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Alaska News

Federal ‘SAVE Act’ risks denying thousands of Alaskans the ability to vote, Murkowski says

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, speaks Thursday, March 19, 2026, on the floor of the U.S. Senate, in this screenshot of a video broadcast by the Senate. (Screenshot)

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, speaks Thursday, March 19, 2026, on the floor of the U.S. Senate, in this screenshot of a video broadcast by the Senate. (Screenshot)

An elections bill being debated by the U.S. Senate could cost thousands of Alaskans the ability to vote in this year’s elections, Sen. Lisa Murkowski said Thursday in a lengthy speech on Capitol Hill.

The SAVE America Act, supported by President Donald Trump and most congressional Republicans, is ostensibly intended to prevent noncitizens from voting in American elections, but its implementation could prevent many Americans from being able to vote. 

“While disenfranchisement may not be the intent of the SAVE America Act … I think that we will see that. In fact, I fully expect it to be an outcome of this,” Murkowski said.

The act would require that voters present photo ID when they vote, and that people present documentary proof of citizenship when they register to vote. That would mean presenting proof of citizenship in person at an elections office or other specially licensed state license.

“This would be a major, major departure from how most Alaskans currently register to vote,” Murkowski said. 

In 2024, about 29,000 Alaskans registered to vote. Most of those — 25,000 or so — would have run into problems if the current bill had been law at that time, she said.

Most of Alaska’s voter registrations are done online or through the state’s motor-voter or PFD voter process. The bill could allow citizenship verification, but it’s not clear how that would happen, Murkowski.

Mandating in-person registration would have big effects in Alaska. 

The state has only six in-person elections offices, mostly on the Railbelt, and fewer than a dozen DMV offices where residents could present proof of citizenship. 

Some other state agencies might also be able to accept that proof, but the bill’s requirements take effect immediately, and it contains no funding for states to make changes that would allow remote offices to verify ID.

In practice, that means the bill would require rural residents to fly to urban Alaska, Murkowski said.

In addition, anyone seeking to register would have to have either a passport — roughly 50% of Alaskans don’t have one, Murkowski said — or some other form of appropriate ID. 

Alaska driver’s licenses wouldn’t be good enough to register to vote, nor would most tribal IDs, because they don’t specifically label someone as a citizen or not.

The bill allows someone to self-certify their citizenship if they sign an affidavit, but that clause only applies if the person has already made “reasonable efforts” to obtain a copy of a valid ID.

It isn’t clear what that means, Murkowski said.

The bill also would end Alaska’s practice of allowing anyone to cast an absentee ballot for any reason. It would restrict absentee voting to a subset of specifically identified voters, including people living out of the state where they are registered to vote.

Murkowski said she hasn’t seen evidence that these kinds of measures are needed to address a small-scale problem.

Voting by noncitizens is rare in Alaska. A report obtained by the Alaska Beacon through a public records request showed 70 possible cases since 2015. At least 11 people on that list have been charged in state court. 

“That’s basically seven a year,” Murkowski said.

“You look at what we’re trying to chase here with this balance — with disenfranchising so many who would be faced with almost insurmountable challenges in order to register or vote — I look at this and on balance, it doesn’t weigh,” she said.

Earlier this year, Rep. Nick Begich III, R-Alaska, voted in support of the bill as it passed out of the House, saying afterward that he doesn’t think it will be hard to comply with the bill.

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, has said he supports the act despite its ramifications for the state.

“I do think that having the ability to show an ID and proof of citizenship to keep elections safe is important, and it’s supported by the vast majority of Americans,” he said in response to a question during a February forum hosted by the Juneau Chamber of Commerce.

At that forum, he was confronted by an angry attendee who questioned how he could speak on Elizabeth Peratrovich Day, a state holiday honoring an Alaska Native civil rights leader, and support a bill that would have detrimental effects on Alaska Native voters.

“I have a very, very, very strong record as it relates to the franchise for our people, in particular, the Alaska Native community,” he said, referring to actions he took during the 2010 Alaska election, when he served as attorney general. 

