UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 29, 2026
When life gets boring as you get older
Health
CEOs of US’s top energy firms received average pay raise of $12.3m
April 28, 2026
Artificial Intelligence
Food stamps
...Between January 2025 and January 2026, roughly 4.2 million people stopped receiving food stamps, otherwise known as SNAP, benefits, according to data collected by the Department of Agriculture. The most significant decline in participation occurred after July 2025 with the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill, which added more restrictions to SNAP.
Experts had warned that the federal government’s large funding cuts to the program, combined with stricter work requirements for able-bodied people between 18 and 64, and immigration status restrictions, would lead to more people losing SNAP benefits.
Polls
Reuters/Ipsos poll | 4/24-4/27
Social Security
Middle East
55 Representatives are not running for reelection
Trump's war on the media
Immigration
Environment
Trump Administration Will Pay More Energy Firms to Cancel Wind Farms
| Data: U.S. Drought Monitor. Map: Axios Visuals |
Axios- Georgia's devastating wildfires could be a preview of a potentially brutal fire season nationwide, Alex Fitzpatrick writes. The Highway 82 Fire and Pineland Road Fire have destroyed more than 120 homes, fueled by dry conditions, high winds and even leftover debris from 2024's Hurricane Helene.
Much of the U.S. is at least "abnormally dry" after long stretches of low precipitation, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Severe, extreme or exceptionally dry conditions prevail across much of the West, South and Southeast.
John Bailey, professor of silviculture and wildland fire at Oregon State University's College of Forestry, tells Axios: "Over the last few years, different states have set new records for acres burned and acres of high severity fire and homes burned."
Three factors are driving those record-breaking fires, says Bailey, author of "A Walk With Wildland Fire": An "inordinate amount of fuel in the landscape," new homes in fire-prone areas that become fire fuel themselves, and longer and more severe fire seasons. More from Axios Atlanta.
➡️ Trump's "God Squad" overrode the Endangered Species Act, eradicating lifesaving protections for a rare whale species that is now at dire risk of going extinct.
➡️ And Trump gutted the Forest Service, leaving hundreds of millions of acres of public lands without protection right before wildfire season and defunding critical research for conservation efforts country-wide.
Why has the GOP done so little to help average working people?
Can a President sue his own agencies for money?
Deep State Tribunal - A federal judge is holding up Donald Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS and the Treasury Department until his lawyers can convince her it’s legal for a president to take his own federal agencies to court for money.
Trump is the ultimate boss of the agencies he’s suing, so there doesn’t appear to be any real “adversary,” as required by courts, noted Judge Kathleen Williams of the Southern District of Florida, where the suit was filed.
In this case, that would mean no one is legitimately arguing on behalf of the public interest. “There must be an honest and actual antagonistic assertion of rights by one individual against another, which is neither feigned nor collusive,” she added, quoting a previous decision.
The parties may not be “sufficiently adverse” to one another for the case to be allowed to continue, she warned. In fact, Trump’s “named adversaries are entities whose decisions are subject to his direction,” she underscored in an order Friday.
Williams ordered Trump’s lawyers and the Department of Justice to submit briefs about why the case should proceed, and set a hearing on the issue for next month.
House minority leader attacks White House press secretary
Jeffries publicly attacked Leavitt with inflammatory insults including “sick,” “demented,” and “out of control” during a Friday press conference. The outburst followed Leavitt’s claim that Democrats prioritize “Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals” as their main constituency
California to vote on new restrictive ballot rules
Democracy Docket - A sweeping proposal to impose new ID requirements and restrict voting access in California has officially qualified for the November 2026 ballot. California Secretary of State Shirley Weber confirmed Friday that an anti-voting initiative backed by Assemblymember Carl DeMaio (R) and GOP allies gathered enough valid signatures to move forward. The campaign submitted more than 962,000 signatures, clearing the final hurdle to place the measure before voters in November.
While marketed as a voter ID initiative, the measure goes significantly further, rewriting California’s constitution to impose new rules on both in-person and mail-in voting, which is how most Californians cast ballots. If the measure is approved, voters would be required to present a government-issued ID when voting in person. For mail-in voting, the measure would require voters to write identifying information — such as the last four digits of a driver’s license, Social Security number or other document — on the outside of their ballot envelope. Election officials would then be required to verify that information before counting the ballot.
CEOs getting older
Meanwhile...
Public school teachers
NPR - The average salary for public school teachers in the U.S. is up 3.5% from the previous year. However, when adjusted for inflation, today's teachers are estimated to earn less than they did in 2017, according to a new review of school-related data from the National Education Association. Here are some key findings:
🧑🏫 The average salary for new teachers in the U.S. is $46,112. Among the locations with the highest salaries are the District of Columbia ($64,640), and Washington ($60,658). The states with the lowest starting salaries are Montana ($36,682) and Nebraska ($39,561).
🧑🏫 The beginning of the 2024-25 school year saw a 0.3% drop in student enrollment from the previous fall. Since 2016, schools have experienced a roughly 3.6% decline in enrollment.
🧑🏫 States with collective bargaining laws have higher average starting salaries and top salaries than states without them.
🧑🏫 Washington stands out among the 11 states that have seen an inflation-adjusted increase in teacher pay since 2017. Teacher pay in the state has increased 36%. The rise came after the state’s supreme court put the state on notice and imposed a $100,000-a-day fine to ensure better funding and support for public schools.
