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Senate Majority Leader John Thune said at a Republican leadership press conference on January 28, 2026, he won’t back efforts that “undermine law enforcement’s ability to do their job” while discussing DHS and election proposals. (twstalker.com) Thune said he will schedule a Senate vote on the SAVE Act and supports a revised bill requiring documentary proof of citizenship for registration and photo identification for ballots. (democracydocket.com) The bill is being amended and hasn’t cleared committee; passage faces filibuster hurdles needing 60 votes. (democracydocket.com) Supporters Sen. Mike Lee and Sen. Rick Scott praised the pledge, while Democrats and voting-rights groups warned it could suppress turnout. (dailysignal.com)
At a House Financial Services Committee hearing on May 7, 2025, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent clashed with ranking member Rep. Maxine Waters over inflation, tariffs and housing policy. Waters pressed Bessent to oppose the administration’s tariffs and blamed immigration and trade for affordability problems; he pushed back, prompting a heated back-and-forth in which Waters told Bessent to “shut up” and Bessent retorted, “Can you maintain some level of dignity?” Waters later complained to committee chair Rep. French Hill that Bessent had used up her time. The exchange underscored partisan tensions over U.S. economic and immigration policy and inflamed public debate. (congress.gov)
UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned the organization could be on the brink of financial collapse unless major contributors, especially the United States, resume full payments, citing roughly $2.2 billion owed to the U.N.’s regular (core) budget. He said record unpaid dues (about $1.57 billion at end of 2025) and near-exhausted liquidity risk preventing execution of the $3.45 billion 2026 budget and could force the U.N. to run out of cash by July 2026. Guterres urged member states to honor obligations or reform antiquated rules that require returning unspent funds, and warned immediate action is needed to avoid paralysis and disruption. (apnews.com)
Border czar Tom Homan announced that an unprecedented number of Minnesota counties are communicating with ICE and allowing federal authorities to take custody of noncitizens before they reach the streets. He said improved county and jail cooperation has enabled a drawdown of 700 federal immigration officers from Minnesota, though more redeployments hinge on continued local agreements. Homan framed the shift as increased operational efficiency amid Operation Metro Surge, saying targeted jail transfers reduce risky street arrests. Critics warn of legal and community trust issues, and statewide policies remain uneven across counties as negotiations over detention transfers and 48-hour holds ongoing. (fox9.com)
Spencer Pratt, the reality-TV star from The Hills, filed to run for Los Angeles mayor after losing his Pacific Palisades home in last year’s deadly wildfire. Announcing his bid at a “They Let Us Burn!” rally on Jan. 7, 2026, Pratt vowed to “expose the system,” targeting Mayor Karen Bass and promising a tough platform: force Bass from office, audit billions in homelessness spending for fraud, open the city’s books with a full government audit, and launch a surge crackdown on violent crime. Pratt says fires, homelessness, crime and corruption have left Los Angeles bleeding and pledged to clean house. (apnews.com)
President Donald Trump announced he will sign an executive order to eliminate mail‑in ballots and replace voting machines with “watermark” paper ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Calling mail voting and some machines corrupt and inaccurate, he said top lawyers are drafting the order and framed it as necessary to restore election honesty. Legal experts and news outlets note that states control election procedures and such an order would almost certainly face immediate constitutional challenges and logistical chaos, potentially disenfranchising overseas voters and people who rely on absentee voting. The announcement intensified debate over federal election authority and democratic norms. (forbes.com)
Do you support this? No. An order attempting to ban mail‑in voting or force states to scrap machines would likely exceed presidential authority, invite swift court challenges, and risk disenfranchising many voters. (cbsnews.com)
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Elon Musk, speaking on the Benny Johnson podcast on March 28, 2025, attacked federal judges and urged limits on foreign‑born or dual‑citizen jurists, saying many on the D.C. bench were “foreign” or still held non‑U.S. citizenship and arguing that dual allegiance should disqualify lifetime appointees. He pushed reforms including impeachment, stripping jurisdiction, and even a constitutional amendment to require sole U.S. citizenship for judges. Musk’s broad denunciations of the judiciary followed repeated social‑media posts calling court rulings a “judicial coup” and drew criticism and coverage from national outlets and legal observers. (podscripts.co)