“I think voting, in my view, should be easy, but cheating on voting should not be,” Sullivan said.

While Sullivan has said he supports the bill, he also told reporters last month that he doesn’t support overriding the Senate’s filibuster to pass it.

In practice, the filibuster means that the bill would require 60 votes, not 50 and the vice president, to advance through the Senate.

With all of the Senate’s Democrats and Murkowski opposed to the SAVE Act, the bill — at least as of Friday — lacks the support it needs to become law.

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Health

Side-By-Side Pics Of Media Personalities Who Have Confirmed Ozempic Or GLP-1 Use

When your job involves facing the camera daily, there’s pressure to stay slim. These news media celebrities have been open about how GLP-1s have helped them.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Food

Add This Canned Soup To Broccoli For A Quick Side

Depending on how broccoli’s cooked, it can be either bland or utterly pungent – but pouring some of this canned soup on it makes it taste absolutely fantastic.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

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Entertainment

Did Chappell Roan’s Security Guard Bully Jude Law’s Daughter? Soccer Player …

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Over the weekend, Jude Law’s ex’s husband created quite a stir.

The man, a soccer player, claimed that Chappell Roan’s security guard had bullied his 11-year-old stepdaughter.

Chappell has pushed back at the claim, saying that she didn’t know anything about the girl or send some goon to bother anyone.

The story has created a rift on social media, revealing gaps in people’s celebrity knowledge — except that everyone knows who Jude Law is.

Chappell Roan on Call Her Daddy.
On the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast, Chappell Roan discusses performing at different events. (Image Credit: YouTube)

What happened at that Sao Paulo hotel?

Jorge Luiz Frello Filho, known professionally as Jorginho, is a soccer player from Brazil.

(It is our understanding that he plays for a team based in Italy, which we’re told is pretty normal for soccer players.)

According to Jorginho, he and his 11-year-old stepdaughter, Ada, were staying at the Palácio Tangará in Sao Paulo with his wife, Catherine Harding.

Harding shares Ada with her ex, Jude Law.

Another guest at the hotel, Jorginho wrote in an Instagram post, was Chappell Roan.

A screenshot of Jorginho's Instagram Story post about Chappell Roan.
Taking to his Instagram Story, a soccer player known professionally as Jorginho described an alleged unfriendly encounter at a Sao Paulo hotel. (Image Credit: Instagram)

“By coincidence, they’re staying at the same hotel as this artist,” Jorginho wrote. “During breakfast, the artist walked past their table.”

He continued: “My daughter, like any child, recognized her, got excited, and just wanted to make sure it was really her.”

Jorginho’s account continued: “And the worst part is she didn’t even approach her.”

He described: “She simply walked past the singer’s table, looked to confirm it was her, smiled, and went back to sit with her mum. She didn’t say anything, didn’t ask for anything.”

However, Jorginho then alleged a disproportionate reaction from “a large security guard” who confronted them at their table, lecturing Harding and Ada, framing the tween’s actions as disrespectful or harassment.

Jude Law on The Late Show.
Actor Jude Law chats on ‘The Late Show.’ (Image Credit: CBS)

Who’s at fault for this?

“Honestly, I don’t know at what point simply walking past a table and looking to see if someone is there can be considered harassment,” Jorginho marveled. 

He claimed that the guard “even said he would file a complaint against them with the hotel, while my 11-year-old daughter was sitting there in tears.”

Jorginho described: “My daughter was extremely shaken and cried a lot.”

That sounds like a terrible experience for anyone, particularly an 11-year-old.

And while it’s hard to see how exactly this could conceivably be Chappell Roan’s fault, if it happened as described, she received backlash — to the point where the mayor of Rio de Janeiro declared that she’s banned from performing at the Todo Mundo no Rio music festival. Okay.

Chappell Roan’s response to Jude Law’s ex’s husband’s claims.

[image or embed]

— fanana hammock (@fananahammock.bsky.social) March 23, 2026 at 8:49 AM

On Sunday, March 22, Chappell Roan took to her own Instagram Story to issue a public response.

