Tuesday, June 23, 2026

DO DEMOCRATIC CONSULTANTS EVEN WANT DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES TO WIN?

Last night I clicked on an MS NOW story about the Texas Senate race:
James Talarico has a new ad — with millions behind it

Texas Democrat James Talarico is jumping headlong into his Senate bid against Republican Ken Paxton with a multi-million dollar ad buy, MS NOW has learned.

The Senate candidate, who is hoping to become the first Democrat to win statewide in Texas since 1994, is launching what his team is labeling his first “major” ad of the general election....
Not just a new ad, but "his first 'major' ad of the general election," "with millions behind it"? Wow! Talarico's team must have worked really hard on the ad, right? With this kind of investment, and with the campaign proudly displaying the spot to the national media, the results really ought to be special!

They aren't. The ad is terrible. It's generic Chuck Schumer/Hakeem Jeffries-style mush.
In the 30-second spot, shared first with MS NOW, Talarico talks straight to camera while exiting a Red & White food store, a brown paper bag of groceries in hand. The campaign notes that the truck on screen is his own.

“Too many Texans feel like they’re drowning. The cost of groceries, gas, health care,” he says, pledging — if elected to the Senate — that he will “keep fighting to lower your costs.”



We're told, "The spot notably doesn’t directly mention Talarico’s general election rival — Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton." Talarico does say, "I'll take on corruption," which we're supposed to understand as an extremely subtle jab at Paxton, but why not mention his name? Instead, Talarico brags about how bipartisan he is: "In the state house, I brought both parties together to make life more affordable."

Are the consultants who created this ad and decided to spend millions on it releasing it to show Democrats nationwide how hard they're fighting to win this seat? Or did they create and promote this ad to reassure billionaire Democratic donors that Talarico isn't one of those Democrats -- the ones who want to tax the rich and stir up (justifiable) populist anger?

Talarico has campaigned at times like an economic populist. If you go to his campaign site, the first video you see is one he posted in September, in which he says the following:
The biggest divide in our country is not left versus right. It's top versus bottom. Billionaires want us looking left and right at each other so that we're not looking up at them. The people at the top work so hard to keep us angry and divided because our unity is a threat to their wealth and their power. So, their social media algorithms and their cable news networks tear us apart. They divide us by party, by race, by gender, by religion so that we don't notice that they're defunding our schools, gutting our healthcare, and cutting taxes for themselves and their rich friends. It is the oldest strategy in the world. Divide and conquer. But we will not be conquered.



The consultants might say that this was a good message for a Democratic primary, but the affordability mush in the new ad is a better message for a general election in a Republican-dominated state. That's nonsense. Every voter now thinks there's a powerful "they" in charge of everything. Solidly Republican voters believe the powerful "they" are sinister Democratic elitists, but everyone else in the electorate is up for grabs. They know someone is thriving while they're drowning. Talarico has a chance here to speak to that anger, but the consultants don't want him to.

I've begun to believe that the Democratic consultant class thinks the greatest danger facing America is not corpo-authoritarian Republican extremism, but rather the possibility that left-populists might win real power in a Democratic White House or Congress. They fear the Democratic Socialists of America more than they fear the Heritage Foundation. They want Democratic candidates to suppress populist anger, because the rich donors whose interests they serve are afraid of where that anger might lead.

Or maybe they just have an outdated view of what swing voters want: nothing unsettling, nothing bold, just empty talk about affordability. And while they insist that they're trying to solve the problem of the Democratic Party's broad unpopularity in America, it seems clear that they're a main reason for that unpopularity. So they might be leading the party into a period of sustained powerlessness, squandering the opportunity to persuade voters that Democrats are the party of real change, at a time when the leader of the other party is the most widely despised politician of the century.

Monday, June 22, 2026

THE HOTTEST NEWS IS MURDOCHLAND IS ABOUT TWO PEOPLE WHO AREN'T EVEN IN OFFICE ANYMORE

Republicans obviously want the 2026 midterms to be about anything other than Donald Trump's presidency, so it's no surprise that at 9:00 Monday moring, the lead story at Rupert Murdoch's Fox News and the lead story at Murdoch's New York Post were about two guys who aren't even working in the government anymore.

