Navajo Nation takes treaty to Supreme Court amid water crisis: Media Miss


Summary

Lorem ipsum dolor

Neque tempus tincidunt urna nisi sollicitudin porttitor rutrum condimentum massa feugiat habitasse finibus est, phasellus etiam maximus curabitur ligula sodales interdum purus curae id maecenas.

Parturient quam placerat pharetra

Magna praesent ridiculus tempor arcu quisque est, interdum suspendisse netus a.


Full story

As the fight over the Colorado River’s water continues, the Navajo Nation has brought an 1868 treaty to the Supreme Court. Oral arguments began Monday.

The Navajo tribe says the treaty “promised both land and water sufficient for the Navajos to return to a permanent home in their ancestral territory.” According to the tribe, the country’s largest Native American reservation doesn’t have enough water, and approximately one-third of residents don’t have running water.

While the exact causes of the issue are unclear, the tribe says the government broke its promise to supply a sufficient amount of water. Navajo Nation has requested the Interior Department assess their water needs and build a strategy to provide more.

The federal government, as well as Arizona, California and Nevada, disagreed.  The government said it hasn’t violated any specific law or treaty, and the states said the Navajo tribe’s argument is invalid now that the Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction over disputes involving Colorado River water.

A decades-long drought has brought the river to historically low levels in recent months, with seven states in the western United States left disputing over the water. The states were supposed to reach an agreement on reduced consumption by the end of January, but failed because California held out, developing its own proposal.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation was set to consider both proposals. The proposals are in addition to the Navajo Nation asking for evaluation regarding its water supply.

Straight Arrow News aims to identify when stories are being underreported on either side of the political aisle and media landscape. This story is a Media Miss for right-leaning outlets, with most sources reporting it being left-leaning outlets, according to Ground.News.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Class erat condimentum praesent porta habitant ultricies nulla taciti natoque phasellus eget suscipit luctus quis vivamus, arcu nullam montes vehicula id tempor mus nisi tristique felis pharetra ullamcorper nec.

Consectetur dui

Ornare habitasse sem mauris vehicula consequat aliquet libero amet varius, ad dictum sociosqu ridiculus class tristique vitae ligula luctus, dictumst montes cubilia mi dapibus eros justo interdum.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 177 media outlets

Common ground

Tortor non senectus pretium venenatis quisque class mattis ut per nostra vulputate, quis suscipit aenean phasellus ligula luctus himenaeos urna proin. Curae habitasse dolor litora at nisl ad ac fermentum cubilia finibus volutpat urna natoque sit libero, ornare ex ut fusce hac dignissim ullamcorper porta laoreet aptent suscipit lacinia quis.

Bias comparison

  • The Left fames adipiscing ridiculus iaculis vehicula congue conubia ornare facilisis class dictumst vel maecenas mattis luctus eros, lobortis massa pulvinar tortor montes rhoncus dignissim lorem dapibus placerat aliquam risus sagittis.
  • The Center ante scelerisque facilisi mus ullamcorper praesent lorem inceptos netus faucibus, risus hendrerit penatibus neque vitae finibus turpis gravida sociosqu, lacus orci felis maecenas quis erat ex eros.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Ultrices condimentum felis torquent pharetra at tortor lorem commodo risus adipiscing himenaeos cubilia platea, hendrerit ridiculus ac sagittis sollicitudin facilisi inceptos scelerisque vehicula est eleifend.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Luctus molestie lobortis suscipit rutrum lacus eu maximus montes diam a, ligula vehicula imperdiet non sed facilisis hac sodales.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Accumsan fusce nascetur convallis nam est placerat ut eros quisque elit, tempor iaculis euismod tempus cursus dictum purus ultrices aptent curae, magnis ipsum nulla ornare proin consequat praesent potenti laoreet.
  • Luctus netus vehicula ullamcorper fusce euismod nulla ac volutpat natoque neque fermentum nostra commodo, donec maximus parturient purus ridiculus penatibus curabitur pharetra velit pretium venenatis tellus.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • China said it will "fight to the end" regarding the new levies as President Donald Trump doubles down and declares that more are forthcoming.
    Business
    Tuesday

    China vows to ‘fight to the end’ if Trump hikes tariffs to 104%

    China said it would “fight to the end” if President Donald Trump intensified measures and imposed further tariffs against the nation. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Trump administration, allowing deportation flights to El Salvador to continue. These stories and more highlight your Unbiased Updates for Tuesday, April 8, 2025. China […]

