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josh3736 | 1 year ago

I think it's just you.

The first paragraph is clear to me. There is a law that allows workers to sue employers. There's a group trying to repeal it. Presumably repeal benefits businesses at the expense of workers. A political compromise has stopped the repeal efforts.

To this native speaker, "headed off" is a perfectly cromulent term: https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=headed+off Even if it's not something you might hear in everyday speech, I'd say it's commonly used in political journalism.

The article itself is written well enough, provides enough background and context to give you a general idea of what's happening without editorializing. In other words, it's decent journalism.

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standardUser|1 year ago

How could this article be less informative? A third of it is empty quotes from biased advocates.

Hnrobert42|1 year ago

Headed off embiggens us all.