UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 29, 2026
Youth
Weather
Trump's sexual abuse case
Bipartisan challenge to FBI spying
Appeals court rules again mass deportations
Climate
Trump's ballroom
86 45
The indictment of Comey for posting an Instagram picture with “86 47” is a bad-faith action by every DOJ attorney who signed or filed the indictment or approved the effort to secure it. The relevant bar associations should immediately open disciplinary investigations into each attorney noted above to determine what evidence, if any, supports the allegation in the indictment that Comey’s seashell message communicated an intent to harm the president.
The obvious answer to that question is that no such evidence exists, and the indictment was sought to placate Trump as Todd Blanche grovels before Trump in an effort to secure a nomination as Attorney General.
The indictment is so flimsy that Fox News legal analyst mocked the indictment in an op-ed in the National Review. See Mediaite, Andy McCarthy Slams Trump DOJ’s ‘Absurd’ Comey Prosecution. McCarthy said,
If it’s possible, the Trump Justice Department’s new indictment of former FBI Director James Comey is even more absurd than the previous indictment. That one failed to state a crime. This one fabricates a crime.
Shortly after the DOJ indicted Comey, the FCC ordered early license renewal examinations for ABC affiliates after Melania Trump demanded that ABC fire Jimmy Kimmel for saying that Melania had “a glow like an expectant widow.” See NPR, Following Kimmel’s Melania Trump joke, FCC orders early license renewal for 8 ABC stations. The FCC’s early renewal action against ABC was unprecedented and was clearly intended to exact retribution against ABC.
....The actions by the DOJ and FCC are merely the latest maneuvers by Trump in his attempt to intimidate the media. He has been using the same playbook for nearly a decade.
...The indictment against Comey is a joke, whose sole purpose is to force Comey to spend money on legal defense. The licenses of ABC’s affiliates will all be renewed because there is no ground for revocation. Again, Trump is merely looking for ways to force his enemies to incur costs.
Elections
Supreme Court strikes Louisiana's reform that added a majority black congressional district
States with the biggest drug problems
This study compares the 50 states and the District of Columbia in terms of 20 key metrics, ranging from arrest and overdose rates to opioid prescription use and employee drug testing laws. You can find some highlights below.
| States with the Biggest Drug Problems | ||
| 1. New Mexico | 11. Wyoming | |
| 2. Arkansas | 12. Maine | |
| 3. Alaska | 13. Montana | |
| 4. Nevada | 14. Louisiana | |
| 5. Missouri | 15. Vermont | |
| 6. West Virginia | 16. Washington | |
| 7. Colorado | 17. Michigan | |
| 8. District of Columbia | 18. Oregon | |
| 9. Oklahoma | 19. South Carolina | |
| 10. Mississippi | 20. Alabama |
Key Stats
- Arkansas has the highest retail opioid pain reliever prescriptions per 100 residents, leading the nation. On the other end of the spectrum, Hawaii has the lowest.
- West Virginia has the most drug overdose deaths per 100,000 residents, which is six times more than in Nebraska, the state with the fewest.
- New Mexico has the highest share of teens who used illicit drugs in the past month, which is 2.5 times higher than in Utah, the state with the lowest.
- Vermont has the highest share of adults who used illicit drugs in the past month, which is 2.4 times higher than in Utah, the state with the lowest.
To view the full report and learn about drug abuse in your state
Columbia's president on the climate crisis
A different electric service story
Polls
Tariffs
Social Security
How the Trump regime may be cheating on Congress
Immigration
These actions echo past judicial interventions against Trump’s 2017 travel bans, frustrating conservative efforts to enforce immigration law.
Federal Appeals court hands Pentagon a significant victory
Congressional Insider - The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit delivered a split decision that temporarily reinstates Pentagon restrictions on journalists. Judges Justin Walker and Bradley Garcia formed the majority, determining the Defense Department would likely succeed in proving its escort requirement legally valid for security purposes. Judge J. Michelle Childs dissented from the 2-1 ruling. This decision directly suspends U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman’s April 9 order, which had found the Pentagon in violation of constitutional protections after implementing new rules requiring reporter escorts and removing workspace access for seven New York Times journalists.
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
