(00:00:00) 23 Cases Left: SCOTUS Endgame, Fed's New Chair & Walz Fraud Report
(00:00:38) H-1B Visa Fee Blocked
(00:01:23) Biden Energy Rules Vacated
(00:01:53) Walz Fraud Report Released
(00:02:38) Kevin Warsh's First Fed Meeting
The Supreme Court is heading into its most consequential final stretch in years, with 23 cases still unresolved before the end of June. This episode breaks down what's at stake: birthright citizenship, transgender sports bans, mail-in ballot rules, and — most significantly — the independent agency case that could give any sitting president the power to fire Federal Reserve governors at will, overturning nine decades of legal precedent.
Also this week: a federal judge in Boston blocked a $100,000 H-1B visa application fee, ruling it crossed the constitutional line from executive fee-setting into congressional tax authority. The administration plans to appeal, and a circuit-court split is already forming. Separately, the Supreme Court vacated a lower-court decision upholding Biden-era energy efficiency standards for furnaces and water heaters — sending the case back to the DC district court with a clear directional signal.
On Capitol Hill, the House Oversight Committee released a 205-page report alleging that Minnesota officials under Governor Tim Walz ignored repeated fraud warnings in state social services programs — including $300 million in nutrition fund losses and up to $9 billion in potential Medicaid fraud tied to the Feeding Our Future scandal.
Finally, the Federal Reserve holds its June meeting under new chair Kevin Warsh. Two-year Treasury yields have hit 4.15% — the highest in over a year — as bond markets price in possible rate hikes by October. Warsh's actual policy posture remains unconfirmed, and the gap between Fed language and market expectations is this week's central tension.
Factual, structured, no spin. Everything that moved US politics in the past 24 hours.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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