Senators introduce bipartisan bill to create fast-track process for Social Security solvency legislation.
A bipartisan group of senators introduced the PROMISE Act to establish a fast-track congressional process for addressing Social Security's funding shortfall. The legislation comes as trustees project the retirement trust fund will be depleted by late 2032, triggering automatic benefit cuts of roughly 22%.
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Divergence score
2 outlets covered it, splitting into 2 framing camps across 1 bias group.
2 camps
1 bias group
The spectrum · how 2 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
Washington Examiner
Newsmax
Supportive of action
Neutral
Dismissive
Critical
Alarmist
International angle
The split, in one line
Both outlets report the same core facts about the bill's mechanism and the 2032 deadline. The Examiner provides detailed procedural steps and context on competing proposals, while Newsmax offers minimal coverage of the announcement.
How each outlet covered it
Lightly covered so far
Too few outlets to map a left-right split. Here is each take as it stands.
Sparse coverage · 2 outlets
“Senators introduce bipartisan bill to save Social Security”
“Bipartisan Senate Bill Addresses Social Security Shortfall - Newsmax”
5 tracked claims across 2 outlets
Fact ledger
All5Claimed4Corroborated1
1/2
Claimed
The PROMISE Act was introduced by a bipartisan group of senators including Bill Cassidy, John Cornyn, Dick Durbin, Tim Kaine, Angus King, and Thom Tillis.
Corroborated
Disputed
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