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  • The Week Evening Review
    2028 voter concerns, NASA’s budget cuts, and the peptide craze

     
    the explainer

    The main issues for Democratic candidates in 2028

    The field of Democratic hopefuls for the 2028 presidential campaign is expected to be massive, and candidates have a wide variety of voter issues to address, but they will probably focus on the cost-of-living crisis and questions about the strength of American democracy. Plus, Democrats will be campaigning without President Donald Trump on the ballot for the first time in 12 years.

    What are the issues?
    Democrats who have been named as possible presidential contenders, including 2024 nominee and former Vice President Kamala Harris, have “sought to hammer the issue of affordability, almost exclusively, as they seek to win back power,” said The Washington Post. This is likely to be the number-one concern when voters head to the polls. 

    Several Democrats, including Sen. Cory Booker (N.J.), have proposed raising taxes for the ultra-wealthy, but such plans “largely misread the problem,” said Slate. The candidates are additionally “challenged to couple” the affordability focus with a “more full-throated description of their civil rights agenda,” especially in an era where many in the party say democratic principles are under threat, said the Post.

    Some contenders have “shifted their views on border security, DEI, crime, climate change and Covid-era lockdowns,” said Axios. Party pundits believe they lost to Trump in 2024 largely because voters “didn't like some of their left-leaning policies,” and some have been arguing for a push back to the center. Others have “questioned whether anyone other than a straight, white man can win the White House,” said Politico.

    How will candidates approach them?
    Democratic bigwigs have largely agreed that the “restoration of civil rights should be central in the next election,” said the Post. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore “warned that Republicans are promoting voter suppression,” and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg “accused the Trump administration” of an “effort to harm disadvantaged communities.” 

    Democrats are also pushing to reengage with Black and Latino voters, and some see Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker as a solution. He has the “blue-collar affect to make him a contender,” said Bloomberg. Democrats “should be recruiting candidates who are generationally talented communicators,” said Maya Handa, the campaign manager for New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘She does not care whether Iran has a nuclear weapon and would blow Italy up in two minutes if it had the chance.’

    Trump to Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera on Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni distancing herself from him after he went to war with Iran in February and condemning his comments about Pope Leo on Monday

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Why is NASA facing budget cuts despite the Artemis II feat? 

    The Artemis II mission to the moon and back might be NASA’s biggest public triumph in decades. It nonetheless is not saving the agency from proposed budget cuts that would massively slash its space science budget.

    President Donald Trump’s plan gives a “billion-dollar boost” to efforts to land on the moon, said CNN. But it also proposes “deep cuts” that would reduce the agency’s science programs by nearly 50%. 

    What did the commentators say?
    The budget cuts “could bring NASA down” after lifting “humanity’s spirits” with the Artemis mission, the Houston Chronicle said in an editorial. The U.S. must maintain its “momentum toward further exploration.” Otherwise, the Artemis success will be a “brief sugar high” instead of a “bellwether for continued human spaceflight.”

    It’s an “odd choice” from a White House that has repeatedly promised to “put America first,” said Bill Nye at MS NOW. China is also looking to land on the moon by 2030, so it’s perplexing that the U.S. would “cede the lead” in the 21st-century space race. The U.S. cannot be “first in space” if it chooses to be “second in science and technology.”

    The U.S. can still “shoot for the moon,” said former NASA scientist Kate Marvel at The New York Times. But we are “losing the ability to understand our own world.” Rather than debate policy, the Trump administration has “chosen to attack science itself.” NASA wants to “conjure the notion of inspiration.” For now, though, U.S. leaders are “diminishing our ability to see and understand our planet.”

    What next?
    The “all moon and little else” White House proposal is the “opening salvo in a multi-month budget process,” said Ars Technica. The Trump administration sought similar cuts to NASA last year but was “resoundingly rejected” by the GOP-led Congress. That may happen again. It would be a “mistake” to gut NASA’s science funding, said Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), who runs the Senate subcommittee that oversees the agency, to Politico. NASA is “doing big things” like Artemis “faster” than it used to, so “more resources” are required to succeed.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $117: The cost of the ticket for the “1 Picasso for 100 Euros” raffle that won French art enthusiast Ari Hodara a $1 million Pablo Picasso painting. The charity drawing was for his “Head of a Woman,” a portrait of the Spanish artist’s longtime muse and partner, Dora Maar, and raised money for Alzheimer’s research.

     
     
    in the spotlight

    Biohacking gets a peptide infusion

    The internet is rife with trends promising to optimize your body, and right now, peptides are the It drug. Available as injectables, intravenous infusions, pills and nasal sprays, these chains of amino acids are rumored to help with weight loss, anti-aging and rapid muscle repair. But government restrictions have led to an increase in gray-market sales.

    New wonder drug?
    The human body naturally produces peptides. Researchers have known about some of them for decades, and “dozens have been turned into safe and effective drugs,” said The New Yorker. The hormone insulin, for example, “moves sugar from the bloodstream into cells” and is used to treat diabetes.

    The drugs that are driving current wellness trends are part of a broad category of synthetic amino acids that includes “well-studied items like insulin and GLP-1 weight-loss drugs,” said Stat News. Unlike those two FDA-approved uses, however, the peptides being touted by some figures in the health sphere are part of a “thicket of newer drugs,” most of which have “comparatively little research” to support claims they can “treat injuries and chronic pain” or “boost energy.”