At Fox:


And at the Post:


The Fox story focuses on Lindy Li, a former Democratic fundraiser who's been flipped by the GOP and is now a professional Democrat-hater. Her upcoming book, Unburdened: A Former Democrat Insider’s Shocking Account of Political Power, Betrayal, and Party Collapse, will be published (by Murdoch's book-publishing company, HarperCollins) on September 15, just around the time early voting starts in the midterms. That's how the Republican media machine wants to motivate voters -- not just by saying Democrats are evil, but by saying Democrats were evil two years ago.

Or according to the New York Post, six years ago -- that's the point of the lead item there. Anthony Fauci, who is Democratic-coded in the eyes of Republicans even though he served presidents of both parties, is (according to the Post's Miranda Devine and outgoing director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard) linked to a lab leak that brought us COVID (even though we still don't really know where the COVID virus originated, and even though Republicans have long insisted that COVID is no worse than the flu). This is meant to motivate Republican voters who never feared COVID in the first place, and who are sure that it can be easily cured with ivermectin in any case. And it will motivate them.

The average D.C. Democrat will denounce Trump and his or her election opponent, but not Republicans as a whole, and certainly not a wide range of Republicans. Republicans, by contrast, incessantly denounce Democrats (and figures presumed to be Democrats), not just for what they're doing now but for what they did many years ago. Republicans stir up grievances, then sustain those grievances forever.

And this works. The GOP is a party with a hugely unpopular president, but it might survive the midterms with minimal damage.


Some Democrats are doing a decent job of directing voters' rage, but Republicans have a huge head start -- and a massive back catalog of grievances.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

OF COURSE TRUMP SUPPORTERS GENUINELY BELIEVE HIS LIES ABOUT THE REFLECTING POOL

President Trump is making preposterous claims about what's happening to the Reflecting Pool in D.C. He's ordering people to be detained for imaginary crimes.
President Trump said on Saturday that “multiple individuals” had been arrested for vandalizing the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, and that problems with a more than $14 million renovation project had become so severe that the pool would likely have to be at least partly drained for “necessary repairs.”

... Among those accused of vandalism was David Carter Hearn, 67, a cyclist and three-time Olympian as a canoeist who says he stopped at the site on Friday just to have a look, then reached down to touch a strip of peeling blue paint mixed with the algae.

The U.S. Park Police arrested Mr. Hearn shortly after, accusing him of destroying government property, a crime that can carry up to a 10-year prison sentence. Mr. Hearn denies the charge.

... The administration has not released the names of others accused of vandalizing the pool, a crime that Mr. Trump said on Saturday could lead to “years in jail.” In a later post, he said without evidence that vandals had “poured corrosive and destructive chemicals into the Pool.”
Trump's critics, most of whom are rational, intelligent people, appear to assume that his base knows he's lying about the vandalism.

I never get used to how much cultists will degrade themselves by pretending to believe this lunatic’s nonsense.

[image or embed]

— Great Popehat My Honor (@kenwhite.bsky.social) June 21, 2026 at 5:11 AM

Another Bluesky commenter writes:
Didn't we establish that the obviousness of the lie is part of the power play? It's clear bullshit but they can punish people with it, and that's what his voters love, that it doesn't *matter* it's a lie.
But they don't think his lies about the Reflecting Pool are lies. They believe him.

Here are some of the top comments in response to a Fox News story about the Reflecting Pool:
Ruining a $14.8 million dollar job. How is that a misdemeanor? They should all be convicted felons with full restitution orders.

****

You know, I never cared for Biden, Obama or Clinton's policies, but I sure the hecks wouldn't vandalize my own country.

****

If I just finished a 52-mile bike ride, reaching into a reflecting pool to touch peeling sealant to see what it felt like wouldn't be the first thing on my mind! He's an idiot!