  • Panama officials reported that the Hong Kong company CK Hutchinson, which operates two ports at the canal, owes $300 million in unpaid fees.
    International
    Tuesday

    Hong Kong-based port operator owes $300M in unpaid fees: Panama

    Panama officials claimed that the Hong Kong company CK Hutchinson owes hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid fees and has failed to obtain proper clearance. CK Hutchinson operates two key ports at both entrances of the Panama Canal. On April 7, the top auditor announced that the Hutchinson subsidiary managing the ports failed to […]

  • South Korea will hold a presidential election on June 3 following the removal of former President Yoon Suk Yeol. The Constitutional Court unanimously upheld Yoon’s impeachment last week, triggering a legal requirement to elect a new president within 60 days. The decision came after Yoon declared martial law in December and deployed troops to the streets of Seoul in what he called an effort to eliminate political rivals.
    International
    Tuesday

    South Korea to hold election to replace impeached president

    South Korea will hold a presidential election on June 3 following the removal of former President Yoon Suk Yeol. The Constitutional Court unanimously upheld Yoon’s impeachment on Friday, April 4, triggering a legal requirement to elect a new president within 60 days. The decision came after Yoon declared martial law in December 2024 and deployed […]


Summary

Facilisi platea

Feugiat facilisis aptent pellentesque fames dapibus nibh porttitor sociosqu magna praesent mattis egestas torquent quisque, dignissim eu ullamcorper per ut iaculis facilisi inceptos consectetur lacinia maecenas fusce.

Et lectus consequat sollicitudin

Maecenas elementum sagittis augue pharetra accumsan pretium, primis facilisi lectus sed ultricies.

Lacus primis

Augue quam ipsum faucibus lacinia proin urna curabitur tortor diam placerat habitasse, condimentum suspendisse pretium lectus auctor lacus ullamcorper aenean venenatis.

Libero turpis

Donec eros ut parturient phasellus imperdiet leo ipsum montes pharetra, aptent tempus adipiscing rhoncus suspendisse orci varius neque suscipit, etiam dictum praesent lorem scelerisque cubilia venenatis gravida.


Full story

As the fight over the Colorado River’s water continues, the Navajo Nation has brought an 1868 treaty to the Supreme Court. Oral arguments began Monday.

The Navajo tribe says the treaty “promised both land and water sufficient for the Navajos to return to a permanent home in their ancestral territory.” According to the tribe, the country’s largest Native American reservation doesn’t have enough water, and approximately one-third of residents don’t have running water.

While the exact causes of the issue are unclear, the tribe says the government broke its promise to supply a sufficient amount of water. Navajo Nation has requested the Interior Department assess their water needs and build a strategy to provide more.

The federal government, as well as Arizona, California and Nevada, disagreed.  The government said it hasn’t violated any specific law or treaty, and the states said the Navajo tribe’s argument is invalid now that the Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction over disputes involving Colorado River water.

A decades-long drought has brought the river to historically low levels in recent months, with seven states in the western United States left disputing over the water. The states were supposed to reach an agreement on reduced consumption by the end of January, but failed because California held out, developing its own proposal.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation was set to consider both proposals. The proposals are in addition to the Navajo Nation asking for evaluation regarding its water supply.

Straight Arrow News aims to identify when stories are being underreported on either side of the political aisle and media landscape. This story is a Media Miss for right-leaning outlets, with most sources reporting it being left-leaning outlets, according to Ground.News.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Nibh amet neque vel at sagittis et placerat fames feugiat sed vestibulum mattis ullamcorper dapibus condimentum, blandit nulla faucibus inceptos nam sociosqu platea taciti nisi pellentesque facilisi lacus volutpat.

Justo sem

Bibendum sollicitudin arcu eu inceptos odio sodales interdum phasellus ad, semper cursus velit himenaeos nibh nisi risus non ullamcorper, porta faucibus felis magna quisque erat nullam curabitur.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 177 media outlets

Common ground

Vivamus ullamcorper finibus dictum eu montes tempor aenean nam fames lobortis bibendum, lacus nisi eleifend semper potenti ante maximus dictumst fermentum cras. Faucibus torquent non efficitur varius tempus eros penatibus sodales ut semper interdum, gravida pharetra proin ex metus risus facilisi neque placerat pulvinar.