“I didn’t even see a woman and a child. No one came up to me,” she clarified from her hotel room. “No one bothered me.”

She added: “Like, I was just sitting at breakfast in my hotel. I think these people were staying at the hotel, as well.”

Chappell’s post not only clarifies how she didn’t ask for this, but also emphasizes that Ada didn’t do anything wrong, either.

“I did not ask the security guard to go up and talk to this mother and child,” she emphasized. “They did not come up to me. They weren’t doing anything.”

'Call Her Daddy' guest Chappell Roan
On the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast, Chappell Roan discusses the major downsides of fame. (Image Credit: YouTube)

What’s the big takeaway here?

For all of the many faults of America’s Next Top Model, it did give us an iconic piece of wisdom.

Natasha offered this sage reminder: “I just want to tell you that some people have war in their countries.”

Obviously, there are many problems in this world that are not as bad as war but still worth addressing. That doesn’t mean that we, as a society, do not need to gain a bit of perspective.

We’re sorry that Ada had a bad encounter with a security guard who was presumably in someone’s employ. But that is and should be where that ends.

The ban from a music festival, real or not, is absurd. There’s no evidence that Chappell did anything wrong. Please be serious.

Did Chappell Roan’s Security Guard Bully Jude Law’s Daughter? Soccer Player … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Jessi Pierce: NHL Reporter and 3 Children Killed In House Fire

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have tragic news to report out of Minnesota today.

NHL reporter Jessi Pierce and her three young children were killed in a house fire in Minnesota’s White Bear Lake over the weekend.

Just one day earlier, she shared photos of a simple, happy outing with her kids — images that have since taken on heartbreaking new meaning.

NHL Jessi Pierce has been killed in a house fire alongside her three children.
NHL Jessi Pierce has been killed in a house fire alongside her three children. (YouTube)

On Friday, Pierce posted photos from a trip to a local ice cream stand with her children — Hudson, Cayden, and Avery.

In the images, the kids can be seen smiling and enjoying treats after waiting in line, capturing what appeared to be a routine family outing.

“Bag(s) secured,” she captioned the post.

Those photos would be her final social media update. Less than 24 hours later, tragedy struck.

Authorities say Pierce and her three children were found dead after a fire engulfed their home early Saturday morning. A family dog was also killed in the blaze.

Fire crews responded to the scene before dawn, but the structure was already fully ablaze by the time they arrived.

NHL reporter Jessi Pierce has been killed in a tragic house fire.
NHL reporter Jessi Pierce has been killed in a tragic house fire. (YouTube)

“The entire National Hockey League family sends our prayers and deepest condolences to the Pierce family on the passing of Jessi Pierce and her three young children,” the NHL said in a statement (per Page Six).

“Jessi loved our game and was a valued member of the NHL.com team for a decade. We will miss her terribly.”

“Jessi Pierce (Hinrichs) was the most vibrant person – the life of the party, always with a smile on her face, always bringing a passion to every article and podcast and interview she did,” wrote fellow Minnesota Wild journalist Michael Russo, adding:

“Jessi simply loved covering the Wild and hockey throughout Minnesota and had a way of brightening everyone’s day with her upbeat, bubbly personality. I have literally NEVER met anybody that had a way of being EVERYBODY’s friend.”

“From a [Minnesota Wild] practice in the morning to enjoying ice cream with her kids in the afternoon, if there is any solace in this tragedy, it’s that Jessi’s last day was spent doing the things she loved most—covering hockey and being a mom,” added Minnesota Wild Broadcast Engineer Zach Halverson wrote.

“The rink will never be the same without her smile, her humor, and her passion for the game. There was never a moment that wasn’t made better by her presence,” Minnesota Wild Broadcast Engineer Zach Halverson wrote.

For those who knew her well — and even those who only followed her work — the images from that final outing now stand as a painful reminder of how quickly everything can change.

Pierce is survived by her husband, Mike. Our thoughts go out to her loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.