****

Juvenile delinquents vandalize. Those are actual adults behaving like juvenile delinquents.

****

It is beyond belief. An American would vandalize a national monument because he hates the president who renovated the pool. Have democrats completely gone crazy?

****

Vandalizing a national monument is a serious felony folks! The perps need to have the maximum sentence available! This is getting out of hand! Nasty people!

****

It takes a really awful person to vandalize a monument that the government is attempting to restore to its former glory

****

Those 'Love Not Hate' folks sure are hateful.
In response to a New York Post story, there's this:
Why would he think that he could just start messing around with a monument in DC, and nothing would happen?
Make this vandal pay for the repairs. Shameless this is a national monument, not a Trump monument; doing this on our 250th anniversary is a double disgrace for these criminal vandals.

****

These vandals defacing government property by ripping out the liner need to pay for the replacement repairs of the liner. This was a multimillion $ restoration project! Even if you don't like the current president, you can't just vandalize the white house property ! This guy is an older man. His last Olympic competition was over 26 years ago. Make him and the other vandals pay!!!!

****

I'm an avid bike rider and I never once stopped riding my bike and reached into a fountain to pull out a floating piece of plastic. I'm weird like that.

****

What did I do ! What did I do! The common phase used by criminals.

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The white version of "I dint do nuffin"
The comments in response to Breitbart's story are more of the same:
President Trump is working to Make America Great Again! Democrats only try to destroy America.

****

Democrats only doing what Democrats do.

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It's so incredibly stupid, it's gotta be Democrats. They prefer the unhealthy large germ factory.

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Lock them up with no trial and keep them in the DC jail for as long as possible. Then throw the book at them like they did to Grandma and Grandpa for trespassing. Only this is vandalism.

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Let them meet in jail the people they've been rooting for and see how that goes.

****

For someone to be filled with so much hatred toward Trump that they would act like children destroying hard work and beautiful things our taxes paid for is beyond comprehension. And to think, every bit of the hatred learned by them was deceitfully installed in their weak little minds by their handlers who are only using them until they get what they want: the destruction of our country.

****

Democrats seek to: MAKE AMERICA A S**THOLE FOREVER
And at Gateway Pundit:
The progressive Democrats are insane. They are literally mentally ill.

Wearing shirts that say TEAM ALGAE and knifing the pool liner are not the actions of a mentally balanced individual. We are seeing mass hysteria becoming mass insanity.

****

End times, expect it to get way, way, worse.

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Demonic

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Demonic manifestations will become almost normal. Just in the last 10 years we've seen this type of demonic activity increase 100 fold. Expect it to increase a 1000+ fold in the coming years.

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Beheadings (of whites) has gotten way too common in this country.

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Team Algae should be declared a terrorist organization and the charges upgraded to reflect that.. I’m not kidding either

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What the F is wrong with these lunatics? They are enemy combatants of the United States and should be treated as such.

****

They were indoctrinated in our schools to hate our country. That is what happens when you let people who openly hate your country run the education system for multiple generations. Add to that, these same people controlled most of the mass-media.

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The enemy within.

****

This is some serious TDS. Although, kids today are taught to hate America from their first day in school.

Seems to me root cause is not the crime you see. All these Dim really just trying to get their guts pushed in and if they go to jail they will get all the LOVE they want... They are Dims so they lust to have anything jammed in their bungholios...
I should probably stop there.

America has a two-party system. Members of the Democratic Party regularly say that they think America needs a strong Republican Party. They praise bipartisanship and "working across the aisle." They get their news from outlets like The New York Times that are often harshly critical of their own party.

Members of the Republican Party get their news from Fox, which depicts Democrats as uniformly evil -- Republican-hating, America-despising, crime-loving, chaos-admiring psychopaths. Of course these people believe that evil Democrats (with "Trump derangement syndrome") deliberately vandalized the Reflecting Pool. Of course they don't believe this was a botched restoration -- they don't believe Trump is capable of doing a bad job.

