Policy & Law — Archive
Federal legislation, executive orders, and regulatory changes
Democratic Grassroots Group to Target More Than 60 Races With Ambitious Canvassing Effort
Swing Left expands its Ground Truth program from 33 to 63 congressional, Senate and gubernatorial contests, aiming for 500,000 voter conversations ahead of November.
New 9/11 Museum Exhibit Aims to Connect Younger Americans to Attacks Through Flags, Artifacts
The 'Our Flag Was Still There' exhibit at the National September 11 Memorial and Museum features artifacts from first responders, veterans and Operation Neptune Spear as a third of the U.S. population has been born since 2001.
US Grocery Prices Rose in April, But Gas Spikes Weren't the Only Reason
Year-over-year food-at-home inflation hit 2.9%, the highest rate since August 2023, as trade tariffs and drought compounded energy costs.
South Carolina Supreme Court Overturns Alex Murdaugh's Murder Convictions, Orders New Trial
The 5-0 ruling found that Colleton County Clerk of Court Rebecca Hill made biased comments to jurors during the 2023 trial, denying Murdaugh his right to a fair proceeding.
Democratic Texas Senate Candidate Faces Criticism Over Absence on Bill to Deny Bail to Illegal Immigrants Charged With Violent Felonies
The legislation, named for 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray who was killed in Houston, failed after Talarico and other Democrats were absent during the final vote.
Trump Set to Meet Xi Jinping in Beijing Amid Iran Conflict, Trade Talks
The high-stakes meeting comes as the US navigates an active conflict with Iran while seeking leverage in ongoing technology and trade disputes with China.
Trump Fires All 22 Members of National Science Board Amid DEI Grant Controversy
The dismissal follows Senate findings that over $2 billion in NSF grants since 2021 funded programs promoting social justice concepts rather than core scientific research.
Xi Tells Trump U.S. and China Should Be 'Partners, Not Rivals' at Beijing Summit
The Chinese president opened bilateral talks during what both governments called a historic meeting between the world's two largest economies.
Almost Half of Americans Strongly Oppose AI Data Centers in Their Areas, Gallup Poll Finds
The survey comes as states like Maine move to restrict data center construction amid concerns over energy use and community impact.
Chinese Agent Found Guilty in NYC 'Secret Police Station' Case
Lu Jianwang faces up to 30 years after jury convicts him of acting as unregistered agent for Beijing; China calls the charges fabricated.