Who Should Write the Rules for Artificial Intelligence?

Artificial intelligence has officially entered the “Congress is trying to do something about it” phase, which means we’ve now moved from “terrifyingly fast technological disruption” to “terrifyingly fast technological disruption, but with committee hearings.” According to reports surrounding the Obernolte-Trahan AI negotiations, Reps. Jay Obernolte, a California Republican, and Lori Trahan, a Massachusetts Democrat, have…

Ukraine Aid Returns to the House Floor

Rep. Gregory Meeks’ Ukraine Support Act has now been forced toward a House vote through a discharge petition, meaning supporters gathered enough signatures to bypass House leadership and bring the bill out of legislative limbo. That alone makes the story politically significant. Discharge petitions aren’t everyday tools. They’re congressional crowbars, used when enough members decide…

The Major Richard Star Act: Weighing Promise, Principle, and Price

The fight over the Major Richard Star Act is one of those rare Washington debates where the moral case is pretty simple, even if the budget math isn’t. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth recently voiced support for the bill during Senate questioning, saying the administration supports the Act after Sen. Richard Blumenthal pressed him on the…

The GOP Tug-of-War Over Haitian TPS

At first glance, the House-passed bill extending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian migrants through 2029 looks like a fairly routine immigration measure, one of those periodic “kick the can” decisions Washington specializes in. But the reaction to it, particularly from within the Republican Party, tells a much bigger story about where immigration politics currently…

Impeachments, Headlines, and Hype

House Democrats are moving to introduce articles of impeachment against Pete Hegseth, citing concerns tied to alleged misconduct, judgment, and overall fitness for a high-level national role. Reporting from The Hill makes one thing clear: this is less of a quiet procedural step and more of a very loud political moment. And here’s the reality…

Expulsion or Excuses? Congress Confronts Its Own Credibility Problem

At first glance, the situation involving Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick looked like yet another entry in the long-running series called Congressional Ethics Questions: Season 47. You know the script: allegations surface, everyone calls for an investigation, and leadership urges patience while quietly calculating the political fallout. But this case doesn’t sit comfortably in that familiar script…

Dignity on the Line: Can Immigration Reform Thread the Needle?

 The Dignity (Dignidad) Act is what happens when lawmakers attempt something that feels almost nostalgic in modern Washington: an actual compromise. Instead of leaning hard in one ideological direction, the bill tries to stitch together two competing priorities that have defined the immigration debate for decades—enforcement and legalization—and present them as a single, cohesive plan.…

Congress Finally Takes Housing Seriously

In a Congress that often seems more invested in partisan theater than practical governance, the House’s bipartisan passage of a housing package stands out as something unusual: an acknowledgment of reality. Housing affordability is no longer a regional issue confined to coastal cities or high-growth metro areas. It’s a national pressure point affecting families in…

America’s Security Strains, Congressional Shakeups, and the Search for Serious Leadership

If the last week of news has taught us anything, it’s this: America is juggling more security concerns and political reshuffling than a circus clown with stage fright. From Afghan nationals making threats on TikTok to a loyal Trump-aligned congressman hanging up his boots, the moment feels… busy. And not the peaceful, sipping-sweet-tea-on-the-porch kind of…