UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
March 27, 2026
Kash Patel
Health
Over seven million sudent loaners to be hit by Trump regime
Labor
ICE
Trump at his cabinet meeting today
Credit card debt
Donald Trump
Lily Becker - In an offhand remark about Iran at the White House on Tuesday, President Donald Trump showed how much his approach to foreign policy differs from his predecessors’. “We killed all their leadership,” he said. “And then they met to choose new leaders, and we killed all of them. And now we have a new group and we can easily do that. But let’s see how they turn out.”
Independent UK - President Donald Trump has falsely claimed to have won “the gay vote” during the 2024 presidential election, despite only picking up 12 percent of support from the LGBT+ community. In a lengthy phone interview on Fox News’s panel show The Five on Thursday, the president said: “Now I think I did very well with the gay vote, OK? I even played the gay national anthem as my walk-off, OK? And I think it probably helped me. But I did great. No Republican’s ever gotten the gay vote like I did and I’m very proud of it, I think it’s great. Perhaps it’s because I’m from New York City, I don’t know…”
Bloomberg - Cracks are emerging in Trump’s MAGA base as the Iran war drags into its fifth week, turning the typically unified Conservative Political Action Conference into a debate over foreign policy and rising costs.
- Some Trump loyalists and conservative media figures are openly opposing the war, citing broken promises and blaming Israel, even as most Republicans still back the president’s actions.
- The administration has said it started the war because of threats posed by Iran, but there are signs of disagreement between the US and Israel over its aims.
- The worry for Republicans is that surging oil and gas prices, plus uncertainty over the war’s end, risk political fallout for Trump and the GOP going into November’s midterm elections.
Census
Taxing billionaires
So no, the Evergreen State’s action is not unique. But that’s not the same as saying it doesn’t matter. Instead, the measure, approved a week ago by Washington legislators after a grueling session that included a 24-hour filibuster by opposing Republicans, ought to be seen for what it is: the latest in a series of attempts by states to tax the growing uber-rich class in ways the Trump administration won’t.
TSA will get paid, says Trump
The Hill - President Trump announced on Thursday evening that he will sign an executive order to “immediately” pay TSA officers despite the partial government shutdown. The funds will come from the One Big Beautiful Act that Republicans passed last summer.
Catholic churches gaining parishioners
National Guard use in cities challenged
Iran
Trump's war against DEI
The Hill - The Trump administration is expanding its push against the use of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in university admissions, opening investigations into three medical schools.
Stanford University, The Ohio State University and the University of California, San Diego received letters Wednesday asking for seven years of data concerning applicants’ race, standardized test scores, relations to donors, ZIP codes and other information, The Hill’s Lexi Lonas Cochran reports.
The government is also demanding documents related to DEI use in admissions and other university communications regarding race, donor status and other information gathered during admissions. They were given a deadline of April 24 to comply.
The administration has prioritized trying to obtain various admissions data from universities during Trump’s second term, expressing concern that academic institutions are using other methods to get around a 2023 Supreme Court decision banning the use of affirmative action in admissions. Many universities have handed over admissions data or changed policies to abide by federal officials’ requests, while 17 Democratic-led states are suing to stop their universities’ admissions data from being collected.
No Kings protests grow
Meanwhile . . .
Aging
March 26, 2026
Social Security
Popuation
New voters in South Dakota will have to prove to vote in state and local races
NY Times - New voters in South Dakota will have to prove that they are United States citizens in order to cast a ballot in state and local races under a bill signed on Thursday by Gov. Larry Rhoden.
The new law, which does not apply to South Dakotans already on the voter rolls, comes amid a national push by Republicans to tighten voting rules and root out voting by noncitizens, which is already illegal and believed to be rare.“This bill ensures only citizens vote in state elections, keeping our elections safe and secure,” said Mr. Rhoden, who is seeking election to a full term this year and is facing a crowded Republican primary field. He replaced Kristi Noem, who left the governor’s office last year to become homeland security secretary under President Trump.
South Dakota is one of a handful of Republican-led states to advance its own proof of citizenship measures this year as President Trump pushes Congress to pass the SAVE America Act.
Iran
Donald Trump
The Hill - President Trump said Wednesday at the National Republican Congressional Committee’s (NRCC) annual fundraising dinner that he avoids using the word “war” to describe the conflict in Iran. “I won’t use the word ‘war’ because they say if you use the word ‘war,’ that’s maybe not a good thing to do,” Trump told the crowd of GOP lawmakers at Union Station in Washington, D.C. “They don’t like the word ‘war’ because you’re supposed to get approval. So, I’ll use the word ‘military operation’, which is really what it is. It’s a military decimation.”
New Republic - When the FBI raided Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in 2022 and found that the former president had stolen hundreds of classified documents from the White House, stashing them in the club’s closets and showers, one question stood out: Why? Was Trump coordinating with Russian intelligence? Hiding proof of aliens?
As it turns out, the answer was more self-serving: Former special counsel Jack Smith concluded that Trump took the documents to help advance his business interests, according to case records obtained by Democrats and reviewed by MS NOW.
“Trump possessed classified documents pertinent to his business interests—establishing a motive for retaining them,” one memo from Smith’s office read. “We must have those documents.”
The documents Trump kept included a classified map he showed to passengers on his plane, and one document so sensitive that only six people were allowed to view it.
Following the FBI raid of Mar-a-Lago, Judge Aileen Cannon, who has a history of ruling in Trump’s favor, dismissed the federal lawsuit against him by arguing that Smith’s appointment was unconstitutional. Cannon slapped a gag order on Smith and most of the documents related to the investigation. The special counsel resigned after Trump was reelected in 2024.
Progressives
Olympic Committee Announces a Broad Ban of Transgender Athletes in Women’s Events
Polls
Airports are not the only government shutdown victims
NBC News - The partial government shutdown is affecting more than just airports. Among the other agencies enduring the consequences of a shutdown:
→ FEMA's Disaster Relief Fund is rapidly depleting, the agency said. If the fund is depleted, FEMA will be unable to fund many disaster recovery efforts.
→ DHS's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has scaled back or paused its work to reduce systemic risk over time and make proactive assessments, among other initiatives, said Nicholas Andersen, the agency's acting and deputy director.
→ And the Coast Guard has not had enough funding to operate and pay its workers for 85 of the past 176 days. It also can't pay over 5,000 utility accounts, "putting us in danger of widespread shutdowns to critical infrastructure," said Adm. Thomas Allen, Coast Guard vice commandant.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he has not made a final decision about whether senators will leave for their two-week recess at the end of the week if there is no deal. More