UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 22, 2026
Donald Trump
Trump's nominee for Surgeon General
The profit in immigrant warehouses
Gavin Newsom
Canada
Bloomberg - Should they stay or should they go? That’s the question Albertans may soon confront when voters in Canada’s energy heartland decide this fall whether to begin a legal process that could ultimately lead to secession.
- Premier Danielle Smith says she’ll hold a referendum on Oct. 19 in a bid to contain independence sentiment within her United Conservative Party, which has governed the province since 2019.
- The decision follows a court ruling that blocked an earlier push to petition the government for a secession vote. The judge sided with indigenous groups, whose treaty rights predate Alberta’s creation as a Canadian province in 1905.
- Polls show separatism remains a minority view, with especially weak support among women and residents of major cities.
- The French-speaking province of Quebec offers a cautionary tale. Rising separatist sentiment there in the 1970s drove many businesses to Toronto from Montreal. Quebec voters ultimately rejected independence in a razor-thin 1995 referendum.
Trump grip in GOP primaries masks vulnerabilities in the fall
House rejects bill to further museum honoring women
Democrats review of 2024 gets criticized
NPR - The Democratic National Committee yesterday released an external review of its 2024 campaign losses to identify lessons for 2026 and beyond. DNC Chairman Ken Martin is facing internal criticism for shelving the report after he received it in December 2025. Martin has apologized for not releasing the report and for not being more transparent about the decision. But he also said he disavows the report, which was delivered incomplete. The 192-page document, written by Paul Rivera, a Democratic consultant unaffiliated with the Biden and Harris campaigns, lacks key sections, including a conclusion and an executive summary. |
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Congress leaving town for a week
NPR - Congress is preparing to leave town for a weeklong recess without passing a Republican-backed plan to fund immigration enforcement for the next three years. This is a top priority for President Trump, who told congressional Republicans he wanted additional funding approved by June 1. Trump's $1.8 billion "Anti-Weaponization" fund may derail the deadline. The fund aims to compensate people who say they have been targeted by the government. It's not included in the immigration enforcement measure, but some Senate Republicans wanted to address it before passing the funding. Discord also appears to be growing among House Republicans, who called off a vote last night on a resolution limiting the president’s war powers. |
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Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche
Weather
House GOP cancels war powers resolution
May 21, 2026
Donald Trump
Huffington Post - President Donald Trump has once again invoked Jesus Christ, this time in his latest erroneous claim that the 2020 election he lost was “rigged.” This comes just weeks after the president faced backlash for sharing a social media image depicting him as ... Him.
US votes against historic UN climate change decision
Grocery prices continue to climb
Trump's tax scheme could save him more than $100 million
Polls
THe Hill - A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday showed one of his lowest ratings recorded so far, finding only 34 percent of respondents approved of his job performance. Only a third said they approve of his handling of the economy.
The results were split along partisan lines, with nearly all Democrats disapproving of him on the economy and an overwhelming majority of Republicans in approval. But there was a significant shift within the president’s party.
Only 73 percent of Republicans said they approve of Trump’s handling of the economy, while almost a quarter disapprove. That’s a significant change from Quinnipiac’s poll last month, when 88 percent of Republicans approved of the president on the issue.
Health
Artificial Intelligence
Legal issues
Workers
More Americans are working part-time when they want full-time jobsMulti-job households are risingLong-term unemployment is increasing
“This is millions or even billions of dollars that’s not going towards workers and investing into their workplace,” said Margaret Poydock, a co-author of the report and a senior policy analyst at the EPI.
Employers spent company money hiring consultants and law firms specializing in union avoidance and on legal counsel, representation and litigation services during union elections and organizing campaigns.
Poydock said the role of these union-avoidance law firms and consultants has, in part, contributed to the decline of unionization membership and density over several decades. Union density in the US is at 10%, compared with 20.3% in 1983. Despite this decline, Gallup polls report nearly 70% of Americans approve of labor unions.
Meanwhile. . .
The case highlights double standards in how Washington treats document handling in politically charged Trump investigations. Lineberger has pleaded not guilty, so the evidence and motives will be tested in court.
Ethnicity
Helping other groups
California's big inactive voters still signed up
The group says at least 873,000 inactive registrations are still on the books across dozens of counties. Prior Judicial Watch cases forced major clean‑ups in Oregon and Colorado, removing hundreds of thousands of ineligible names.
Federal law requires states to make a “reasonable effort” to remove ineligible voters, but does not allow automatic purges of inactive voters.