Funding for Maine’s AgrAbility program is restored after a damaging freeze—unpacking the partisan fight, its impact on rural workers, and the lessons for future policy battles.
Author: Democratically
Nintendo’s Switch 2 ditches gender for ‘styles’ in Mii creation—a move that provokes backlash but marks a milestone for digital inclusion.
When efforts to leave Michigan for Syria failed, Aws Mohammed Naser shifted his extremist focus to American soil—and built a bomb for ISIS from his own basement.
Prime Minister Recean warns of Russia’s plan to deploy 10,000 troops to Transnistria and install a pro-Kremlin government—a threat to Moldova’s democracy with far-reaching regional implications.
A coalition of progressive senators is challenging the DOJ and FTC to explain why they let Rocket Companies’ massive acquisition of Redfin proceed, warning it could dramatically reshape the housing market and worsen affordability.
The Trump administration’s attempt to restrict birthright citizenship faces major constitutional challenges, with legal experts and federal judges calling the effort an unprecedented and dangerous attack on the 14th Amendment.
NATO’s calculated silence on Ukraine’s membership exposes growing fractures—and raises questions about the alliance’s commitment to democracy in Europe.
Streavel’s threats against Trump spark urgent questions: How do we police violent rhetoric online without compromising core freedoms?
The White House has declared South Korea’s election fair—yet the shadow of China and partisan mistrust still haunt both sides of the Pacific.
For the first time since its founding, the Ukraine Defense Contact Group is meeting without the U.S. defense secretary—an absence that speaks volumes about Washington’s shifting priorities and has NATO allies worried about the future.