Jessi Pierce: NHL Reporter and 3 Children Killed In House Fire was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Sports Fox

2026 NFL Draft: Inside Adidas Rookie Pro Day with Fernando Mendoza, Other Top Prospects

PORTLAND, Ore. — At Adidas’ North American Headquarters last week, Fernando Mendoza held a cleat in his hands that, uncharacteristically, didn’t have the three diagonal stripes the brand is known for. Not yet. That’s because this shoe is a prototype, still in the design process. Those distinctive stripes will be the finishing touch. But first, the Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback and presumptive No. 1 overall draft pick had a few suggestions. This cleat, after all, is special because of its potential for customization. Adidas uses 3-D printing to empower its innovation lab technicians to make a boutique shoe, in this case one specially made for Mendoza. The innovation lab takes up an entire floor and features a small basketball court, a 40-yard dash track, a batting cage and other spaces for athlete-cleat testing. Mendoza was here for Adidas’ first-ever Rookie Pro Day, a promotional event to announce the brand’s 2026 signing class. The class also includes a number of other top NFL prospects: defensive linemen Arvell Reese and Rueben Bain Jr., safety Caleb Downs, receivers Carnell Tate, Jordyn Tyson, Denzel Boston, Makai Lemon and KC Concepcion, and tight end Kenyon Sadiq. At the event, Mendoza sat with seven members of the Adidas innovation team, including Marc Makowski, SVP of creative direction and innovation. “Could you put extra traction on the cleat here?” Mendoza said, pointing to the inside heel of the right cleat. He demonstrated how he pushes off that back foot during his throwing motion, with that heel often sitting at an angle, akin to a receiver breaking out of a cut. One technician asked: “Would that be weird if you only had the extra traction on the back foot?” “No, I think that would be good,” Mendoza replied. The innovation team pulled out a 3-D rendering of Mendoza’s foot. One technician explained that because the QB’s midfoot is a little more advanced than the average person’s, the team could use the surface area for the additional points of grip that Mendoza wants. The group also discussed his toe box — and his bunions. And they discussed different plates they could put in for protection and support. “This is awesome,” Mendoza said. “This is the perfect solution.” For a quarterback who spent the better part of his interviews, including at the NFL Combine, discussing the importance of the “fine details” of the game, this was his sort of meeting. “He’s the perfect face for you,” one Adidas employee said. “Innovation, analytical, scientific.” It’s hard to argue, particularly if Mendoza can live up to the expectations — not only to be the first-overall pick by the Las Vegas Raiders, but also to be a franchise quarterback for years to come. After Mendoza left, the seven innovation lab technicians huddled to discuss how they will accommodate the QB’s requests. One of them asked: “Should we consider a silver-and-black color scheme?” Yup. In 2024, Adidas went through a similar process with Washington Huskies receiver Rome Odunze, who was the Bears’ first-round pick that year. As a result, the company is now known for locking in wideouts, including the top five prospects this year, according to Rob Rang’s big board. Adidas worked with Odunze to develop a shoe that helped him with separation, not just to increase his acceleration out of his cuts but also to improve his deceleration into his cuts. That fueled faster change of direction and, in turn, helped with separation. In the cleat that Adidas designed with Odunze — the “Adizero One Horizon” — the brand reported a 3% improvement in an athlete’s ability to decelerate and a 2% improvement in acceleration. It might not sound like much, but in a league defined as a game of inches, those marginal gains can be huge for a receiver. That’s what made Mendoza’s conversation so compelling. It’s possible that he and Adidas will create a unique cleat that one day will appeal to quarterbacks in the way that the Adizero One Horizon will with receivers when it comes out this fall. “I do think customization is something that has a potential future,” Aaron Seabron, VP/GM of Adidas’ U.S. Sports and Creation Center, told me at the Pro Day. “Because if you think about it, right, the ads on your phone and my phone are different. So I think customization is certainly prevalent in all of our lives, and I think eventually, does that make its way into the product? In time — probably, yeah.” To be clear, Adidas isn’t pivoting away from its receiver emphasis. The wideout position is important to the company, and Seabron echoed a statement that multiple Adidas executives mentioned, which was that they were excited to have signed Ohio State receiver Jeremiah Smith last August and that they hope to retain him when he joins the pro ranks next year. Smith was arguably the best receiver prospect in college football in 2025 despite not being draft-eligible. “We strive to be the fastest brand in football, and we do that by fusing speed and culture,” Seabron told me. “If I can think of one position that is truly a speed and culture position, it’s wide receiver, right? They’re normally the ones that make the biggest plays, the biggest catches, and they’re normally some of the biggest personalities on the field. I think our athlete signings reflect who we’re trying to be as a category.” At the Pro Day, most members of Adidas’ 2026 signing class had their feet and gates measured. They ran through drills and wore sensors to help the innovation lab’s 70 cameras measure their every move. To help with the precision, Adidas has 20 “force plates” embedded into the 40-yard dash track. These force plates are planks in the floor that measure the force and angle at which the players are striking their feet. It’s all designed to deliver a special shoe for Adidas athletes. “They put a lot of detail into [the cleats],” Denzel Boston, who had 20 touchdown catches for Washington the past two seasons, told me. “They discuss what goes into the making of the cleats, when it comes to all the different tests that they do. Not only that, but also the way they design cleats, whether it’s to tell a story or it’s a collaboration through another brand to tell their story. They’re very detail-oriented in both those spaces.” Most of the athletes wanted to undergo extensive testing before they pick a shoe to wear during their rookie NFL seasons. And of course, the color scheme could change on April 23, when they hear their names called on draft day. But while they focus on footwear, the athletes spoke highly of Adidas’ overall presentation at the Pro Day. “I haven’t seen anything like that before,” Arvell Reese, Ohio State’s All-American linebacker, told me. “It was a surprise seeing all the tech. “It’s next level.”​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Music

