Signal packet/Home/Wire/Politics
PoliticsUnited StatesHighScore 8.0

The U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers, permitting them to challenge a New Jersey state investigation into their practices.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled in favor of anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers, allowing them to challenge a New Jersey investigation into their operations.

Quick reaction

One tap helps tune what we surface next.

Reader discussion

Public comments
0/1000

No comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.

Follow this signal

Get updates on this story

We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.

Map context

Open map near United States

Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.

Open live map

Related coverage

More story pages

The U.S. House passes a Senate-approved budget resolution to secure funding for ICE. The measure advances without Democratic support, clearing a path for agency operations.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a Senate-approved budget resolution, securing funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without Democratic support.

The US House approves a 3-year extension of FISA Section 702 in a 235-191 vote. The legislation allows intelligence agencies to continue collecting foreign communications without a warrant, despite concerns regarding the incidental collection of data from Americans.

The US House of Representatives has voted 235-191 to extend FISA Section 702 for three years, permitting intelligence agencies to continue warrantless collection of foreign communications.

The U.S. Department of Education is opening an investigation into Stanford University over diversity practices that the Trump administration has labeled as discriminatory.

The U.S. Department of Education has launched an investigation into Stanford University regarding diversity-related practices that the Trump administration has characterized as discriminatory.

House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump administration officials secure enough support from Republican holdouts to open debate on a bill renewing warrantless domestic surveillance powers.

House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump administration officials have secured enough support from Republican holdouts to initiate debate on a bill to renew warrantless domestic surveillance powers.

More live signals

Continue with the live feed.

The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.

Continue with live feed

Monitor

Track follow-ups in Monitor

Turn this public story into a watchlist seed for matching future signals, team alerts, and operational routing.

Signals API

Use these signals via API

Evaluate structured event payloads, canonical URLs, categories, geo fields, and confidence metadata for your own workflows.