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Trump Order Triggers Mail-In Meltdown
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Trump Order Triggers Mail-In Meltdown

When the mailman starts deciding which voters count, Americans on both sides of the aisle see the deep state stepping directly between them and the ballot box. Story Snapshot Postmaster General David Steiner says the Postal Service will not deliver mail ballots for states that refuse to turn over detailed voter lists tied to President Trump’s 2026 election order.[4][5][13] A new federal rule would force states to upload every mail voter’s name, address, and ballot barcode into a national Postal Service database or see their ballots rejected at the post office counter.[1][3][7] Supporters say this protects election integrity and blocks noncitizen voting, while critics warn it is unconstitutional, creates a de facto national voter file, and will disenfranchise millions.[2][5][16][18] Both left and right see another power grab from Washington that grows federal control over elections while ordinary voters, not elites, bear the risk of chaos and lost votes.[2][5][18] What the new Postal Service rule would actually do The United States Postal Service has proposed a rule that rewrites how mail-in ballots move through the system for every federal general, special, and runoff election.[1][7] Under the plan, each state must upload to a new “Federal Ballot Mail Portal” the name, address, and unique ballot barcode for every voter who will receive a mail or absentee ballot, at least 30 days before those ballots go out.[1][3] Postal workers would then reject ballot mail that does not match this list or comes from non‑compliant states.[1] The rule stems directly from President Donald Trump’s March 31, 2026 executive order, “Ensuring Citizenship Verification and Integrity in Federal Elections,” which tells the Postmaster General to ban delivery of ballots for anyone not on a state-specific enrollment list held by the Postal Service.[13][17] The same order pushes federal agencies to build “State Citizenship Lists” from federal databases and to tighten tracking and envelope rules for all ballot mail.[15][17] Together, they shift a large share of election machinery from states into federal hands.[13][16][18] Steiner’s warning to states that refuse to share voter rolls Testifying before the Senate Homeland Security Committee, Postmaster General David Steiner was pressed on what happens if a state refuses to submit its absentee voter list to Washington.[4][5] When asked whether the Postal Service would still mail their ballots, Steiner answered, “Under our proposed regulation, no,” and said the agency would tell the state, “we need the manifest.”[4][5] In plain terms, that means no compliant list, no ballot delivery, even for otherwise eligible voters who follow their state’s rules. Steiner has tried to frame the rule as simply locking in “Kit 600” best practices that the Postal Service already shares with election officials about envelope design and tracking.[4][11] But internal briefing materials and the proposed text show something much larger: a new federal “Mail‑in and Absentee Participation List” that functions as a centralized registry of who is allowed to vote by mail in federal races.[1][3][11] Postal experts have called the plan unprecedented and warned it demands a new secure national system just months before a high‑turnout election.[5][11] Supporters’ case: election integrity and citizenship checks The Trump administration and its allies say the system is needed to ensure that only United States citizens vote in federal elections and that every mailed ballot can be tracked from printing to delivery.[5][13][17] The executive order cites the need for uniform standards on ballot envelopes and Intelligent Mail barcodes so law enforcement can compare how many ballots were mailed, how many were returned, and spot suspicious gaps.[1][3][13] Supporters argue states still decide who may vote by mail; the Postal Service simply demands clean lists and accurate data.[3][7][11] For many conservatives who watched loose pandemic rules, ballot harvesting fights, and sloppy voter rolls, a well‑tagged ballot with a secure barcode sounds like basic common sense. They see blue states resisting any citizenship check as proof that elites in those states value mail‑in turnout more than accurate lists. They also note that Washington has long set some election standards, such as military ballots and disability access, and believe stronger mail controls are just another step to protect against fraud, even if documented mail‑ballot fraud remains rare.[6][7] Opponents’ case: unconstitutional overreach and voter risk Legal and voting‑rights groups counter that there is no federal law that lets the Postal Service demand voter lists or decide whose ballots it will deliver.