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Music

Dying to Love: Six Country Love Songs With ‘Die’ in the Title

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Uncategorized

The ever-evolving Latino vote is rapidly shifting away from Trump and Republicans

In 2024, Trump and other Republicans scored notable gains in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, along with other heavily Hispanic areas. Getty Images/Michael Gonzalez

In 2024, Donald Trump dramatically improved his performance among nearly all groups of voters from four years earlier. Trump’s growth among Hispanic voters was especially notable, increasing by more than 10 points from 2020 to 2024, at least according to exit polls.

This led to a considerable amount of commentary speculating that Hispanic voters, historically more supportive of Democrats, might continue shifting toward the GOP.

News reports suggesting Latinos were critical to Trump’s 2024 victory were, in our view, overblown. Even if Latinos had not shifted, Trump still would have won in 2024.

Yet there is no question that over the past three election cycles, Latino voters – Latino men under 40, in particular – have shifted right. That change has benefited GOP candidates, even as the majority of Latinos still voted for Democrats.

However, evidence from general elections in 2025 in places such as New Jersey, New York and Virginia, as well as special elections in 2026, suggest an abrupt correction is underway, with some of the Latino voters who backed Trump now swinging back to the Democrats.

As political scientists and pollsters who study Hispanic voting trends, we are concerned with the question of whether these latest movements are real or simply a function of fluctuating Latino Democratic turnout rates. In other words, are Latinos broadly changing their votes back to Democrats, or are Latinos who remained loyal to the Democrats now more angry and fired up?

Survey and election data suggest it’s a bit of both. So what does this portend for the future of American politics?

Latino voting trends

The history of the Latino vote nationwide had for decades been one of long-term stability. Historically, Democrats enjoyed an approximate 65% to 35% advantage over Republicans.

That advantage shrank marginally after Republican President Ronald Reagan signed the Immigration Reform and Control Act in 1986, providing a path to citizenship for millions. But the more familiar two-thirds advantage for the Democratic Party returned following passage of Proposition 187, a 1994 anti-immigrant initiative in California that ultimately mobilized Latinos against Republicans.

