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Government fraud-prevention efforts are on the rise

The House of Representatives has passed seven major fraud fighting bills and 15 less controversial measures in June, spurred by a recent report accusing Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and state Attorney General Keith Ellison of being aware of taxpayer fraud in federally funded social programs and doing nothing to stop it.

2 in 3 facing financial hardship from gas prices: Gallup

Two in three Americans are facing financial hardship due to increased gas prices, according to a new poll gauging the Iran war's impact on the U.S. economy. In the Gallup poll, 67 percent of respondents said “recent price increases in gasoline” have resulted in “financial hardship” for themselves or their household. Thirty-three percent said recent gas...

USPS wouldn’t deliver ballots in states that refuse to fork over mail-in voter info under proposed rule

Postmaster General David Steiner says USPS would not mail ballots from states that refuse to share absentee voter list with the federal government.

Supreme Court hands Trump two major immigration victories

Supreme Court rules migrants turned away at the border cannot apply for asylum and blocks TPS recipients from judicial relief in two major decisions.

Most Trump supporters still back NATO despite years of Trump’s criticism, new poll finds

A new Reagan Institute poll finds 73% of Americans, including 61% of MAGA Republicans, say keeping the U.S. in NATO is important to national security.

Florida GOP candidate warns NYC socialist primary wins will fuel business, resident exodus: ‘Concerning’

Florida GOP congressional candidate Scott Singer says New York's socialist primary wins will drive more people and businesses to flee the city.

‘Deranged’ vandals fuel Mall sabotage trend, from blood writing to Reflecting Pool damage

Vandals target the National Mall with blood-written messages on the Washington Monument, 8647 markings, and razor-blade cuts to the Reflecting Pool.

Supreme Court hands Second Amendment win to concealed carry holders in blue state gun control case

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the state of Hawaii's Attorney General in Wolford v. Lopez in a 6-3 decision Thursday, granting concealed carry holders a huge victory in the blue state. 

The Supreme Court sided with the plaintiff, who contested Hawaii's state law requiring a property owner's explicit permission to allow lawful gun owners to bring firearms into public businesses.

Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Johnson races to break House GOP blockade in high-stakes meeting with Trump

House Speaker Mike Johnson will meet with Trump in an effort to break the impasse as GOP infighting stalls key legislation ahead of the August recess deadline.

Mamdani-backed socialist primary winner founded group whose goal is to ‘eradicate’ Western civilization

Darializa Avila Chevalier, NYC congressional primary winner, reportedly founded a Columbia group that called for total eradication of Western civilization.

‘As long as it takes’: Trump allies freeze House floor to pressure Senate on voter ID bill

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna leads conservatives vowing to block all House floor votes until Republicans pass the SAVE America Act.

NY socialist surge could push Dem voters to defect, GOP governor candidate predicts

Bruce Blakeman warns the Democratic Party has veered too far left, predicting traditional Democrats will increasingly vote Republican in elections.

Team Trump is exposing billions in fraud — even as Democrats keep actively encouraging it

Democrats oppose anti-fraud rules, such as those in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, claiming they cost folks their health care — as if...

Pull the plug on ‘activist classroom’ rules indoctrinating our kids

Ideology, not student performance, is the priority in many states' public schools -- because state laws force teachers to be trained as activists.

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