They're nearly 40% of the country -- and they vote. Yet our political culture never argues that they're the problem. Our political culture believes that, as Toby Buckle puts it, "the right must be understood, but never blamed." And that's why America is in this mess.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

THERE'S NOTHING INHERENTLY WORKING-CLASS ABOUT WANTING TO FIGHT THE VILLAINS

The New Republic's Greg Sargent recently wrote about some research conducted for the Democratic group American Bridge that tried to determine the kinds of party messages that might appeal to white working-class voters who've lost faith in Donald Trump. I know that Democrats always try to win over disaffected Republicans, and it rarely works -- but it's true that the voters in the study aren't happy and blame both Trump and the GOP for what's wrong these days. They might listen to Democrats, for once:
... among the targeted constituencies ... a certain type of economic messaging resonates. It blames insurance companies and other conglomerates for high medical and prescription drug costs and hits big corporations for price gouging and tax avoidance. It blames Trump and Republicans for allowing these things to happen. And finally, that messaging vows that Democrats will crack down on them.

Similarly, regions hit hard by Trump’s tariffs and Iran-war-related costs are very responsive to arguments about those things. Among targeted voters in Iowa’s 1st and 2nd districts, for instance, one message that resonates hits Republicans for backing Trump’s tariffs and his war with Iran, arguing that they’ve hiked grocery and energy costs and hurt farmers who export goods. In short, what appears to work is a populist economics that centers villains, hits Trump and Republicans for enabling them, and pledges action.
John Stoehr thinks a message focused on villains appeals to something special in the white working-class brain.
... that word gets at something important about the white working class. These voters ... have been primed to gobble up messaging that names the bad guy. Only instead of "insurance companies and other conglomerates," the villains have been "criminal illegal aliens" or some other other. The white working class is persuaded by messaging that clearly identifies the criminal, the crime and the punishment, to wit: The brown guy is stealing from you, so crack down on him.

Maga messaging also taps into the fundamental nature of the white working-class voters, which is that, above and beyond all else, they are hierarchical. The belief that society has a top-down structure is fixed. That's why they can apply the word "entitled" to people at the bottom of the social order – undeserving "welfare queens" – as well as people at the top – the undeserving rich. Neither has earned their place. One wants everything given to them. The other has already had everything given to them. Both are "entitled."
Stoehr continues:
For a decade, the GOP has oriented white working-class voters so they look downward only. The trick for the Democrats is reversing that orientation, so the criminal, the crime and the punishment are just as clear looking upward, to wit: The rich are stealing from you, so crack down on them.
I understand what Stoehr is getting at, but I think a lot of this is wrong, and a little bit patronizing.

First of all, if being "hierarchical" means believing "that society has a top-down structure," who's more hierarchical than educated progressives? We believe that the rich have way too much money and politcal power. Our anti-Trump movement is called No Kings. Many of us quote the aphorism "It is easier to imagine an end to the world than an end to capitalism."

Beyond that, if white working-class voters really believed that society's "top-down structure is fixed," they wouldn't want the rich taxed at a higher level, as even some Republicans do now. They wouldn't oppose the construction of data centers by wealthy tech firms, as some Republicans (though far more independents and Democrats) do now.

Do you know who's really hierarchical, in Stoehr's sense? Voters who still admire Trump despite all the maladministration they've seen. These are the people who think Trump's billionaire status and gold-plated life are signs that God wants him to be rich and powerful. Even now, they wallow in AI images in which he bestrides the world like a Colossus. No Democrat is getting their votes, ever.

Stoehr writes:
Progressives who do not come from the white working class may not be aware that working-class white Americans are essentially illiberal, in the sense that they will resist liberal attempts to flatten the top-down structure of society. In that resistance, however, lies an opportunity. It is because they are illiberal that they are not only open to a message of retribution, but attracted by it. They already know who's screwing them. What they don't know is who's going to make it right. The Democratic candidate's job is to tell them.
I'm a progressive who comes from the white working class. If you "resist liberal attempts to flatten the top-down structure of society," does that mean you're "illiberal"? Or does it mean you worry that the would-be flatteners will just become a new set of elites screwing you? (That's certainly what Fox News has told them -- for several decades, not just the decade of Trump.)

