Live U.S. government activity. No bias. Just facts.
A live, automated wire of U.S. government activity — executive orders, senate resolutions, and presidential nominations published the moment they hit the public record. No editorial layer, no partisan framing, just primary-source facts with neutral AI context.
Atlas US Gov Feed is a fully automated wire of executive orders, senate resolutions, presidential nominations, and federal register actions — pulled directly from primary sources and published with a neutral AI brief and a verified source citation. No editorial layer. No partisan framing. No paywall on the public read.
Branches Covered
Publish Latency
Editorial Bias
Sources Verified
Atlas pulls directly from the official systems of record — not from journalism, not from press releases.
Executive, legislative, and federal-register coverage in one feed. Click a chip to see a real example.
Presidential directives with the force of law against executive agencies.
Four automated stages. Zero editorial steps. Every dispatch carries the document hash, the source URL, and the citation chain so any reader can audit the brief against the document.
Atlas polls the Federal Register API, senate.gov XML feeds, congress.gov bulk data, and whitehouse.gov press feeds every 30 seconds. New documents are pulled in full — text, metadata, and citation chain — within 60 seconds of public release.
Six rules the pipeline auto-enforces on every dispatch. The AI brief is constrained, sentiment is disabled, and corrections are posted with a visible diff — never silently overwritten.
Model reads the document; no third-party commentary in context.
No 'positive' / 'negative' framing on actions or actors.
No party labels in summaries; positions cite voters and votes only.
Zero humans in the summarization loop. Pipeline is fully automated.
Every dispatch links the primary-source document and CFR / U.S.C. references.
Corrections are posted with a diff against the original. The original is never edited silently.
One pipeline, four surfaces. Read it on X, browse the archive, consume the JSON API, or pipe it into your reader.
The live human-readable wire. Every dispatch is a thread with the primary-source link, the agency, the citation, and the AI brief — built for readers and resharers.
Permalinked, searchable, browsable archive of every dispatch. Filter by branch, type, agency, statute, or date. Each post links the primary source and the AI brief side-by-side.
Structured fields per dispatch — type, citation, agency, statutes, effective dates, source URL, AI brief. REST endpoints + webhook delivery. Free tier for civic/academic; commercial for production.
Drop the source into any reader. Per-type feeds (XO only, S.RES only, NOM only) and a combined stream.
Eight things bundled into the public wire — full-branch coverage, sub-2-minute latency, source verification, constrained AI briefing, JSON API, public errata, and free civic / academic access.
Free public read access on X. Every dispatch ships as a single thread with the primary-source link, agency, citation chain, and AI brief — designed to be reshared without losing attribution.
From primary-source publication to wire post in under two minutes, end-to-end. The pipeline polls every 30 seconds; ingest, verify, brief, and publish run concurrently in <90 seconds.
Executive (Federal Register, White House) · Legislative (Senate, House, congress.gov) · Independent agencies (EPA, FCC, FTC, FDA, etc.). One wire, one neutral voice, no per-source toggling required.
Each dispatch carries a neutral summary generated from the document text only — no sentiment, no framing, no political labels. The brief always cites the underlying section and statute it references.
Structured fields for every dispatch — type, citation, agency, statutes, effective dates, source URL, AI brief, document hash. REST + webhook delivery. Free for civic / academic; commercial tiers for production ingestion.
Every dispatch is signed against the primary-source document hash and timestamp. Atlas does not edit the source text; the dispatch is a structured wrapper around it, not a rewrite.
Corrections are posted with a visible diff against the original wire. The original dispatch is never silently edited — corrections are additive so any reader can audit the trail.
The X feed is free to read and reshare under attribution. API access is free for non-profit, academic, and journalism use; commercial tiers fund the pipeline without paywalling the public read.
Journalists, civic platforms, policy researchers, compliance teams, accountability orgs, fund managers, and civic devs — all reading the same neutral wire, citing the same primary source.
Atlas does not paraphrase a press release. Every dispatch is built from the document the government actually published — Federal Register text, Senate XML, congress.gov bill-status feeds. The source URL is in every post.
The summary you read was generated under a constrained system prompt with sentiment scoring disabled, no party labels, and a citation requirement. There are zero humans in the summarization loop.
Every dispatch ships with the document hash, the source URL, the agency, and the citation chain. You can quote it, embed it, or pipe it into a product — the trail back to the document is always one click away.
Follow @USGovFeed on X for the live human-readable wire. Use the JSON API to pipe dispatches into your civic dashboard, newsroom, or compliance tool. Free for civic and academic use; commercial tiers fund the pipeline.



Real questions from buyers and integrators — straight answers.
An automated, real-time feed of official U.S. government activity — executive orders, senate resolutions, presidential nominations, and federal register actions — published the moment they hit the public record. Each post ships with a neutral AI-generated explanation, no editorial slant, and no partisan framing.
Directly from primary sources: federalregister.gov for executive orders and rulemakings, senate.gov and congress.gov for resolutions and votes, and whitehouse.gov for nomination announcements. Atlas indexes every action within minutes of publication and ships it through a fully automated pipeline — no journalism layer, no opinion column.
Explanations are generated from the action's primary text only — no editorial commentary, no sentiment scoring, no political framing. The model is constrained to summarize what the document says, which agencies and statutes it references, and what it changes from prior policy. Source URLs are always cited so any reader can verify the explanation against the document.
On X at @usgovfeed for the live stream, with a web archive and search interface coming soon. The feed is also exposed as a structured JSON API for developers building civic dashboards, news products, automation, and academic research tooling.
Yes. The public X feed is free to read and reshare under attribution. Commercial API access — high-throughput, SLA-backed, structured fields, webhook delivery — is available for products that need programmatic ingestion. Academic and non-profit research access is free; contact us with a project brief.
Most civic news products stand between the citizen and the document — adding framing, opinion, and a paywall. Atlas removes that layer. The feed is automated, primary-source, and AI-explained without editorial direction. The reader gets the action and the document; the interpretation is theirs to make.