Organizers in Idaho, Nevada, and Virginia Are Putting Abortion Rights on Ballot
Grassroots canvassers are hitting the streets to urge voters to defend abortion rights in their states this November.

A CNN pundit shut down a conservative who kept interrupting her by yelling in his face.Leigh McGowan, a political commentator and the host of the PoliticsGirl podcast, got locked in a fiery exchange with Jason Rantz, a conservative radio host, during their appearance on CNN on Tuesday.The debate centered around Zohran Mamdani and Darializa Avila Chevalier, a congressional candidate who won the Democratic primary for New York's 13th Congressional District on Tuesday. Rantz argued that socialism and antisemitism will help Republicans win congressional seats in the midterms, while McGowan countered that he was exaggerating extreme views as mainstream in the Democratic Party."There are people struggling in this country, and we need representatives that don't just represent the donors and the lobbying groups and the billionaires," McGowan said. "Mamdani is showing us that you can deliver it."As she made that point, Rantz continued talking and demanded, "Could you find one?" and "Can you find any who don't hold antisemitic views?""I would love to talk without you talking over me the entire time," McGowan shot back.Rantz accused McGowan of praising Avila Chevalier, who's known for far-left views and as a democratic socialist. McGowan denied that. She tried to clarify that she said Avila Chevalier's race was the closest among the New York races on Tuesday and that she celebrated Mamdani's messaging, not Avila Chevalier's.Rantz kept trying to talk over her, however, and stressed his argument about Democrats veering further left. That's when McGowan snapped."Again! I'm speaking, and you keep talking over me!" she yelled. "I would love to finish my point."CNN anchor Abby Phillip had to intervene, saying "hold on a second," and asking Rantz to let McGowan finish her point."Mamdani, in six months, has shown what the Democrats have not been able to show," McGowan said in a quiet voice. "That you can say you're going to get something done, and then get it done."
Grassroots canvassers are hitting the streets to urge voters to defend abortion rights in their states this November.
House Democratic leaders will give remarks Wednesday morning in the wake of New York’s primaries, when two hopefuls backed by Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) were defeated by more progressive candidates. The victors were backed by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D), a democratic socialist, and have shown a growing rift between the party’s…
A trio of progressive Democratic congressional candidates swept their respective races in Tuesday’s New York primary elections, and a number of right-wing figures – including Fox News’ own Sean Hannity – were said by critics to be experiencing a full-on “freakout.”“Incumbent congressman Dan Goldman (D-NY), who was just banned from a New York City coffee shop because of his support for Israel, has now lost his primary to a radical socialist backed by [New York City Mayor Zohran] Mamdani,” Hannity said Tuesday night on Fox News, his voice cracking. “It appears that a pretty scary transformation is now fully underway in the Democratic Party.”AJ Faleski, a hip-hop artist and news analyst, quipped that Hannity appeared as though he was “literally about to cry” in a social media post on X to his more than 325,000 followers, with several other notable critics making near-identical observations, including writer and activist Maria Figuereo and progressive political commentator Jordan Uhl of The Young Turks fame.Three Mamdani-backed progressive congressional candidates – Claire Valdez, Brad Lander and Darializa Avila Chevalier – won their respective primary elections Tuesday night, two of them ousting Democratic incumbents who House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) “campaigned aggressively” for, but fell short.Michael A. Cohen, a centrist liberal writer who is of no relation to President Donald Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen, proclaimed after the election that it was a "genuinely scary night for New York City Jews,” a remark presumably referencing Mamdani and his allies’ fierce criticism of Israel.His comment was scrutinized, however, given the demographics in the districts the progressive candidates achieved overwhelming electoral victories. New York’s 10th Congressional District, for instance, is 24.4% Jewish, giving it the second-largest Jewish population of any congressional district in the country. Lander, who has called Israel an "apartheid" state, won NY-10 by 66% over his pro-Israel opponent Goldman.“The freakout tonight over the NY primaries reminds me of the meltdown when Mamdani won his primary,” wrote the prominent influencer and writer who uses the pseudonym “GenXGril” in a social media post on X to their more than 102,000 followers.Sean Hannity is literally about to cry https://t.co/ckRv6wGVU7— An0maly (@LegendaryEnergy) June 24, 2026
With no evidence behind them, Trump has amplified MAGA media's claims about the Reflecting Pool
New Yorkers are at the polls Tuesday to vote in a series of House elections. There are handful of open seats up for grabs this cycle, including the 7th, 12th and 21st Congressional Districts. Democratic Reps. Nydia Velázquez and Jerry Nadler as well as Republican Reps. Elise Stefanik’s (R) exits from Capitol Hill set up…
The Supreme Court ruled that non-US citizens can no longer sue in US courts over international human-rights violations. The American government’s abandonment of the cause is now complete, Bloomberg Opinion columnist and Harvard Law Professor Noah Feldman says. (Source: Bloomberg)
Four Republican senators broke ranks with President Donald Trump and voted to limit his Iran war powers on Tuesday, according to CNN. The "major rebuke" from lawmakers, including GOP leaders, has directed the Trump administration to begin removing military forces in Iran, CNN reported.Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) all voted for the resolution. Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) voted against it. The final vote tally was 50-48."The measure passed the House earlier this month. But because it is what’s known as a concurrent resolution, it does not require the president’s signature and, by definition, does not carry the force of law," CNN reported.A House Democratic aide involved in the effort to pass the war powers resolution told CNN earlier this month "that they believe the measure would be binding and it would be a legal matter to work out.""This is a major rebuke of President Trump," CNN anchor Boris Sanchez said.Republicans have had increasing concerns over Iran war negotiations, said CNN anchor and chief political correspondent Manu Raju."This is the first time that this has happened," Raju explained. "The Senate and the House have passed an identical measure to limit President Trump's powers with Iran, essentially to stop the war altogether, unless Congress has a say, and if the president wanted to escalate things in Iran, he'd have to come back to Congress to get approval." The White House has not yet responded to the vote."Democrats effectively pushed this bill through the House with the support of some Republicans," Raju said. "And now we are seeing the same thing happening today on the Senate side. A sign of some concern within the GOP ranks over the way this war is being waged and a message being sent to the White House, now that both chambers of Congress are calling to limit the President's war powers with Iran."
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Tuesday that practitioners of the Falun Gong spiritual movement cannot sue tech giant Cisco over allegations of aiding the Chinese government’s surveillance and torture of the group. The conservative majority rejected the plaintiffs’ attempt to bring claims against the company and two of its then-executives under the 18th century Alien Tort Statute…