And again, if they're "open to a message of retribution," doesn't that mean they are receptive to at least some flattening?

I think what's going on is a lot simpler. A certain percentage of white working-class Americans now believe they're being shafted by a Republican president and his party, and they want action. There's nothing uniquely working-class about wanting action -- suburban Democratic women want action, too. Here's a scene from a gathering of Democrats in the Cleveland suburbs, as reported by The Atlantic's Elaine Godfrey. The chair of the Ohio Democratic Party, Kathleen Clyde, is struggling to win over voters (mostly women) who should be receptive to her message:
“What are we going to do differently?” one woman asked, pointing out that the Democrats’ brand is terrible. Eventually, the microphone was abandoned, and another woman asked: “Why don’t the Democrats have a good message?” A third woman chimed in, a little frantically: “What can we do?!”

Clyde’s eyes were wide. She hadn’t expected friendly fire. “We do have a good message!” she sputtered. “Affordability!” But the women smelled weakness, and now, several of them were shouting at once. “How are you going to do that?” one demanded. “It has to be more specific!”
The weak tea Democrats seem to be offering is We're laser-focused on affordability! with no specifics. The liberal women in that Ohio gathering will sigh wearily and vote for that message, even though they find it lacking. But even very disaffected ex-Trump voters in the white working class probably won't.

How did Mikie Sherill score a double-digit win in the New Jersey gubernatorial race last year? In part, by promising to freeze utility bills.


How did Zohran Mamdani win the mayor's race in New York City last year? In part, by promising to freeze rents.


Don't think of white working-class voters as dumb palookas who want combat because that's what appeals to their primitive brains. Think of them as normal people who feel as roughed up by the powers that be as we do, and want to hear what specifically Democrats will do to intervene in the beatdown, just the way we do.

Friday, June 19, 2026

IT'S EASY TO DELEGITIMIZE DEMOCRACY IF YOU DELEGITIMIZE HALF THE ELECTORATE

A few days ago on Bluesky, I made what was probably an overly gloomy prediction, in response to the increasing calls on the right for an end to female suffrage:


I tried to make the case that the right really could take away women's right to vote sometime in the next few decades, but I didn't have much of answer to the obvious question: How do you overturn a right that's unambiguously in the Constitution without a superseding constitutional amendment, which probably couldn't be ratified by 38 state legislatures? Tossing out the heart of the Voting Rights Act is easy by comparison -- it's not in the Constitution. The right to an abortion isn't explicitly in the Constitution. But the 19th Amendment -- "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex" -- is as close to unambiguous as anything in our law.

So if right-wingers can't really take away women's right to vote, why are so many of them talking about doing that?

I think this is how they hope to delegitimize elections that don't go their way in the future, especially in places where their losses can't be attributed to the groups they usually demonize. On right-wing rhetoric about those groups, Jamelle Bouie writes, referencing Donald Trump's claims of fraud in the 2020 election:
There was a reason ... that Trump centered his crusade on ferreting out “illegal votes”; there was a reason he focused on cities with large Black populations like Atlanta, Detroit, Milwaukee and Philadelphia; and there was a reason that when his supporters fought their way into the Capitol, they unfurled Confederate flags to mark their achievement.

The president’s convoluted and false claims about “fraud” were little more than a smoke screen for a more basic claim about who belongs to the community — about who counts as a voter and who counts as a citizen. To say that Democratic victories in Pennsylvania or Georgia were the product of fraud in Philadelphia or Atlanta was to say, in short, that the wrong people were voting. And in the same way that Trump’s “birtherism” wasn’t really about whether Barack Obama was born in the United States, his crusade to “stop the steal” wasn’t about the nation’s election procedures. It was a declaration that the only real voters were his own.
Bouie is a person whose ideas are based in facts and reason, and I think he imagines that Donald Trump is the same way. He asserts that Trump knows he lost the 2020 election, and suggests Trump is arguing that non-white Americans' votes are inherently illegitimate instead of arguing that real fraud took place.

