Social Security payments delayed for millions; US and Nigeria strike ISIS militants targeting Christians


Summary

Overview

Media Miss Minute highlights two stories each episode, one covered by right-leaning media and one by left-leaning media, that are underreported or unreported by the other side.

Right Media Miss

Millions of Americans face delays in Social Security payments after thousands of agency employees were laid off, according to a new Washington Post report.

Left Media Miss

The U.S. and Nigeria confirmed they carried out coordinated airstrikes on ISIS militant camps in Sokoto. President Donald Trump said the militants had been targeting Christians in the region.


Full story

In this Media Miss Minute, millions of Americans who rely on Social Security are facing growing delays. Plus, the U.S. and Nigeria confirmed a joint military operation targeting ISIS militants in northwest Nigeria.

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Media Miss by the right: Social Security delayed for millions due to backlogs

The Social Security Administration is in what The Washington Post describes as “turmoil” after the Trump administration laid off thousands of employees last  February.

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According to the report, the agency is currently facing roughly 6 million pending cases and 12 million transactions — delays that could affect about 74 million Americans.

The layoffs included about 7,000 employees. As a result, many claimants are now waiting 3 to 6 months for payments and services, the paper reported.

A spokesperson for the agency refuted the Post’s reporting in a statement sent to Newsweek.

“The Washington Post piece is full of Pinocchios,” the statement read. “Under President Trump’s leadership, Social Security is serving more people faster and better than before, and SSA will remain undeterred by politically-driven propaganda peddled by the Post.”

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Media Miss by the left: Nigeria confirms US-coordinated airstrike killed ISIS militants

The United States and Nigeria say they collaborated on airstrikes in Sokoto state as part of an operation targeting ISIS militant camps.

Officials say intelligence showed the camps were being used to plan attacks. In a social media post, President Trump said the group had been targeting Christians in the region.

Nigerian officials said the late-December strikes were aimed at securing  Sokoto and preventing infiltration from the Sahel.

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If you want more stories not being reported by partisan media outlets, visit SAN’s Media Miss archive.

Straight Arrow News identifies Media Misses based on coverage data available at the time of publication. Some outlets may choose to cover a story after our analysis is published. Our methodology prioritizes timely, prominent coverage across a range of sources, but we continually review and refine our approach to ensure balance and accuracy.

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Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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