A man wearing a poncho and a mask that says 'no justice, no peace' bangs on a drum during a protest.
Trump’s immigration policies have triggered widespread protests, including among Latinos.
AP Photo/Eric Gay

Another effort at GOP outreach to Hispanic voters culminated in President George W. Bush taking approximately 40% of the Latino vote in 2004. That growth, however, soon eroded in the wake of anti-immigrant legislation passed by the Republican-controlled House in 2005 and 2006.

The successful campaigns of Democrat Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012, as well as Hillary Clinton’s unsuccessful 2016 campaign against Trump, saw Democrats reaping a relatively high level of Latino support, peaking at a 3-to-1 advantage in 2012.

That made Trump’s improvements among Latinos in 2020 and 2024 feel, for some, particularly unexpected. He lodged notable breakthroughs in parts of Florida, where he carried Miami-Dade County, and Texas, where he flipped the historically Democratic Rio Grande Valley.

Some Latinos question whether Democrats have delivered

It should not have been such a surprise. There has been a history of sizable shares of Latinos supporting Republican candidates. For instance, both former President George W. Bush and his brother, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, performed well with Latinos in Texas and Florida.

For two decades, Democrats have campaigned among Latinos on the promise of comprehensive immigration reform and an economic policy that would level the playing field, including raising the federal minimum wage, providing universal pre-K education and promoting affordable housing.

Many Latinos feel they are still waiting for these Democratic policies to be enacted, let alone improve their lives.

Democratic trifectas in 2009-10 and 2021-22 – when the party held both chambers of Congress, along with the presidency – failed to produce meaningful movement on immigration policy. Many Latinos felt their daily lives had not improved, as they faced high costs of living, expensive housing markets and rising health care costs. While House Democrats did pass numerous bills to address these topics, Senate moderates proved difficult to persuade.

A female member of Congress in a black-and-white polka dotted jackets stands at a lectern and speaks during a news conference.
Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, including Arizona Democrat Adelita Grijalva, have criticized Trump’s immigration stance.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Given these shortcomings, running on the message that “the GOP are bad guys” only gets Democrats so far. In 2024, surveys and focus groups of Hispanic voters made it clear that not everyone was convinced by this characterization. The frustrations of working-class families during the Biden administration were real, whereas fears of mass deportations and other social chaos that a second Trump term might portend were, at that point, conjecture.

The Trump campaign specifically promised widespread action against immigrants, but many of our Latino focus group participants felt this was bluster. They believed that Trump’s actions would be targeted against blatant criminals and that his policies would not affect their families and friends.

They did not believe the worst-case scenarios presented by Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats during the campaign. Despite often not liking Trump, his economic promises felt good during the 2024 affordability crisis.

Latinos shifting back left?

Many Latinos are now quite upset with Trump. The 2025 gubernatorial elections in New Jersey and Virginia point to dramatic 25-point changes in the Latino vote in the Democrats’ direction, compared with Trump’s 2024 performance.

In December 2025, the first Democrat was elected mayor of Miami since 1997, with Latino support. A Democrat won a heavily Republican state legislative district in Texas in February 2026 with an estimated 79% of the Latino vote. Most recently, Latino voter turnout surged to record levels in the March Democratic primary in Texas.

Majorities of Latino voters believe that their economic fortunes have declined since Trump returned to the White House. Moreover, they expect the situation to worsen over the next year. In March 2026, The Economist reported that Trump’s support among Latinos had fallen to 22%.

In a bipartisan poll by UnidosUS released in November 2025, only 14% of Latino voters said their lives were better after one year under Trump, while 39% said they had gotten worse. Looking ahead, 50% expected things to get worse still in 2026, while only 20% were optimistic about their economic future. Two-thirds of Latino voters felt that Trump and the Republicans were not focusing enough on improving the economy for people like them.

What’s more, mass deportations have happened under the second Trump administration. The vast majority of those detained for deportation, including those who have died, had no criminal record.