    Off-label use of peptides was initially popular among bodybuilders, but in the “era of Make America Healthy Again,” peptides’ popularity has risen among the general public, said The New Yorker. Compounding pharmacies are experiencing soaring demand, and imports of gray-market peptides from China nearly doubled last year, said The New York Times. Influencers like “looksmaxxer” Clavicular and podcaster Joe Rogan, as well as Health Secretary Robert. F. Kennedy Jr., are among those singing their praises.

    Kennedy and the gray market
    In 2023, during Biden’s administration, the FDA placed 14 peptides on a “do not compound” list due to “potential significant safety risks,” including immune reactions, pancreatitis and accelerated growth of cancerous cells. But in February, Kennedy said the FDA would make changes to make their use more acceptable. 

    A senior Health Department official confirmed that the FDA plans to move forward in allowing compounding pharmacies to produce the injectable peptides, said the Times. Lifting the restrictions would be done in an effort to curtail the use of “substandard” gray-market products, said Kennedy on Joe Rogan’s podcast. 

     
     

    Good day 🔙

    … for search engine safety. Google is cracking down on “back-button hijacking” — when a website interferes with users’ browser navigation, preventing them from using the back button to return to the page they came from. Google is adding this interference to the list of malicious practices covered by its spam policies. 

     
     

    Bad day 🔒

    … for an online streamer. Controversial American YouTuber and livestreamer Johnny Somali has been sentenced to six months in a South Korean jail on public nuisance and other charges. He has been barred from leaving the country since his indictment in 2024, after he kissed a statue honoring women forced into wartime sexual slavery.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Red, white and pink all over

    A visitor takes a selfie in front of flowering azaleas at Nezu Shrine in Tokyo, Japan. About 100 varieties of 3,000 shrubs attract visitors during the annual Azalea Festival.
    Franck Robichon / EPA / Shutterstock

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily sudoku

    Challenge yourself with The Week’s daily sudoku, part of our puzzles section, which also includes guess the number

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    Get real personal with these customized gifts

    Stumped on what to gift the person who has everything? A personalized present guarantees they receive a one-of-a-kind present, crafted with them in mind. These gift ideas can be tailor-made for anyone for any occasion.

    The Printed Gift custom recipe towel
    Move their grandmother’s famous cookie recipe out of the box and onto a tea towel. The Printed Gift takes scanned handwritten or typewritten recipes, cleans them up to remove any stains and smudges, then transfers them to a cotton towel. This is a “meaningful” way to preserve and “celebrate family recipes,” said Southern Living. ($30, The Printed Gift)

    Happy Tooned custom portrait
    This one’s for the character in your life. Send Happy Tooned a picture of your person, and an illustrator will create a custom portrait of them in the style of an animated series. Options include “The Simpsons,” “Family Guy, “Rick and Morty,” “Bob’s Burgers” and “My Hero Academia.” The artist sends a preview for approval, and you can make as many revisions as you want until it’s perfect. (starting at $40, Happy Tooned)

    Songfinch custom song
    This company’s roster of independent musicians works with you to create a one-of-a-kind song that’s all about the recipient. After choosing a genre and artist, you will share with them memories, stories and other details you choose to be part of the lyrics. The final song is uploaded to a page that includes the lyrics and artist information. (starting at $200, Songfinch)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Nearly two-thirds of Israelis oppose the ceasefire with Iran, and 39% think attacks should resume, while 41% believe the agreement should be respected, according to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The vast majority of the 1,312 adults polled think neither Iran nor Hezbollah has been severely weakened by the recent U.S. and Israeli bombardments.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today’s best commentary

    ‘Battle Creek, a Rust Belt icon, battles back as American manufacturing jobs decline’
    Chicago Tribune editorial board

    For “generations, the Kellogg food company and Battle Creek, Michigan, went together like corn flakes and milk,” but “after decades as an independent public company, Kellogg split in two,” says the Chicago Tribune editorial board. Like “many other small industrial cities across the Midwest,” Battle Creek is “diversifying beyond its roots,” and its “resilience in the face of change shows that, under pressure, the Rust Belt’s factory towns can carve out a future based on their long-time strengths.”

    ‘Why aren’t Republicans thrilled by the fall in teen pregnancies?’
    Arwa Mahdawi at The Guardian
    The teenage birth rate in the U.S. “fell by 7% in 2025,” and “while this might seem like a positive development, it has been a cause of dismay among the MAGA-adjacent crowd,” says Arwa Mahdawi. Republicans “aren’t just content with overturning the right to a safe and legal abortion”; they are also “quietly undercutting access to contraception.” What’s “next? The party of ‘family values’ rallying behind child marriage? Oh, wait, they have already ticked that one off.”

    ‘Universities must reinvent themselves for the intelligent age’
    Klaus Schwab at Time
    For “more than a century,” universities have been “among humanity’s most transformative institutions,” but the “world they helped create is now changing at unprecedented speed,” says Klaus Schwab. In the “Intelligent Age defined by the rise of artificial intelligence and quantum computing, education cannot remain preparation for life.” It “must become a continuous condition of life,” as “our culture is moving irreversibly from learning for life to lifelong learning.” This “demands systemic change across national education systems.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    daraxonrasib

    A drug created by Revolution Medicines to treat pancreatic cancer. The daily pill has succeeded in a Phase 3 trial, almost doubling the typical length of survival and slashing the risk of death by 60% compared to chemotherapy, according to the company. These are “dramatic results, with practice-changing outcomes,” said CEO Mark Goldsmith to Time.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans and Joel Mathis, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; CSA Images / Getty Images); Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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