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Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios

5 big things

1.Birthright citizenship decision gives advocates short-lived sigh of relief

  • Avery Lotz
The Fed's independence is still on the line
2.The Fed's independence is still on the line
SCOTUS rejects Trump's birthright citizenship policy
3.SCOTUS rejects Trump's birthright citizenship policy
Supreme Court lets states ban trans girls from girls' sports
4.Supreme Court lets states ban trans girls from girls' sports
Rep. Kean discloses depression diagnosis upon return to Congress
5.Rep. Kean discloses depression diagnosis upon return to Congress
    • Amy Harder
    50 mins ago
    -
    Energy & Climate
    Google's AI boom sends emissions, power use soaring
    Bright blue sky over a desert data center in Arizona with several palm trees; a brown perforated wall and a colorful Google sign sit at ground level.

    Google's data center in Mesa, Arizona in June 2026. It's powered by 86% clean electricity, the company shared Tuesday. Photo: Amy Harder/Axios

    Google's electricity, water use and greenhouse gas emissions all climbed to record levels last year as the company raced to build more AI infrastructure.

    Why it matters: Google has invested more aggressively than perhaps any other tech company in clean energy, yet its environmental report released Tuesday shows how difficult it has become to keep climate goals on track amid the AI buildout.

    Go deeper (1 min. read)
    • Andrew Pantazi
    Updated 1 hour ago
    -
    Politics & Policy
    Supreme Court strikes down party spending limits
    Campaign stickers for Michael Whatley's U.S. Senate bid are displayed next to an "Honoring God With My Vote" flyer at a North Carolina election night event.

    "Whatley U.S. Senate" stickers sit at a North Carolina primary election event for Republican Senate candidate Michael Whatley in Charlotte, North Carolina, on March 3. Photo: Cornell Watson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    The Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down federal limits on how much political parties may spend in coordination with candidates, handing party committees a major win and reshaping campaign-finance rules ahead of the midterms.

    Why it matters: Freed from the caps, party committees can now spend without limit alongside their candidates — making them a far more powerful magnet for the big-dollar money that's flooded into super PACs over the past 15 years.

    Go deeper (1 min. read)
    • Avery Lotz
    3 hours ago
    -
    Politics & Policy
    GOP reboots the Red Scare as young Democrats embrace socialism
    Photo illustration of President Donald Trump being squeezed between quotation marks.

    Photo illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

    70 years after the Red Scare and 35 years after the fall of the Soviet Union, President Trump and Republicans are trying to re-introduce a national fear of "godless communists" ahead of the critical midterms.

    Why it matters: A wave of resounding victories by Democratic Socialists has the GOP trotting out a message that last worked when most of those candidates weren't even born.

    Go deeper (2 min. read)

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