Politics July 2, 2026 Federal judge blocks Postal Service from carrying out Trump mail-in ballot order A federal judge blocked the U.S. Postal Service from implementing President Donald Trump's executive order on mail-in ballots nationwide, citing a 2020 agreement.
Media July 2, 2026 NPR’s Nina Totenberg long history of controversies, from plagiarism and ethics concerns to Alito retraction NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg has been a working journalist for over five decades, with plenty of mistakes and gaffes along the way.
Opinion July 2, 2026 MORNING GLORY: Celebrate the Supreme Court, our Constitution and America at 250 The annual chorus of court critics hits its highest volume every year at this time. Most Americans, however, rightly cherish and admire the Supreme Court
Cops July 2, 2026 Virginia officer placed on administrative leave after malicious wounding charge tied to off duty incident Arlington, Virginia police officer Vincent Baglio allegedly assaulted someone he knew while off duty and now faces a malicious wounding charge.
Supreme Court July 1, 2026 What the SCOTUS Title IX ruling could mean for lawsuits seeking damages for women impacted by trans athletes Riley Gaines and Brooke Slusser lawsuits seek damages after Supreme Court ruling allegedly shredded NCAA's Title IX defense on trans athletes.
VIDEO July 1, 2026 Linda McMahon slams Democrats for dismissing women's sports concerns Education Secretary Linda McMahon discusses the Supreme Court's ruling on transgender sports bans on 'America Reports.'
Illegal Immigrants July 1, 2026 'Weapons of mass reproduction': Watchdog unveils action plan to curb birth tourism after Supreme Court ruling The Oversight Project unveils a plan to combat birthright citizenship effects through mass deportation, ICE at hospitals, and birth tourism crackdowns.
Justice Department July 1, 2026 Ex-CIA chief accused of orchestrating 'Russia hoax' sues Trump admin for 'vindictive prosecution' Former CIA Director John Brennan is suing the Trump administration and demanding an order requiring the administration to preserive its investigation records.
Politics July 1, 2026 Republican accuses SCOTUS of betraying US, pushes bill restricting birthright citizenship, pregnant visitors Rep. Andy Ogles accused the Supreme Court of betraying the nation and introduced the Anchors Away Act to crack down against birthright citizenship.
Supreme Court July 1, 2026 Alito warns Supreme Court made 'serious mistake' that could have national security consequences Justice Alito warns the Supreme Court's birthright citizenship ruling threatens national security by extending citizenship to children of birth tourists.