UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
June 17, 2026
Americans to be hit with record-high electricity bills this summer
Judge Orders Restoration of National Park History Displays
Weather
Polls
Housing
Reuters - The "State of the Nation’s Housing," [is] a report produced every year by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. The 2026 edition, out June 17, is sobering.
“Persistent affordability challenges and rising economic uncertainty are hurting housing markets," the report says bluntly. "Weakening labor markets and plummeting immigration have dampened household growth and mobility. Sales of existing homes sit at three-decade lows and inventories are rising in the face of high homebuying costs.”
Only 1.1 million new households were formed in 2025 – a number roughly in line with the depths of the Great Recession over a decade ago – as student debt, a weaker job market, and anemic consumer sentiment made Americans wary of striking out on their own.
Similarly, only 11.2% of Americans relocated in 2024, an all-time low.
- As of 2024, 20.7 million homeowner households (24% of the total) spent more than 30% of their income on housing expenses; 9.6 million spent more than half their income. Renters may have it worse: roughly half of all households that rent, or 22.7 million, were cost burdened as of 2024, including 12.1 million that were severely burdened.
Benjamin Netanyahu
Trump regime
Climate
House passes anti-worker bill
- The House passed the Faster Labor Contracts Act, forcing strict timelines and binding arbitration onto first union contracts.
- Critics say it hands unelected government arbitrators power to dictate pay, benefits, and workplace rules for up to two years.
- Supporters claim it stops employers from dragging out talks, but opponents warn it actually strips workers of a real vote on contracts.
- Over 350 groups, including many conservative and business organizations, are urging the Senate to kill the bill as federal overreach.
The grifting of America's 250th celebration
But, in king-like fashion, Trump and his MAGA allies went around Congress and created their own party planning committee, confusingly named “Freedom 250.” This new group, which claims to be nonpartisan, is planning competing events all year that do little more than glorify Donald Trump.
Who is paying for these Freedom 250 festivities? You — at least in part. That’s because Freedom 250 has gained access to taxpayer funds allotted by Congress last year for the 250th anniversary celebrations.
Media
Money
To highlight the places where people are having the most trouble paying their debts, WalletHub analyzed proprietary user data from Q1 2026 for each of the 50 states. In our ranking, we considered both the percentage of individual tradelines that were delinquent and the percentage of residents’ total loan balances that were delinquent.
| Most Delinquent | Least Delinquent |
| 1. Mississippi | 41. Hawaii |
| 2. Louisiana | 42. Massachusetts |
| 3. Arkansas | 43. California |
| 4. West Virginia | 44. Washington |
| 5. Alabama | 45. Colorado |
| 6. South Carolina | 46. Wisconsin |
| 7. Delaware | 47. Montana |
| 8. North Carolina | 48. Utah |
| 9. Tennessee | 49. Vermont |
| 10. Texas | 50. Iowa |
For the full report and to see where your state ranks