[2][4] Analysts at the Brennan Center argue the executive order and rule attempt to seize state and congressional power over elections by making the Postal Service the gatekeeper of who may vote by mail.[2][16] They say the Constitution’s Elections Clause reserves election rules to state legislatures, with Congress allowed to change them by law, not by presidential memo to a mail agency.[2] Democrats in the Senate warn the proposal would force eight all‑mail states and Washington, D.C. to upload data on every single registered voter into a national absentee voter database under White House control.[5][16] Senator Alex Padilla has called it an unlawful step toward a national voter eligibility list that could block tens of millions of lawful voters from voting by mail if information is missing or mismatched.[10][16] Civil liberties groups add that the order directs federal prosecutors to target local election officials who send ballots to people the federal database wrongly flags as ineligible.[16][18] Deeper stakes: growing federal control and public distrust This fight does not happen in a vacuum. Since 2016, both Republican and Democratic presidents have tested the limits of executive power over elections, and federal courts have often pushed back, saying the White House cannot rewrite election rules on its own.[2][18] Many Americans on the right see blue states using loose mail rules to tilt the field, while many on the left see Trump using federal power to scare voters away from mail ballots and build giant citizenship databases.[5][16][18] The ruling by Judge Sparkle Sooknanan (Biden appointee, born in Trinidad & Tobago) blocks the Trump administration’s specific overhaul of the federal SAVE database for states to check voter rolls for citizenship. The court found the expanded data aggregation violated privacy laws… — Grok (@grok) June 24, 2026 For citizens who already believe Washington is run for elites, the idea that a politically appointed Postmaster General can refuse to deliver valid ballots unless states feed his new portal confirms their worst suspicions. The same government that cannot balance a budget or secure the border is now demanding more data, more lists, and more power over the most basic act in a republic: putting a ballot in the mail and trusting it will be delivered.[1][5][15][18] Sources: [1] Web – Postmaster General to States Being Uppity About Voter Roll Disclosure: … [2] Web – USPS Proposes Rule Establishing New Federal Election … [3] Web – Analyzing the President’s Executive Order on Mail Voting [4] Web – US Postal Service proposes big changes for mail-in voting, including … [5] Web – Postmaster general says USPS won’t deliver mail ballots if states … [6] Web – Postal Service faces backlash over voter data rule tied to mail ballot … [7] Web – Election Mail – about.usps.com [10] Web – Vote By Mail – NCSBE.gov [11] Web – Padilla Statement on USPS’s Proposed Rule to Implement Trump’s … [13] Web – USPS mail ballot proposal could add new hurdles for voters and … [15] Web – Trump’s USPS is threatening to withhold mail ballots unless states … [16] Web – Trump’s USPS is threatening to withhold mail ballots unless states … [17] Web – Secretary of State Shenna Bellows issued the following statement in … [18] Web – White House issues Executive Order on mail-in ballot procedures …

IAEA Alarm — Iran Closes Bombed Sites
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IAEA Alarm — Iran Closes Bombed Sites

Iran’s nuclear standoff has entered a more dangerous phase, because the world still does not know what damage the war did or what Tehran may be hiding. Quick Take The International Atomic Energy Agency says Iran now needs a very strong verification system after the war to block any move toward nuclear weapons. Rafael Grossi says the new framework deal puts Iran’s nuclear activities under International Atomic Energy Agency supervision. Tehran is still disputing access to bombed sites and denies there is a clear inspection plan. Inspectors have lost continuity of knowledge about Iran’s stockpiles, which makes any deal less certain. Verification, Not Promises International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi said Friday that Iran needs a very strong verification system after the recent conflict. He said Iran’s stated intent is not enough, because the key question is whether inspectors can prove compliance in practice. Grossi said the goal of the US-Iran agreement is to make sure Iran does not develop nuclear weapons, and that this should happen as soon as practical.[1][2] That warning matters because Iran’s nuclear file has been built on a gap between declarations and proof. The International Atomic Energy Agency has said it could not access all nuclear sites after the June war, and that it no longer had continuity of knowledge over Iran’s nuclear materials. A Chatham House analysis said inspectors have still not returned to all sites, including damaged facilities, and that no clear timeline has been set.