Latinos are overwhelmingly opposed to federal troops in U.S. cities, according to our polling; 41% fear legal residents and U.S. citizens getting caught up in enforcement actions. The No. 1 immigration concern for Latino voters remains a path to citizenship for Dreamers – the undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children – and for immigrants who have worked and paid taxes in the country for more than 20 years but lack formal status.

Among Latinos who actually voted for Trump, many would not do so again. Our poll suggests that 22% of Latinos who voted for Trump in 2024 would not vote for him again. By contrast, Democrats retain support from 93% of their 2024 Latino voters.

The long-term effects of the Trump presidency on the Latino electorate are difficult to predict, but for now party preferences have shifted firmly back toward the Democrats. Among voters in the UnidosUS poll, 55% said they felt the Democrats “care a great deal” about Latinos, compared with 29% saying they felt that way about the GOP. At the same time, 33% of Latino voters see the GOP as “hostile,” compared with just 7% who believe this about the Democrats.

If the recent leftward shift is sustained, or the earlier shift to the right was illusory, the effects on the politics of 2026 could be large, potentially putting control of Congress in the hands of Latino voters. There are 46 House districts where the number of registered voters who are Latino exceeds the total margin of victory for those seats in 2024, with 23 currently held by Republicans and 23 currently held by Democrats.

Latino voters need to believe that politicians truly care about their concerns and will work to implement a plan to create equal opportunities for the nation’s largest minority group to achieve the American dream. We believe the candidates able to make that pitch convincingly will be the most successful.

The Conversation

Matt A. Barreto is principal and co-founder of the polling firm BSP Research. BSP Research has conducted polling for non-profit and advocacy organizations, businesses, and candidates. Barreto has, in the past, directly consulted with Democratic candidates for House, Senate and the presidency.

Gary M. Segura is principal and co-founder of the polling firm BSP Research. BSP Research has conducted polling for non-profit and advocacy organizations, businesses, and candidates. Segura has, in the past, directly consulted with Democratic candidates for House, Senate and the presidency.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Uncategorized

What Betsy Ross’ real story tells us about women’s work in the Revolution − and why it still matters 250 years later

According to the legend, Betsy Ross showed George Washington how a five-pointed star instead of a six-pointed star would speed up production. GraphicaArtis/Archive Photos Collection via Getty Images

For generations, most Americans knew – and maybe believed – a story about upholstery seamstress Betsy Ross and the making of the nation’s first flag.

In the account passed down through her family, Ross was a young Philadelphia widow when George Washington and a congressional committee asked her to make a flag for the Colonies uniting in rebellion against England.

A sketch showed what they envisioned: red and white stripes and a constellation of six-pointed stars across a blue field.

But, the story continues, Ross folded a piece of paper “just so,” made a single cut, and voila! She produced a perfect five-pointed star. The men approved, she stitched a flag, Congress cheered and history was made.

As a historian of early American craftswomen, including Ross, I have often seen how mythologies – history’s sound bites – can bury richer and deeper understandings of the past. That’s the case with Betsy Ross, whose story was never about designing one flag but about producing many – and being one of thousands of women whose labor was essential to the nation’s origins.

Making of a legend

In 1870, Ross’ grandson William J. Canby recounted the family’s story about Betsy Ross and the making of the first flag in a speech to the Pennsylvania Historical Society. Historians and members of the public greeted the tale with skepticism.

Canby’s best efforts notwithstanding, no archival evidence then – or since – has confirmed that Ross fabricated the first U.S. flag.

Still, the story gained traction. For a long while, Ross was a popular historical figure in U.S. culture, up there with the likes of Martha Washington and Abigail Adams. One of the earliest biopics imagined her life story, and her name graced everything from dolls to decanters. Over time, thousands of people began visiting her supposed home at 239 Arch St. in the Old City neighborhood of Philadelphia. The landmark is preserved as a house museum.

As late as the 1980s, history professor Michael Frisch reported that “college students asked to name any person from pre–Civil War America who is not a politician or military figure” included Ross “year after year.”

But in the years following the 1976 U.S. bicentennial, Ross’ fame was already cresting. Today many Americans aren’t entirely sure whether she was real or fictional.

