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Supreme Court allows Alabama to use 2023 congressional map in August special primary

The U.S. Supreme Court as seen on April 9, 2026. The Supreme Court on Tuesday evening allowed Alabama to use a 2023 congressional map that was previously ruled racially discriminatory, blocking a lower court's ruling, in an August special primary. (Photo by Ashley Murray/States Newsroom) The U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday evening allowed Alabama to use a 2023 congressional map, reversing a lower court’s ruling that repeatedly deemed the map racially discriminatory. In an unsigned 6-3 decision on the case known as Allen v. Milligan, the court wrote that the lower court’s map would not be “more convenient” for Alabama than the congressional map the Legislature passed in 2023.   “Here, the District Court interposed itself into Alabama’s ongoing efforts to conduct its imminent 2026 congressional elections under maps that its elected representatives selected,” the justices wrote. “While federal courts should not impose changes close to an election, states are free to decide for themselves...
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Black midwives are suing Southern states, claiming regulations make it harder to help patients

Tamara Taitt, the executive director of the Atlanta Birth Center and a plaintiff in a lawsuit against Georgia’s midwifery restrictions, speaks at a news conference outside the state Capitol in Atlanta on April 2, 2026. Midwives are suing the state over a law that requires them to have collaborative practice agreements with physicians, a regulation that they say limits their scope of care. (Photo by Maya Homan/Georgia Recorder) Black midwives in the South, a region rife with racial disparities in maternal health access and maternal mortality, are leading lawsuits over state regulations that they say limit their ability to provide care. Women behind the litigation say midwives can help improve birthing outcomes in Southern states, where maternal mortality rates are higher than the overall U.S. rate, and treat low-risk pregnancies in rural and underserved areas. They turned to the courts, they said, after legislative attempts to widen their scope of practice stalled. The lawsuits were f...

Tuberville submits income tax returns, expert says it’s not enough to prove residency

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, the Republican nominee for governor, speaks to reporters after voting in Auburn, Alabama on May 19, 2026. Tuberville on Monday submitted Alabama income tax returns from 2018 to 2024 to defend his residency, but an expert said they are not enough on their own to prove the nominee has met the Alabama Constitution's seven year residency requirement. (Anna Barrett/Alabama Reflector) U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville submitted partially redacted income tax records on Monday evening from 2018 to 2024 to prove that he meets the Alabama Constitution’s residency requirement for governor. The Alabama Republican Party (ALGOP) announced Monday that it will hear Ken McFeeters’ third challenge of Tuberville’s residency , who won the Republican nomination for governor on May 19. McFeeters, who got second place in the primary, would become the party’s nominee if the challenge finds that Tuberville has not the eligibility requirement to be a candidate for that office. The Al...

Year-over-year homelessness declines

A volunteer records details about a person experiencing homelessness in Salt Lake City on Jan. 30, 2026. There was a slight year-over-year decline in homelessness between 2024 and 2025, according to new federal data. (Photo by Aline Walker for the Utah News Dispatch) There were fewer homeless people in the United States on a single night in January 2025 than in January 2024, but homelessness increased in 28 states, according to the latest federal count. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development counted 745,652 homeless people in its latest “point-in-time” estimate , down 3% from the year before. The count was conducted before the Trump administration late last year announced a shift away from long-term housing in favor of funding transitional housing with work and addiction treatment requirements. HUD said the decrease was driven largely by a 4% decline in the number of people in emergency shelter. The number of unsheltered homeless people fell by 3%. In releasing the n...

Trump’s $1.77 billion ‘slush fund’ may be on the way out after GOP objections

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks from the Cross Hall of the White House on April 1, 2026 in Washington, D.C.  (Photo by Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images) WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s nearly $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund appeared to be on shaky ground Monday as he continued to face opposition from his own party. Trump had not yet made a public announcement by late afternoon, but several media outlets reported the president planned to possibly drop the fund to clear the way for Senate Republicans to advance a $72 billion immigration enforcement funding package. Politico  reported White House officials communicated the decision Monday to Republicans on Capitol Hill, according to two unnamed sources. Trump’s fund has sparked resistance from both parties as concerns mounted that Jan. 6, 2021, riot defendants who assaulted police officers could conceivably get reparations by claiming the law was “weaponized” against them for political purposes.  A slew of  lawsuits ...

Measles, whooping cough spike amid low vaccination rates

A University of Utah clinic in Salt Lake City displays a sign warning about measles last year.  Utah is among the states that already has more measles cases in 2026 than in all of 2025, when cases reached the highest annual level since 1991. (Photo by McKenzie Romero/Utah News Dispatch) Vaccine hesitancy fed by misinformation is causing new surges of measles and whooping cough, while COVID-19 hotspots persist in some states and a new threat looms from an Ebola outbreak in central Africa.   Nationally there have been 1,983 measles cases this year, nearly the 2,288 total for all of 2025, which in itself was the worst year since 1991, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Friday.   Halfway through the year, 12 states and the District of Columbia already have more measles cases than they did for a full year in 2025. That’s true for South Carolina and Utah, where cases are already more than double last year, and also for states such as Florida, which has 139 cas...

Some trans military members banned by Trump allowed to continue service under ruling

The E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse in Washington, D.C., home of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, on July 14, 2025. (Photo by Jacob Fischler/States Newsroom) WASHINGTON — Transgender military members won a temporary victory against the Trump administration in federal appeals court Monday when two judges ruled a policy banning them from service violated their constitutional right to equal protection under the law. Judges Judith W. Rogers and Robert L. Wilkins for the U.S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia upheld a lower court ruling allowing those plaintiffs involved in the case to continue their service. The decision is a preliminary injunction, meaning the case will continue to play out in court. The policy, issued by President Donald Trump in an executive order in January 2025 and carried out by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, “appears to be driven by the bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group: persons who identify as transgender,”...