Gerrymandering 2025: Maps So Wild They’re Legal?
Advanced data and weakened legal oversight could enable unprecedented gerrymandering in 2025—producing legal but wildly distorted electoral maps.
Advanced data and weakened legal oversight could enable unprecedented gerrymandering in 2025—producing legal but wildly distorted electoral maps.
As a new government shutdown looms, Democrats are using Obamacare as leverage—a strategy that backfired for Republicans in 2013. Can they succeed where their opponents failed?
Russia’s Vladimir Putin unveils new nuclear-capable weapons after Trump cancels Ukraine summit, reigniting fears of Cold War-style brinkmanship.
As Zohran Mamdani runs for NYC mayor, he and London’s Sadiq Khan—both liberal Muslims—face similar far-right attacks despite vastly different political approaches.
Medicare recipients must review their Part D plans before Dec. 7, as 2026 premiums are seeing massive increases or decreases.
Stephen Miran, newest Fed governor, urges aggressive rate cuts to avoid recession—clashing with inflation-focused colleagues.
Despite promises, California’s fire insurance rules let companies bypass high-risk homes—leaving residents with costly, limited coverage.
New Trump administration policies add major hurdles to U.S. citizenship, sparking fear and confusion among immigrants.
Thirteen candidates, political dynasties, and a $63M lawsuit define Miami’s chaotic 2025 mayoral race.
Journalist Igor Ilyash has been imprisoned in Belarus after refusing to leave his already-detained wife, highlighting the regime’s continued assault on press freedom.