[1][6] Why the Dispute Is So Sharp Grossi pushed back against Tehran’s claim that no inspection deal exists. He said the memorandum of understanding signed by both sides says the nuclear activities will be supervised by the International Atomic Energy Agency, and he said inspections will happen. He also said the timing is less important than the fact that access must come, because without inspectors there is no real verification system.[2][4] Iran’s foreign ministry tells a different story. Spokesman Esmail Baghaei said Iran does not intend to allow inspectors to visit the damaged sites and said no procedure is in place for those visits. He also said Iran had not met with Grossi, which directly clashes with the US version of events. That split leaves the agreement sounding stronger in public than it may be on the ground.[9][11] A Broader Pattern of Weak Trust The current fight fits a long pattern in nuclear diplomacy. Verification deals often look firm on paper, but they can still fail when states restrict access, delay inspections, or fight over what the rules really mean. Historical analysis of IAEA safeguards shows that the agency depends heavily on state declarations, which means trust and access remain central even when the technical tools are strong.[16][17][19] That is why this dispute has drawn attention far beyond Iran. If inspectors cannot confirm the condition of uranium stockpiles, damaged sites, and centrifuge cascades, then no one can say with confidence what Iran can do next. Arms control analysts say the agency has already lost key knowledge about Iran’s program, and that future monitoring must rebuild that baseline before any real limits can be trusted.[6][8][13] The politics around the deal also reflect a bigger public mood. Many Americans, on both the right and left, are tired of hearing that major problems are “handled” while the facts remain murky. This case shows why. A war has damaged nuclear sites, both sides are talking past each other, and the agency meant to provide answers still lacks full access. In that setting, verification is not a side issue. It is the whole story.[1][2][6] Sources: [1] Web – ‘Very strong’ nuclear verification needed in Iran after war: IAEA head [2] Web – The IAEA and Iran reached an agreement on inspections [4] YouTube – IAEA To Inspect Iran’s Bombed Nuclear Sites? Chief Rafael Grossi … [6] Web – IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi says inspections of Iran’s … [8] Web – Monitoring and Verification in Iran | IAEA [9] Web – IAEA and Iran: Chronology of Key Events [11] Web – The Iran Nuclear Deal: What’s Wrong With It And What Can We Do … [13] Web – Criticism of the Iran nuclear deal – Wikipedia [16] Web – Iran rejects US demand for inspection of military sites [17] Web – Negotiating Verification: International Diplomacy and the Evolution … [19] Web – [PDF] coming-to-terms-with-security-a-handbook-on-verification … – …

Congress Buries Critics With A Steel Box
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Congress Buries Critics With A Steel Box

As Washington buries a 250‑year time capsule in Philadelphia, many Americans wonder whether this “gift to the future” says more about our leaders’ image-making today than real problem‑solving for people struggling right now. Story Snapshot Congress and a national commission are burying an official America250 time capsule at Independence National Historical Park on July 4, 2026, to be opened in 2276. The capsule is mandated in the founding law that created the America250 commission and is framed as a unifying, nonpartisan project representing all states and branches of government. Leaders highlight hope, history, and “a gift to future Americans,” while offering almost no public discussion about costs, priorities, or how this helps citizens facing today’s economic and social crises. The carefully bipartisan rollout, with no visible opposition, raises questions for both conservatives and liberals about how symbolism can mask deeper government failure and elite self‑preservation. What exactly is America’s 250th time capsule? On July 4, 2026, a large national time capsule called “America’s Time Capsule” is set to be buried at Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia and remain sealed until the year 2276.[4] The project comes from America250, the national, nonpartisan commission that Congress created to plan the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.[5] According to the commission, the capsule is the official national time capsule for the semiquincentennial and is meant to preserve “a snapshot” of the United States at 250 years.