UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 14, 2026
Polls
Red Flag warnings
Money
Young less fond of AI than it might appear
Drug overdose deaths down
Gen Z
Senate
The Hill - The Senate on Thursday unanimously approved a resolution sponsored by Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) to suspend senators’ pay during future government shutdowns, a new rule that could give lawmakers in the upper chamber a powerful incentive not to block funding bills ahead of key deadlines. The Senate adopted the resolution by voice vote. It will go into effect after the November midterm election so it could apply to a potential end-of-year government shutdown, but not if one occurs ahead of the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year.
Kamala Harris
She tied today’s pessimism to concrete pressures: AI-driven job disruption, social-media-fueled division, and concentrated elite power. Polling cited alongside the speech showed nearly half the country doubts the Dream still exists, with skepticism higher among Democrats and younger voters.
China
On the western edge of Tiananmen Square in Beijing, in the imposing Mao-era Great Hall of the People, Donald Trump and Xi Jinping sat down for two hours of talks. After the meeting, China’s foreign ministry published Xi’s remarks. He said Taiwan was “the most important issue in China-US relations” and warned of “clashes and even conflicts” with the US over its future. Beijing wants the US to reduce its levels of support for Taiwan, a self-governing island that China claims as part of its territory. Xi has made “unification” with Taiwan a core priority for his legacy and has not ruled out the use of force. |
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Donald Trump
Gen X
Word
Huge datacenter in Utah
Middle East
The Hill - Republican senators are warning that any request from President Trump for tens of billions of dollars to pay for the Iran war will have a tough time passing the Senate, as patience wanes over what they say is a lack of a clear plan to end the conflict. GOP senators say additional funding likely won’t have the votes to pass unless Trump comes to Congress with a formal request for authorization, or at least a clear plan to end the war soon.
The big problem is that Trump seems to have no easy way of ending the war while Iran has a choke hold on the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 percent of global oil supplies travel.
The Guardian - In a 50-49 vote, the Senate on Wednesday narrowly rejected a seventh attempt by Democrats to force an end to the US war on Iran, as a third Republican voted in favor.
Time - Senate Republicans on Wednesday narrowly blocked the strongest congressional effort yet to force an end to the war with Iran, as three Republican senators broke with their party over President Donald Trump’s handling of the conflict.
The measure, brought under the 1973 War Powers Resolution, failed by a single vote, 50 to 49. It was the seventh attempt in the Senate to pass such a measure since the war began in late February, and the first time Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, voted for it.
Murkowski was joined by Republicans Susan Collins of Maine and Rand Paul of Kentucky in backing the resolution. Collins first broke with Republican leadership on the issue last month, shortly before the expiration of a 60-day legal window that some legal experts argue required the Administration to seek congressional authorization for continued military action. Paul, a longtime critic of expansive presidential war powers, has voted for all seven attempts.
...The deciding vote was cast by Senator John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat and staunch supporter of Israel, who again crossed party lines to side with Republicans and oppose the measure.
Under the War Powers Resolution, presidents may introduce U.S. armed forces into hostilities for 60 days without congressional approval, after which authorization from Congress is required for military operations to continue. That clock began on March 2, when Trump formally notified Congress of military action against Iran, following joint U.S.-Israeli strikes launched days earlier.
Weather
Grocery prices
May 13, 2026
Donald Trump
The decline in education
Donald Trump
Netflix sued for secretly harvesting user data
FBI
What they’re up to: The team is building criminal cases that seek to charge former top government officials with a “grand conspiracy” against Trump, Jose writes. They expect their work to soon result in an indictment of former CIA Director John Brennan.
Middle East
The role of Jared Kushner in Iran
Axios - Classified intelligence assessments from earlier this month indicate that "Iran has regained access to most of its missile sites, launchers and underground facilities," the N.Y. Times' Adam Entous, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan report.
- "The findings undercut months of public assurances from President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who have told Americans that the Iranian military was 'decimated' and 'no longer' a threat," The Times notes.
The assessments say there's evidence that Iran restored operational access to 30 of the 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz. They suggest Iran has retained roughly 70% of its prewar missile stockpile and 70% of its mobile launchers. It has regained access to about 90% of its underground missile storage and launch facilities. MORE
Co-op grocers
GOP Senators balk at $1B in security for White House ballroom
It's not just blacks who are being targeted
It maps out a future in which American women are stripped of their right to vote without their husbands’ paperwork, denied access to contraception and abortion, pushed back into the home, and reduced to what Heritage’s new American Citizenship chair Scott Yenor calls the “heroic feminine” of motherhood and wifeliness. It’s quite a Mother’s Day card from the people who claim to revere motherhood the most.
Scott Yenor wants:
— To make gay sex illegal in America again,
— Divorce to be “difficult to get or proscribed,”
— Adultery and sex between unmarried consenting adults (he calls it “fornication”) criminalized, and
— The Civil Rights Act to be “scaled back” so that businesses, schools, and “every other institution in the country” can once again discriminate against women, queer people, and minorities the way they used to.
And just a few months ago, the Heritage Foundation, the same outfit that wrote Project 2025 and watched the Trump administration follow their playbook virtually to the letter, hired Yenor to chair its American Citizenship Initiative.