November 7, 2025 – US Headlines

1Judge Orders Trump Administration to Fully Fund Food Stamps This Month

Story gist: A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to fully fund the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program this month. The ruling requires full funding of SNAP benefits by Friday.
Left
Judge Orders Trump Administration to Fully Fund Food Stamps This Month
— The New York Times
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Center
Snap food benefits – Trump must fully fund aid program by Friday
— BBC
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The New York Times frame the story by directly naming the Trump administration as the target of the judge’s order, emphasizing executive obligation. Center outlets like the BBC use neutral terms, focusing on the SNAP program and deadline without partisan emphasis. Right-leaning coverage is absent, indicating potential omission of stories highlighting judicial checks on conservative policies.

2Trump unveils deal to expand coverage and lower costs on obesity drugs Wegovy and Zepbound

Story gist: President Trump announced a deal to expand Medicare coverage for obesity drugs Wegovy and Zepbound. The agreement lowers costs to as little as $149 for certain patients.
Left
Certain obesity drugs will cost as little as $149 and Medicare will start covering them under White House deals
— CNN
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Center
Trump unveils deal to expand coverage and lower costs on obesity drugs Wegovy and Zepbound
— AP News
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning CNN emphasizes affordability with $149 pricing and Medicare expansion under White House deals, using a positive tone focused on access benefits. Center AP News provides a neutral summary mirroring the announcement’s details without added emphasis. Right-leaning coverage is absent, leaving out potential conservative perspectives on government intervention or fiscal impacts.

3After California’s vote to counter Trump, here’s where redistricting stands

Story gist: California approved new congressional district maps following a vote aimed at countering Trump-era policies. Republicans filed a lawsuit to block the maps. Governor Gavin Newsom confirmed interest in a potential White House run amid the redistricting developments.
Left
Republicans Swiftly File Lawsuit in Bid to Block California’s New House Maps
— The New York Times
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Center
After confirming possible White House run, California’s Newsom scores a win in fight for US House
— AP News
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The New York Times emphasize Republicans’ swift lawsuit as an obstructive bid against California’s maps, highlighting Democratic resistance. Center outlets like AP News frame it as Newsom’s win in the House fight, tying it to his presidential ambitions with neutral progress reporting. Right-leaning coverage is absent, omitting perspectives that might portray the redistricting as partisan Democratic maneuvering or electoral overreach.

4Senate will vote Friday to advance shutdown-ending deal, Thune tells Republicans

Story gist: Senate Majority Whip John Thune informed Republicans that the Senate will vote on Friday to advance a deal ending the government shutdown.
Left
Just When It Looked Like the Shutdown Might End
— The Atlantic
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Center
Senate will vote Friday to advance shutdown-ending deal, Thune tells Republicans
— Politico
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The Atlantic frame the story with skepticism, using a headline implying potential complications just as resolution seems near, emphasizing uncertainty. Center outlets like Politico provide neutral, factual reporting mirroring the event’s details without added tone. Right-leaning coverage is absent, indicating no prominent framing from that perspective, possibly due to differing priorities or lack of engagement with the shutdown narrative.

5Two ways countries could respond to the Supreme Court ruling on Trump’s tariffs

Story gist: The U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling on tariffs proposed by former President Donald Trump. Countries could respond to the decision through two potential strategies.
Left
Trump Team Now Claims Its Trillions in Tariff Revenue Are ‘Incidental’
— The New York Times
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Center
Two ways countries could respond to the Supreme Court ruling on Trump’s tariffs
— Axios
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Right
No major right-leaning outlet from our monitored sources covered this story
Bias summary: Left-leaning outlets like The New York Times frame the story with skepticism, emphasizing the Trump team’s shift in claiming trillions in tariff revenue as ‘incidental,’ suggesting inconsistency. Center outlets like Axios provide neutral analysis, focusing on factual responses countries might take without judgment. Right-leaning coverage is absent, potentially indicating omission of perspectives that might defend Trump’s tariff policies or downplay criticisms.