[4] Congress passed a concurrent resolution allowing the use of Emancipation Hall in the Capitol Visitor Center for a dedication ceremony of the Congressional America250 Time Capsule earlier in June.[1] That ceremony in Washington, D.C., highlighted the congressional role in the project, while the actual burial will happen in Philadelphia on Independence Day.[4] This split between Capitol Hill celebration and Philadelphia burial shows how tightly choreographed and symbolic the entire effort has become, with cameras and messaging in mind at every step. Who is involved, and what is going into the capsule? America250 says the capsule includes contributions from all three branches of the federal government, all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and the five United States territories.[2] The collection contains letters, artifacts, records, and objects meant to tell the story of the country during the 250th year.[2] Leaders describe it as including institutional history, key legislative milestones, cultural artifacts, and a message from the current 119th Congress to the 244th Congress that will serve 250 years from now.[1] The project has become a showcase for broad institutional participation. The commission notes that the capsule was developed through years of work with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Library of Congress, the National Park Service, and other partners.[4] One press release explains that the capsule’s mandate comes directly from the founding public law that created America250, making it an official, congressionally required national artifact rather than just a feel‑good side project.[2] In other words, Washington did not just allow this; it ordered it. How did this become an official federal mandate? A 2016 law created the America250 commission and required that a time capsule be buried in Philadelphia on July 4, 2026, and opened in 2276.[6] A television report on the project states that Congress’s 2016 mandate clearly ordered a time capsule at Independence National Historical Park to be interred on Independence Day and unearthed for the nation’s 500th birthday.[7] This means the current ceremonies and media push are not simply choices by today’s leaders; they are the long‑delayed fulfillment of a decision made a decade ago by an earlier Congress. At the same time, later legislation such as the Semiquincentennial Congressional Time Capsule Act helped spell out the congressional side of the project, including direction for the Architect of the Capitol and a message to a future Congress.[10] Together, these actions lock in the time capsule as a government‑backed mission. For many Americans on both the right and the left, this raises familiar questions: when Washington decides something years in advance, can voters still have any real say, or does the political class simply move from one scripted pageant to the next? Why this feels inspiring to some, troubling to others Supporters frame the capsule as a rare moment of unity. The America250 commission calls itself bipartisan and says the project represents “the full federation of states and territories,” with contributions from across government and civil society.[2] News coverage stresses that the time capsule was mandated by a nonpartisan commission and is meant as a gift to future Americans, not a win for one party over the other.[6] At a time of deep division, many citizens welcome any sign that leaders can stand together, even just for a symbolic act. Courts are marking America’s 250th anniversary in creative ways. At the Otoe County Courthouse in Nebraska, students, court leaders, and community members gathered for a time capsule dedication. The capsule will be opened in 50 years. #America250 #StateCourts #CivicEngagement pic.twitter.com/NlV0oLkgkH — National Center for State Courts (@StateCourts) June 22, 2026 Yet the same details that make the project look unifying also set off alarms for people who feel shut out by the political class. The capsule is tightly controlled by a congressionally created body, filled with items chosen by national institutions, and presented by high‑ranking leaders from both parties.[2] There is no visible record of serious debate, dissent, or public input about what should go inside or whether this is a good use of time and money.[6] For Americans who believe a distant elite runs the government for itself, it can look like the system literally sealing its own story into the ground while everyday problems go unsolved. What this reveals about power, memory, and the future The time capsule tells us as much about who has power now as it does about what future Americans will find. Congress and a congressionally chartered commission decide what counts as the “real” story of the United States at 250 years.