Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

A federal judge ordered UPenn to comply with an EEOC subpoena seeking names and contact details for Jewish affiliates in an antisemitism probe—while narrowing parts of the request—raising sharp questions about privacy, compelled identification, and how discrimination investigations are scoped.

Judiciary

Mar 31, 2026

A DOJ filing says ICE guidance used to justify immigration-court arrests never applied there, raising serious questions about a year of courthouse enforcement and the oversight that allowed it.

Judiciary

Mar 26, 2026

A federal judge temporarily halted HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s attempt to narrow routine childhood vaccine recommendations, finding his remake of the CDC’s vaccine advisory process likely broke basic federal procedures.

Judiciary

Mar 16, 2026

Federal regulators are signaling self-policing for prediction markets even as presidential-family influence spans rival platforms, weakening anti-corruption guardrails and normalizing conflicted governance.

Economy

Mar 6, 2026

When an administration quietly reinstates a blocked rule to obstruct congressional oversight of detention facilities, it tests whether court orders and appropriations limits still restrain executive power.

Judiciary

Mar 2, 2026

Federal regulators were pulled back as a politically connected prediction market expanded—normalizing profit incentives tied to war outcomes and undermining anti-corruption guardrails.

Executive

Mar 1, 2026

Racing to expand ICE while cutting core training invites an armed federal workforce to operate in our cities without the instruction needed to honor constitutional limits and lawful orders.

Executive

Feb 23, 2026

An unelected efficiency unit and its private-sector leader are shaping Medicaid policy by publicizing claims data amid a drive for sweeping cuts, shifting accountability from institutions to crowdsourced suspicion.

Executive

Feb 14, 2026

Political budget cuts are forcing a major public research university to halt faculty hiring, normalizing the use of funding leverage to weaken national research capacity and public institutions.

State Politics

Feb 21, 2025

We are paying foreign governments through opaque deals to take deportees the law may protect—then routing people onward anyway—normalizing a shadow deportation system beyond meaningful oversight.

Executive

Feb 13, 2026

When an agency rewrites workers’ emails to assign partisan blame, the government crosses the line from administration into compelled political speech under federal authority.

Judiciary

Nov 7, 2025

Federal broadband money is being conditioned on statewide carve-outs for ISPs, turning a deployment grant into a tool to override state net neutrality and affordability laws.

Executive

Oct 30, 2025

The administration is trying to end a court case as “moot” to block discovery into whether it defied orders from federal judges and the Supreme Court—an assault on judicial enforceability.

Judiciary

Jun 18, 2025

A U.S.-citizen toddler was removed from the country while a court petition was pending, normalizing deportation-by-fait-accompli over due process and judicial oversight.

Judiciary

Apr 26, 2025

A federal agency admits a protected resident was deported by “administrative error,” then claims courts are powerless to compel the government to fix what it unlawfully set in motion.

Judiciary

Apr 1, 2025