Kansas daily brief
Kansas news for busy people - Apr 7, 2026 edition
🌾 Kansas
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Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed eight bills Monday sent by the Republican-led Legislature, including measures on immigration, private school tax credits and abortion, setting up potential override fights during the veto session scheduled for Thursday and Friday. →
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Gov. Laura Kelly signed 12 bipartisan bills into law Monday, including measures authorizing up to $10,000 bonuses to retain critical state workers and creating new legal avenues to remove squatters from residential properties. →
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Gov. Laura Kelly signed a bipartisan bill creating the Attorney Training Program for Rural Kansas Act, offering law students annual stipends of $3,000 and licensed attorneys up to $20,000 annually in loan repayment to address attorney shortages in less-populated counties. →
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Gov. Laura Kelly signed House Bill 2537, known as Caleb's Law, enhancing criminal penalties for online sexual extortion and expanding the state's legal framework to address digital threats against children. →
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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman visited the Kansas Cosmosphere on Monday as the Artemis II crew orbited the far side of the moon, cutting the ribbon on a renovated Hall of Space Museum and touring aerospace manufacturers in Wichita. →
🇺🇸 US
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A new Goldman Sachs report finds workers displaced by technological shifts take a month longer to find jobs and earn 3% less after reemployment, as the share of Americans over 55 in the workforce falls to 37.2%, the lowest level in more than 20 years. →
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Maine is poised to become the first state to freeze construction of new data centers this spring as lawmakers in more than 10 states propose temporary bans amid a building boom driven by AI demand. →
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Americans spend more on healthcare than anyone else in the world, with family insurance premiums now approaching $27,000 a year, as the Trump administration announces it will raise payments to Medicare Advantage insurers by 2.48% for 2027. →
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Four astronauts aboard NASA's Artemis II mission swung around the far side of the moon Monday, becoming the first humans in more than half a century to slip behind the lunar surface and reaching a distance of more than 248,000 miles from Earth. →
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Negotiators are increasingly pessimistic that Iran will agree to reopen the Strait of Hormuz before President Trump's 8 p.m. Tuesday deadline, which could trigger U.S. strikes on Iranian infrastructure. →
Weather

April 7 1950: Truman Signs NSC-68, Cementing America’s Cold War Containment Doctrine
NSC-68 locked in a long-term U.S. pledge to contain Soviet power through massive military buildup, nuclear dominance and far‑flung alliances, helping create a permanent national security state whose logic still shapes U.S. strategy. Then, a shattered postwar world was defined by a stark U.S.–Soviet bipolar standoff; today’s far more multipolar order—marked by overlapping U.S.–China and U.S.–Russia rivalries, assertive regional powers, and transnational threats like cyberwarfare and AI—makes any single‑adversary containment playbook incomplete.
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