[2] The objects, letters, and data they choose will shape how people in 2276 remember this era. That is a serious responsibility, especially when many citizens today feel their voices and struggles rarely make it into any official record at all. For conservatives frustrated by globalism, high energy costs, and government overreach, and for liberals angry about inequality, deportations, and stalled social progress, the capsule can feel like another polished ceremony that avoids hard truths. It celebrates institutions that many believe are failing them. Still, there is a deeper question that both sides share: will the people running America today give future generations more than a steel box of artifacts—will they leave behind a country where hard work and initiative can once again lead to a real American Dream? Sources: [1] Web – A Bridge To The Future: America’s 250th Celebration Time Capsule [2] Web – House Passes Rep. Salazar Resolution Advancing Congressional … [4] Web – America’s Time Capsule Dedication – America250 [5] Web – Time Capsule Dedication – America250 [6] Web – WATCH: Congress dedicates national time capsule ahead of … – PBS [7] Web – A 2016 law creating the nonpartisan America250 commission … [10] Web – America250

Drone Barrage Upends Crimea’s Backbone
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Drone Barrage Upends Crimea’s Backbone

Crimea has moved from a rear-area stronghold to a place where fuel, transport, and basic order are breaking down fast. Quick Take Russian-installed authorities in Crimea declared an emergency after heavy Ukrainian drone strikes and fires at key fuel sites[18]. Crimean officials suspended civilian fuel sales, saying supplies were being held for state and emergency services[22]. Ukrainian officials have framed the campaign as a “Logistics Lockdown” aimed at Russian supply routes into Crimea[1][6]. Independent reporting says the strikes hit oil depots, ferry links, air defenses, and other transport nodes around the Kerch Strait[24][25]. Fuel Crisis Hits the Peninsula Russian-installed leader Sergey Aksyonov declared a state of emergency in Crimea and Sevastopol after the latest wave of attacks. That move followed reports of fires, power problems, and a deepening fuel shortage across the peninsula[18]. NBC News reported that civilian gasoline sales were halted, with fuel reserved only for government users, while Aksyonov said the strikes left four people dead and 28 injured[22]. The fuel restrictions are the clearest sign that the attacks are no longer just a battlefield nuisance. They are now shaping daily life for people under Russian control. Reporting from multiple outlets says gas stations were shut to civilians, traffic moved slowly on key routes, and the Kerch Strait crossing came under pressure as ferry service and truck movement were disrupted[23][24][25]. Ukraine’s Strategy Is About Isolation Ukraine’s Defense Ministry and public messaging have described the effort as “Logistics Lockdown,” a campaign meant to cut the Russian military’s supply lines into and across Crimea[1][6]. The stated goal is to reduce the movement of fuel, vehicles, weapons, and personnel that support Russian forces in southern Ukraine[3][25]. Ukrainian-linked reports say the strikes have also hit air defense systems and transport nodes around Kerch[9][25]. That framing matters because it shapes how the strikes are judged outside the war zone. Ukraine says it is hitting military logistics. Russian-installed authorities say civilians are bearing the pain through shortages, outages, and emergency controls[18][22]. The gap between those claims is the core dispute. Public sources reviewed here do not show independent proof that the targeted fuel sites were used only by civilians or only by the military[17][18]. Why Crimea Matters Now Crimea has long served as a key support base for Russia’s war effort in southern Ukraine. The Kerch Strait bridge, ferry links, oil depots, and road routes all help keep that system running. When those links come under attack, the impact spreads fast. Reports from this week say the peninsula’s fuel system has been pushed into emergency mode, with civilian sales stopped and supply lines narrowed to the most vulnerable routes[24][25]. The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) has reportedly struck three Russian military vessels and air defence systems in occupied Kerch. According to the SBU, drones from its Alpha Special Operations Center targeted the Project 15310 cable-laying ships Volga and Vyatka, along with… pic.twitter.com/C9d1DRaXBr — Shaun Pinner (@ShaunPinnerUA) June 26, 2026 The broader lesson is simple. Wars now turn on logistics as much as front lines. In Crimea, that reality is visible at gas pumps, on bridges, and in emergency decrees. Supporters of Ukraine see a pressure campaign aimed at a military rear area. Critics see civilian harm and growing instability. Either way, the peninsula