Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

Robert Morris’ release after just six months in jail highlights how plea deals and old-case legal limits can produce punishments that feel wildly out of proportion to the underlying abuse.

Judiciary

Mar 31, 2026

A Texas Democratic Senate candidate answered a pastor’s “imprecatory” rhetoric with forgiveness, but the bigger story is how violent-sounding political theology is being laundered as “just metaphor.”

Elections

Mar 25, 2026

Ms. Rachel’s push to shut down the Dilley family detention site spotlights a bigger, less-covered shift: the Trump administration’s renewed reliance on large-scale detention of children alongside parents in Texas.

Executive

Mar 23, 2026

A national party committee is normalizing AI impersonation of a candidate in paid persuasion, exploiting disclosure loopholes and eroding the democratic norm that campaigns must not fabricate a person’s speech.

Elections

Mar 13, 2026

A major Senate race is being shaped around a presidential demand that the non-endorsed candidate “drop out,” shifting nomination power from voters toward personal political leverage.

Elections

Mar 10, 2026

Federal agents used lethal force on a U.S. citizen while the agency delayed disclosure and defended the killing with claims the released video does not clearly substantiate.

Executive

Mar 7, 2026

A sitting president is demanding a Texas Senate runoff candidate exit a lawful election—testing whether personal endorsement power can supplant voters’ right to decide.

Elections

Mar 4, 2026

A federal detention facility’s measles outbreak has now closed access to visitors and attorneys—normalizing a public-health rationale for cutting off detainees from counsel.

Executive

Mar 4, 2026

A GOP primary defeat rewards escalation toward using federal funding levers to restrict medical care, signaling a hardening precedent of policy-making aimed at narrowing civil protections.

Elections

Mar 4, 2026

When rule changes send voters to the wrong polls and courts leave late-cast ballots in limbo, election administration stops being neutral—and public consent starts to fracture.

Elections

Mar 4, 2026

Texas intervened mid-election to segregate ballots after polling-place confusion, normalizing judicially driven uncertainty over which legally cast votes count.

Elections

Mar 4, 2026

A precinct-only primary model, driven through party-run administration and then patched by a court order, turned basic access to the ballot into a procedural trap.

Judiciary

Mar 4, 2026

A U.S. citizen was killed by an ICE officer, and the agency’s role remained undisclosed until internal reports surfaced—eroding the baseline norm of timely public accountability for lethal force.

Executive

Feb 20, 2026

A fundraising pitch invokes authoritarianism and media capitulation while providing no underlying facts—leaving the public without the transparency required for democratic accountability.

General

Jul 10, 2025

A sitting member of Congress is accused of exploiting a staff relationship while rivals turn a death into electoral leverage, eroding the basic norm that public office isn’t a private coercion zone.

Elections

Feb 18, 2026