What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Preventing Preventive Care

A federal judge has struck down a provision in the Affordable Care Act requiring private insurers to provide preventive care—screenings and the like—at no cost to patients. 


But preventive care is a good investment for insurance companies and for national health. It’s something Americans already don’t get enough of — but is anyone willing to step in and save it?


Guest: Julie Rovner, chief Washington correspondent Kaiser Health News, host of the “What the Health” podcast


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Wisconsin’s High-Stakes Supreme Court Race

In Wisconsin, the state Supreme Court election is breaking records when it comes to campaign spending on a judicial race. With abortion rights for Wisconsinites, their state’s electoral geography, and potentially the fate of the 2024 presidential election on the line, that big ticket spending makes sense. But will it make a difference in who gets the seat? 


Guest: Mark Joseph Stern, senior staff writer for Slate.


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Trump Heads to Court

In a history-making move, a grand jury voted to indict a former president. We’ll have more answers about the details of the charges after Donald Trump’s Tuesday arraignment, but what this means for the GOP nomination, the 2024 race, and for future presidents in politically-hostile states is still up in the air.


Guest: Ankush Khardori, former federal prosecutor for the U.S. Department of Justice.


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - TBD | Seeking Asylum Via App

CBP One, U.S. Customs and Border Protection's app that is supposed to make crossing the border more efficient, is littered with bugs. But even a perfectly functional smartphone app would pose problems for people seeking asylum on the southern U.S. border. 


Guest: Arelis Hernández, Washington Post reporter

Gia Del Pino, director of communications at the Kino Border Initiative

Felicia Rangel Samponaro, director of the Sidewalk School


Host: Lizzie O’Leary


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - TBD | When A.I. Denies Your Health Care

As Medicare Advantage plans have increased their reliance on software to determine what their customers require—and, therefore, receive—elderly patients are being denied coverage for care they need. What happens when an algorithm — not a doctor — decides how much care you need and it’s not enough?


Guest: Casey Ross, national technology correspondent at STAT


Host: Emily Peck


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Podcast production by Evan Campbell

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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - The Diagnosis Was Fatal. She Couldn’t Get an Abortion.

Two weeks after Roe v. Wade was overturned, Lauren Hall found out the baby she was carrying had a fatal condition: her head and skull weren’t properly developing. Texas’s three overlapping bans on abortion forced her to fly to Washington to terminate the unviable pregnancy. With the Center for Reproductive Rights, she’s now one of five plaintiffs suing the state, so no one else will have to go through what she did.


Guest: Lauren Hall, plaintiff suing the state of Texas over its abortion bans.


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Slate Books - The Waves: We Were Once a Family

On this week’s episode of The Waves, Slate supervising producer Daisy Rosario is joined by Texas Tribune reporter Roxanna Asgarian to discuss her book We Were Once A Family: A Story of Love, Death and Child Removal in America and its findings on the foster care system. The book covers the tragic Hart family murders in 2018 where two mothers drove their six adopted children off a cliff. 


In Slate Plus: How Roxanna navigated writing about a tragic family story in a pandemic while being a first-time mom. 


Podcast production by Cheyna Roth and Tori Dominguez with editorial oversight by Daisy Rosario and Alicia Montgomery.


Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com.

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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - March Madness Comes to Capitol Hill

Two years ago, the NCAA changed their rules to allow college athletes to make money from their “name, image and likeness.” It was a stop-gap measure at best, and some folks even want to see athletes gain employee status. But, the NCAA has taken to Capitol Hill today to try to prevent just that.  


Guest: Dan Murphy, staff writer at ESPN and author of Start By Believing.


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Why Israelis Are Protesting

Israel ground to a halt on Monday after a series of massive protests against planned judicial reforms. Though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the reforms will be delayed, getting them passed is a top priority for his far-right coalition government. How can the government—and country—move forward?


Guest: Dahlia Scheindlin, international political and strategic consultant and fellow at Century International in Tel Aviv.


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What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Will Crime Decide Chicago’s Mayoral Race?

In Chicago, a city plagued by recent crime concerns from its citizens, a progressive former Teachers Union organizer faces an opponent who has described himself in the past as “more of a Republican than a Democrat.” 


Guest: Gregory Pratt, Chicago Tribune reporter covering Mayor Lori Lightfoot and City Hall.


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