I believe that Trump is making both arguments, and that his case for a rigged election works on a reptile-brain level, and doesn't need to make logical sense. Pallets of fake ballots are being trucked in! Black people are voting! Black people are counting the ballots! It's a rhetorical layer cake, and you get both People we don't like are voting! and Democrats always cheat! in every bite.

Now, imagine that you could delegitimize the votes not just of a minority of the population, but of half the population. Enter the "women shouldn't vote" propaganda campaign.

On a basic level, the message is: Women shouldn't vote because they don't have real adult brains, so they vote the wrong way. See point #2 in this video from Tania Shaw, a Christian-right influencer:


Shaw says:
Women voting never should have been legalized because women vote emotionally, and they primarily vote for the right to kill their babies, and for woke things like gay marriage and men in women's bathrooms and trans ideologies.
In the manosphere, the belief that men are logical and women are emotional is near-universal. So this message appeals to resentful young men.

But the message here isn't just Yes, women are legally entitled to vote, but they shouldn't be because they vote liberal, therefore elections won by liberals are illegitimate. In addition, female suffrage is blamed for liberal immigration policies, which leads to voter fraud and (in the right's view) a civilizational apocalypse.

This isn't an American tweet, but it's a message many on the American right fully agree with:


HH was responding to this:


On the right (globally), opposition to women's suffrage is tied to white nationalist eliminationism. The message is this: Democracy is a sham and Those People are running rampant because women get to vote.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

THE GOP CAPITULATIONS BEGIN

Lindsey Graham was one of the first Republican critics of President Trump's Iran capitulation. A bad sign for Trump? Nahhh -- since then, Graham has caved:
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on Wednesday commended the new memorandum of understanding (MOU) signed by the U.S. and Iran, after previously expressing skepticism about the state of negotiations between the two nations.

The senator shared in a social media post Wednesday afternoon that he had a “very lengthy and productive discussion” with special envoy Steve Witkoff about the negotiations.

“After this discussion, it is my opinion that signing the MOU will be beneficial to the United States, in as much as the Strait of Hormuz will begin to open, and the hostilities with Iran will stop,” Graham wrote.

“Whether or not the United States can reach an acceptable, verifiable deal with Iran regarding its nuclear program and other issues is yet to be determined, but I see little downside to trying,” he continued. “The economic stability that comes from opening up the Strait and the cessation of hostilities could create a pathway to peace well beyond the Iranian conflict.”
Rupert Murdoch's New York Post was initially skeptical:
On Wednesday morning, the front page of The New York Post offered a critical view of the administration. “Trump devastated Iran, now he hits them with a ... LOVEBOMB,” the right-leaning tabloid’s front page blared, above an image of a burning American flag and text saying that Mr. Trump’s deal showered Iran’s leaders with “cash — and no sanctions.”
But last night the Post published an opinion piece by Miranda Devine that reaches North Korean levels of praise for Dear Leader.
Trump is showing the world, G7 leaders who’s the ‘boss’ and deserves respect for his deal-making

“I’m the boss,” President Trump joked when he arrived a bit late to a meeting with G7 leaders in France Wednesday.

He is.

That’s what his detractors forget.

America is “the boss” again, the colossus.

Iran doesn’t bully us.

Israel doesn’t instruct us.

Europe can sneer at Donald Trump all it likes, but it’s a supplicant.

China respects us.

Canada bows.

Trump understands power, and it rests easy on his shoulders.

He joked about it at the G7 in his relaxed American fashion, and European leaders now get it.

They laughed along, but they understood.
Devine goes on in this vein for many more paragraphs, some of which have more than one sentence. It's the verbal equivalent of those AI-slop cartoons that depict trump as a shirtless two-fisted brawler with a six-pack.