A brick rowhome with a white door and a US flag
The Betsy Ross House museum in Philadelphia.
Gilbert Carrasquillo via Getty Images

Widow turned aspiring government contractor

Elizabeth Griscom Ross was indeed real. She was an upholstery worker who lived in Philadelphia from the 1750s to the 1830s. While no written record confirms the flag story, ample evidence survives to document the successful multigenerational flagmaking enterprise that she launched and then sustained with her daughter and granddaughters.

According to an oral history recorded with Ross’ youngest daughter, sometime in the 1760s a young Elizabeth Griscom, who was born in 1752, joined a sister employed by Philadelphia upholsterer John Webster. Ross learned the craft of upholstery as well as the making of tassels and fringe from Ann King, who oversaw women’s work there.

Ross married upholstery apprentice John Ross in 1773, and the pair launched a small shop. John died in January 1776. Ross’ second husband, mariner Joseph Ashburn, served the Revolution as a privateer and died in an English prison. In 1783, another privateer, John Claypoole, became Ross’ third husband, and the couple raised a large family and lived full lives in the city.

My take on the legend’s veracity is that it is partly accurate, partly not, and there isn’t really any “first” flag.

What is certainly true is this: Ross found herself widowed in 1776 just as Philadelphia braced for British forces, an effort that required the building of a navy and new flags representing the Americans. Women all around the seaport were getting contracts to stitch flags, and Ross surely wanted in.

The “Did she or didn’t she sew the ‘first flag’?” question is usually framed as a story of design, but it’s not: It’s a story of production.

Ross, drawing on years of experience, was saying to these potential clients, “If you want a lot of these flags, and fast, five-pointed stars work better.”

Women’s massive wartime effort

When Betsy Ross told this story later to her children and grandchildren, at the heart of the story is a young craftswoman who met the “Father of Our Country” – and believed she taught him something.

Understanding Ross’ real life is important because her story offers a view of women’s massive wartime production of flags, uniforms, tents, knapsacks and more – and because of the deep pride she and women like her felt in their contributions to the independence movement.

Hundreds of Philadelphia women – including, briefly, Ross – manufactured ordnance for the Schuylkill arsenal. White, Black, Indigenous, enslaved and free women provided labor in the form of nursing, cooking, and making and maintaining clothes that was essential to military encampments. Women shaped diplomacy directly, especially among Indigenous peoples, and indirectly as they shared their perspectives with husbands, fathers and sons. They also managed affairs for absent family and stretched scarce resources to sustain wartime households.

Whatever she did or did not offer to the making of the first U.S. flag, Elizabeth Griscom Ross Ashburn Claypoole certainly enjoyed a long career in flagmaking.

The best documentation for this came just before the War of 1812. When Purveyor of public supplies Tench Coxe needed flags, he steered contracts to the onetime Elizabeth Ross, now known as Elizabeth Claypoole. In 1808, for instance, Coxe recorded that yards of blue fabric were en route to her; weeks later, the craftswoman submitted a bill for two garrison flags, two silk flags and seven regimental colors.

In 1810, she was contracted for six 18-by-24-foot garrison flags for a military installation at New Orleans. These flags unfolded to 432 square feet and required more than 100,000 stitches. They must have been well received because another order followed, for 46 garrison flags, which she was to deliver “with all dispatch” to the arsenal. Orders also came in from the Indian Department to produce dozens of flags used in diplomatic exchanges with Native nations.

By the time the U.S. went to war with England a second time in 1812, flags by Elizabeth Claypoole, aka “Betsy Ross,” flew all around the United States.

Over her long career, Betsy Ross produced an unknown number of flags – the hundred or so recorded in archival sources represent a fraction of her total output. As the U.S. observes the 250th anniversary of its independence, Ross’ real life – today fully interpreted by the dedicated staff of the Betsy Ross House – offers a view into the lives of working women across America whose wartime labor helped build a nation.

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The Conversation

Marla Miller receives funding from the National Park Service as a consultant providing expertise on women and the the American Revolution.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation