
Growing number of Republicans increasingly critical of Netanyahu and Israeli policy
Benjamin Netanyahu lost the Democrats. Now a growing number of Republicans are souring on him and his country, too.
Axios · 3h ago
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The Supreme Court's final week brings major rulings on presidential power, while the administration reshapes policy across foreign crises, election infrastructure, and disaster response.
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Supreme Court strips TPS protection from Haitian immigrants who rebuilt a struggling Ohio city, forcing thousands to choose between deportation or illegality after Trump's inflammatory rhetoric.
Supreme Court ruled against extending Temporary Protected Status for Haitian nationals, meaning current TPS holders must leave the US or face deportation when their designation expires.
Supreme Court upholds immigration law by ending temporary status for Haitians, allowing enforcement of existing rules regardless of local economic benefit claims.
Your Wallet
Haitian and Syrian workers losing legal status may leave labor shortages in some US industries and communities.
Your Safety
Asylum restrictions and TPS cancellations could leave vulnerable migrants without legal protection or vetting pathways.
Your Voice
Supreme Court decisions on immigration bypass Congress, concentrating power over who enters and stays in courts.
Your Future
Weakened asylum protections set precedent for broader executive control over immigration without legislative oversight.

Court says no.
Advocates say yes. People caught between.
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Politics is a long-running theatrical production with poor scripts and good catering. The cast turns over every two and six years. The set has not been redecorated since the 1960s. There are two main parties, both of which insist they are the only thing standing between you and disaster, and both of which have been wrong about something important within your lifetime. SignalPop's politics room covers it as theater that occasionally produces statutes. We lead with the wire copy from Reuters, the Associated Press, and the BBC for the first read of what happened. We layer in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and Politico for the committee-level reporting that the wires skip. Press releases dressed up as news are treated as press releases. The Outrage Inflation widget flags coverage running hotter than the underlying event warrants. The Bullshit Index scores items for source quality, corroboration, and theater. Partisan messaging routes low or off the page entirely. Two or three real developments a day; the rest is staging. Every headline links out to the publication that did the work, because no two-minute summary deserves credit for it.