fraud Control Units if they fail to aggressively prosecute Medicaid fraud, according to the report. These units, which operate in each state, investigate and prosecute Medicaid provider fraud. 

“And if we continue to find problems, we can turn off other resources within their state Medicaid programs as well,” Mr. Vance said, according to the report. 

CMS also announced May 13 it was imposing a six-month nationwide moratorium on new Medicare enrollments for hospices and home health agencies as part of a broader effort to combat Medicaid fraud, waste and abuse. 

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/white-house-freezes-1-3b-in-medicaid-payments-to-california/

CVS unit Omnicare wins court approval for sale to GenieRx



Omnicare, a unit of health insurer CVS Health, said on Wednesday a U.S. ‌bankruptcy court has approved the sale of its ‌business to GenieRx Holdings.

Here are some details:

• GenieRx is a partnership ​between private investment firm Milrose Capital and healthcare investment and management firm Integro Asset Management.

The transaction is expected to close later this year, subject to regulatory approvals ‌and customary conditions.

• Omnicare ⁠did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for financial details related to the ⁠deal.

• Omnicare said it will continue to operate normally until the deal closes, maintaining pharmacy services for customers in ​skilled ​nursing and assisted living facilities.

• ​The company said the ‌sale would help strengthen operations and support continued delivery of reliable pharmacy services, with a focus on clinical care and pricing transparency.

• Jenner & Block LLP and Haynes Boone are serving as legal counsel, Houlihan Lokey is ‌serving as investment banker and Alvarez & ​Marsal is serving as restructuring ​advisor to Omnicare.

• ​In September, Omnicare filed for bankruptcy to ‌resolve issues related to its ​litigation in the ​U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/cvs-unit-omnicare-wins-court-202623590.html