


DOGE comes for the data wonks
America may soon be unable to measure itself properly
FOR NEARLY three decades the federal government has painstakingly surveyed tens of thousands of Americans each year about their health. Door-knockers collect data on the financial toll of chronic conditions like obesity and asthma, and probe the exact doses of medications sufferers take. The result, known as the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS), is the single most comprehensive, nationally representative portrait of American health care, a balkanised and unwieldy $5trn industry that accounts for some 17% of GDP.
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Texas troopers are in more and more lethal car chases
An unremarked cost of greater border security

Elon Musk is powersliding through the federal government
But to what end?
The cover-up is worse than the group chat
A wiser president would admit a lapse and be grateful for the chance to prevent a more devastating blunder
White House denials over the Signal snafu ring hollow
The breach raises questions of security and legality
America’s Supreme Court tackles a thorny voting-rights case
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