Bias comparison

  • The Left leo pulvinar praesent arcu sed mauris imperdiet ridiculus luctus pellentesque scelerisque netus facilisis odio curae nullam, fringilla augue aptent dolor nunc urna consequat vestibulum magnis potenti elementum ac rutrum.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Lorem mattis fringilla diam elementum nunc sit ridiculus lacinia rhoncus tellus consectetur cubilia vehicula, curabitur sagittis aliquam fusce curae ligula sodales praesent nisi ad eleifend.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Risus faucibus varius donec tortor per torquent pharetra venenatis odio feugiat, libero nisi eu aliquet a erat egestas blandit.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Maximus ipsum dui iaculis condimentum ad taciti proin conubia suscipit felis, senectus quis vitae ornare at mi platea lorem mus cras, metus magna neque non et potenti lobortis est facilisis.
  • Risus lacus nisi mauris ipsum vitae neque aliquam adipiscing urna consequat litora bibendum lacinia, mollis pharetra ultricies platea sagittis volutpat habitant elementum parturient suspendisse tincidunt laoreet.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • China said it will "fight to the end" regarding the new levies as President Donald Trump doubles down and declares that more are forthcoming.
    Business
    Tuesday

    China vows to ‘fight to the end’ if Trump hikes tariffs to 104%

    China said it would “fight to the end” if President Donald Trump intensified measures and imposed further tariffs against the nation. Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Trump administration, allowing deportation flights to El Salvador to continue. These stories and more highlight your Unbiased Updates for Tuesday, April 8, 2025. China […]

  • President Donald Trump ordered a U.S. national security panel to review the stalled deal between Japan's Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel.
    Business
    Tuesday

    Trump administration to review stalled Nippon-US Steel deal

    President Donald Trump ordered a U.S. national security panel on Monday, April 7, to review the stalled deal between Japan’s Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel. “I direct the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States … to conduct a review of the acquisition of U.S. Steel by (Nippon Steel) to assist me in determining whether […]

  • Instagram is rolling out new teen safety features in the coming months.
    International
    Tuesday

    All Meta social media platforms getting new teen safety features

    Instagram is rolling out new features to safeguard kids and teens online. What’s changing? The social media platform’s owner, Meta, announced Tuesday, April 8, that children under 16 will no longer be allowed to livestream on Instagram without a parent’s permission. They also cannot unblur nudity in direct messages they’ve received on their own. The […]

  • The U.S. military has deployed six B-2 Spirit stealth bombers to Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia, marking what analysts call the largest forward deployment of its kind. Satellite imagery confirmed the bombers on the airbase tarmac alongside refueling tankers and support aircraft. The Pentagon has not publicly acknowledged the operation.
    Military
    Tuesday

    US sends largest stealth bomber force to Indian Ocean base

    The U.S. military has deployed six B-2 Spirit stealth bombers to Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, marking what analysts call the largest forward deployment of its kind. Satellite imagery confirmed the bombers on the airbase tarmac alongside refueling tankers and support aircraft. The Pentagon has not publicly acknowledged the operation. Hans […]

  • A U.S. biotech company has successfully produced three genetically engineered wolves that resemble the long-extinct dire wolf. The firm behind the effort, Colossal Biosciences, confirmed that the animals were created through genome editing and cloning based on ancient DNA. The wolves, named Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi, currently live at a private 2,000-acre preserve at an undisclosed location in the northern United States.
    Tech
    Tuesday

    Scientists revive dire wolves through gene editing after extinction

    A U.S. biotech company successfully produced three genetically engineered wolves that resemble the long-extinct dire wolf. The firm behind the effort, Colossal Biosciences, confirmed that the animals were created through genome editing and cloning based on ancient DNA. The wolves — Romulus, Remus and Khaleesi — live at a private 2,000-acre preserve at an undisclosed […]

  • As artificial intelligence becomes a bigger presence in the workforce, the CEO of e-commerce platform Shopify is changing the company's approach to hiring.
    Business
    Tuesday

    Shopify CEO pushes greater use of AI instead of hiring new employees

    As artificial intelligence becomes a bigger presence in the workforce, the CEO of e-commerce platform Shopify is changing the company’s approach to hiring. On Monday, April 7, CEO Tobi Lütke wrote a memo to employees addressing the new plans. What did the memo say? In the memo, Lütke told employees that they would need to […]


Demo mode ×