Building Backstops: Hawaii Takes On Citizens United
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
This week Hawaii became the first state in the country to bar corporations from spending money to influence elections — a law its own sponsors wrote as a direct challenge to the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision. Governor Josh Green signed it; it takes effect in July 2027, and the state expects a court fight. That set the texture for the whole week: state legislatures building backstops — the catch that stops a harm from getting through when the bigger system won't.
In the same seven days, Delaware advanced its own John Lewis Voting Rights Act (HB444, 29-11 in one chamber), Vermont became the 23rd state with a comprehensive consumer privacy law as Governor Phil Scott reversed his own prior veto (S71, passed 129-3 / 29-0), Virginia gave mobile-home-park residents first claim on the land under their homes (HB375), and Maryland cleared the way for more than 7,000 homes near transit, overriding local zoning (HB894, 100-32 / 42-4, signed by Governor Wes Moore). Three states moved to widen what insurance has to cover: Michigan passed needle-free epinephrine in schools 103-0 (HB5054), Massachusetts weighed cleft-palate coverage past age 18 (H5477), and New Jersey took up Medicaid fertility coverage (A1207). Plus a lightning round: Pennsylvania crypto-ATM licensing (HB2643), Illinois NICU leave now in effect (HB2978), California's AI-altered-listing disclosure (AB2025), and a Massachusetts crumbling-foundations fund (S3091).
A week of backstops — fifty laboratories, each deciding what it won't let get past. Follow every bill at amendment.app.
The Tenth is produced with AI-generated hosts working from human-edited, fact-checked briefings; every bill, vote, and quote is real and sourced.
Bills in this episode:
- Hawaii corporate election-spending ban (SB2471)
- Delaware John Lewis Voting Rights Act (HB444)
- Vermont consumer privacy law (S71)
- Virginia mobile-home-park right of first refusal (HB375)
- Maryland Transit and Housing Opportunity Act (HB894)
- Michigan needle-free epinephrine in schools (HB5054)
- Massachusetts cleft-palate coverage (H5477)
- New Jersey Medicaid fertility coverage (A1207)
- Pennsylvania crypto-ATM licensing (HB2643)
- Illinois Family Neonatal Intensive Care Leave Act (HB2978)
- California altered-listing-photo disclosure (AB2025)
- Massachusetts crumbling-foundations fund (S3091)