How to read source labels
Source labels describe the publisher, not the truth value of an individual headline. Use them as a reminder to compare coverage across outlets, open the original article, and look for named documents, votes, filings, or official statements when a story matters.
What this page does not do
The wire is not a replacement for journalism and does not copy publisher articles into The Power Tree. It does not rewrite headlines to change their framing, add partisan commentary, or claim that a publisher's story is verified by this site.
Use the original publisher link
Every item should send you to the organization that reported it. If the topic affects a vote, policy, court case, or agency action, follow the source trail from the article to the public record before relying on a summary.
Request a source correction
If a source link fails, a label looks wrong, or a headline feed behaves oddly, send the page URL and the exact outlet name through the contact page. Maintenance reports help keep the public wire useful without turning it into copied content.