is showing how quickly a contested supply network can become a political and economic crisis[18][22][25]. Sources: [1] Web – Crimea declares ’emergency’ amid Ukraine attacks [3] Web – Ukraine announced the launch of a “logistics lockdown” strategy … [6] Web – Ukraine to intensify middle strike drone campaign as Fedorov … [9] Web – Ukraine has launched a programme called “Logistics Lockdown … [17] Web – ‘Island surrounded by war’: Crimeans panic amid Ukrainian attacks [18] Web – Ukraine is slowly but steadily weakening Russia’s grip on Crimea [22] Web – Crimea Without Fuel: The Logistics Lockdown Delivers Results After … [23] Web – Ukraine’s strikes in Crimea: From disruption to real impact – DW News [24] Web – Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure – Wikipedia [25] Web – Chaos has erupted in occupied Crimea after Ukrainian strikes …

Congress Revolts: Trump’s Iran Moves Checked
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Congress Revolts: Trump’s Iran Moves Checked

Congress just gave President Trump a rare wartime rebuke, but the fight over Iran is far from over. Quick Take The Senate passed a war powers resolution on Iran by a 50-48 vote, with four Republicans joining Democrats.[1] The measure tells the president to remove U.S. forces from hostilities unless Congress declares war or gives clear approval.[1] The House had already passed a similar resolution, making this the first time both chambers have approved such a move on Iran.[1][4] The resolution is concurrent, so it does not carry the force of law and is mainly symbolic.[1] Senate Rebuke Over Iran The Senate voted Tuesday to approve a House-passed war powers resolution aimed at limiting Trump’s military action against Iran.[1] The vote marked a rare break from party lines, with Senators Susan Collins, Bill Cassidy, Lisa Murkowski, and Rand Paul siding with most Democrats.[1] Senator John Fetterman was the lone Democrat to vote no.[1] The resolution says the president must pull U.S. forces out of hostilities unless Congress declares war or gives specific military authorization.[1] That language leans on the War Powers Resolution of 1973, which was meant to restrain unilateral war-making and force Congress back into the decision.[17][21] Supporters say the law gives lawmakers a real role when troops are sent into conflict without clear approval.[18][21] Why Conservatives Should Care For many conservatives, this fight is not just about Iran. It is about whether any president can ignore Congress on war and then expect lawmakers to stay silent.[18][21] The Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, and the War Powers Resolution was built to enforce that split of power.[16][17] If that line keeps fading, the next president will inherit even more unchecked power. The White House has rejected the effort and called the War Powers Act unconstitutional.[11] That puts the administration on a direct collision course with Congress over the limits of executive power. The resolution also lacks binding force because it is a concurrent resolution, not a joint resolution signed into law.[1] That means the vote sends a strong political message, but it does not stop Trump by itself.[1][9] What Happens Next The House already passed a similar measure, and that is what made this Senate vote stand out.[4][8] Reporters noted that this was the first time both chambers had approved a war powers rebuke tied to Iran.[1] Still, the path forward is uncertain because the measure does not become law in its current form, and the president is not required to sign it.[1][9] The U.S. Senate on Tuesday approved a war powers resolution passed earlier by the House, rebuking President Donald Trump over the war against Iran. https://t.co/6ey2ZZ8uGt — Scripps News (@scrippsnews) June 24, 2026 Tim Kaine has been pushing the issue for months and filed a war powers resolution to force a new vote on military action in Iran.[2] The dispute now turns on a simple question that matters to every voter who wants limits on government power: does Congress still control war, or has that power drifted into the Oval Office for good?[17][18] Sources: [1] Web – Senate votes to limit Trump’s Iran war powers in rare rebuke… [2] Web – Congress passes war powers measure for first time, rebuking … – BBC [4] Web – Senate rejects latest resolution to limit Trump’s Iran war powers [8] YouTube – Iran war powers resolution fails in the US Senate [9] Web – House Passes War Powers Resolution To Limit Trump’s … – i24 News [11] YouTube – House votes to limit Trump’s war powers amid Iran conflict [16] Web – House votes to block Trump from ordering more strikes on Iran [17] Web – War Powers Resolution – Avalon Project [18] Web – War Powers Resolution of 1973 | Richard Nixon Museum and Library [21] Web – Then and Now: The War Powers Resolution (1973) and War Powers …