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Where the redistricting fight stands heading into the midterms

It’s been a long six weeks for Democrats in the redistricting wars. By the end of April, the party had drawn enough Democratic-leaning seats to turn the back-and-forth over new congressional maps for the midterms that President Donald Trump had started a year earlier into roughly a wash. Then the courts acted: The U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, opening the door to Republican-led states in the South to eliminating majority-Black districts held by Democrats.

NBC News 7d ago

Another Chance for Trump to Cash Out

If Republicans lose control of either chamber of Congress in November, a constitutional crisis will erupt. A new Congress will ask questions about President Trump’s actions. The Trump administration will refuse to answer.

The Atlantic 7d ago

MAHA moms test their influence in US glyphosate fight

MAHA moms test their influence in US glyphosate fight MAHA activists see legislative wins, White House disappointments and question marks for the midterms as they seek to shape policy. On April 27, a few hundred protesters gathered in front of the United States Supreme Court in Washington, DC, holding signs with slogans like “How much cancer is acceptable?” and “Monsanto knew”. Inside, the court was hearing oral arguments in the case Monsanto Company v Durnell, which could make it harder to...

Al Jazeera 6d ago

‘Permanent class of excluded Indians’: Owaisi slams Centre over SIR

As the Election Commission expands its Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls across multiple states, AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi has launched a fresh attack on the exercise, alleging that it could be used to create a “permanent class of excluded Indians” and disproportionately affect Muslims, women, migrants and the poor. In a post on X on Wednesday, Owaisi claimed that the Centre was using a document-based voter verification exercise as a precursor to broader mechanisms for...

Times of India 7d ago

Cut Platner Loose

The Maine Senate race is far from the first time that an American political party has had to choose between character and power. In 2017, Alabama Republicans nominated a state supreme court judge named Roy Moore for U.S. Senate. A month before election day, The Washington Post published a report that when Moore was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney, he initiated sexual contact with a 14-year-old girl.

The Atlantic 4d ago

Louisiana Republicans pass new electoral map that guts majority-Black district

Louisiana Republicans have approved a new congressional map that eliminates a majority-Black district, following a Supreme Court ruling that found a previous map violated the Voting Rights Act. The revised map is expected to shift control of Louisiana's six congressional seats to the Republican party, moving from a 4-2 split to a likely 5-1 majority. The bill is now awaiting signature from Republican Governor Jeff Landry.

The Guardian World 12d ago

It's Cong vs Cong over Cauvery as Mekedatu dam splits Tamil Nadu, Karnataka

NEW DELHI: 2026 has been a year of Congress' re-emergence in southern India. The party won comfortably in the Kerala assembly elections, entered the Tamil Nadu government by supporting Vijay's TVK, and also solved the three-year-long tussle over the chief ministerial post in Karnataka. But, just as it seemed that everything was going Congress's way, regional tensions appear to have taken over the party line.

Times of India 3d ago

What It Would Take to Finally Slay the Gerrymander

This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic’s archives to contextualize the present. Not long after the original gerrymander took its monstrous shape in 1812, The United States Gazette issued a harsh prophecy. Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry might otherwise have been forgotten to history but for the wicked practice that would come to bear his name.

The Atlantic 6d ago

Peru: Presidential election too close to call

Peru: Presidential election too close to call June 8, 2026The results of Peru's presidential runoff were still up in the air on Monday morning, even though more than 90% of the votes had been counted. Preliminary results show that right-wing conservative candidate Keiko Fujimori received approximately 50.5% of the vote, while left-wing politician Roberto Sanchez was on around 49.5%. However, it was expected that Fujimori's lead would narrow.

Deutsche Welle 2d ago

Republicans can win the midterms if they just stop underselling success

Republicans head into the 2026 midterms with a rare advantage: a concrete record of accomplishments to run on powered by President Donald Trump’s second-term successes. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich has proposed a practical midterm strategy reminiscent of his 1994 "Contract with America" that urges Republicans to run hard on their winning record. That record includes such wins as the Working Families Tax Cut, which has already brought positive effects to the economy.

Fox News 8d ago