Sometimes you can almost hear Republicans gritting their teeth and defending Trump policies they hate:
On Wednesday’s broadcast of CNN’s “The Source,” Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) defended letting Iran get immediate waivers to sell oil....

Host Kaitlan Collins asked, “In 2021, you said that relieving sanctions on Iran, in your words, would ‘only contribute to more terror attacks against America and its allies,’ this includes lifting sanctions on Iran. If they have 60 to $70 billion a year that they get from oil, will America be safer?”

Marshall answered, “I think under this agreement they will be. Look, you’re comparing a different set of time what was going [on] in ’21 to today. It’s a completely different day. We are now negotiating from a point of power. Look, this is a two-way agreement. You can’t have everything you want. And all the president is doing is letting them start [to] get back on their feet. I really think this probably only means about $30 billion. They’re already selling about $30 billion a year in oil. This will probably bring it up to $60 billion. Their whole economy, maybe 4 or $500 billion. So I think you have to let them help themselves a little bit here as well. But everything beyond this is a trust, but verify situation. So let’s give them a chance. Even this just for 60 days. Let’s give them a chance to start bringing their economy back together, rather than Americans dumping money in, that what was what Barack Obama did.”

Later, Collins asked, “There’s no requirement they have to meet to get waivers to sell oil. They can start doing that right now. Are you okay with that?”

Marshall answered, “Absolutely. I think, again, we had to get them to sign the document. So, we gave that up in response for them giving up their nukes. So, I would give them $30 billion of their own money back for them to agree to never build a nuclear weapon? Of course. I’ll take that deal every time. And President Trump leveraged that, I think, perfectly.”
Gas prices are dropping. As the midterms approach, that's primarily what Republicans want because they know that's the main thing Americans care about.

These Republicans know that Trump sold America out. They know that Iran won. But at the end of the day, the party will rally around Trump, because that's what Republicans do.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

IN THE RIGHT-WING BUBBLE, THEY DON'T THINK J.D. VANCE IS A LOSER

J.D. Vance might not be the 2028 Republican presidential nominee, and he might lose the general election if he is the nominee. But if you think he's too juiceless and unlikable to win support even among Republicans, you haven't peered into the right-wing bubble.

You might think Vance's appearance on The View yesterday was awkward for him, or even a disaster -- the headline in Britain's Independent was "JD Vance Went on The View and Got Absolutely Torn to Shreds by Middle-Aged Women." AP's lede was this:
Vice President JD Vance, appearing Tuesday on ABC’s “The View” to promote his newly released memoir on faith, was put on the spot from the first question, peppered for nearly an hour on Jeffrey Epstein, the economy, immigration and other issues facing the Trump administration.
You might think that Rupert Murdoch's media properties are likely to put their collective thumb on the scale for Marco Rubio in 2028, based on this Axios preview of the new Maggie Haberman/Jonathan Swan book:
In a scene from the forthcoming "Regime Change," President Trump asks a guest at a private dinner last year to compare Vice President Vance to Secretary of State Marco Rubio.... this time, the judge was Rupert Murdoch.

And with Vance and Rubio sitting awkwardly at the table, Murdoch was notably more effusive about Rubio....

Trump asked Murdoch who he liked best between Vance and Rubio, with the president adding: "They're both great."

Trump: "What do you think of JD?"

Murdoch: "Well ... I think JD has the potential to be great."

Trump: "And what do you think of Marco?"

Murdoch answered immediately: "Marco is brilliant."
But much of the right-wing media admires Vance because he battles the libs and fights the culture wars. Here was the lead story at Breitbart earlier this morning:
Vice President JD Vance and other Republicans have criticized Major League Baseball (MLB) for warning players against wearing Bible verses during Pride Night.

... The incident occurred last Friday when Giants right-hander Landen Roupp displayed “Gen 9:12-16” on his Pride Night hat, which was followed by relievers JT Brubaker and Ryan Walker also featuring Bible verses on their official Pride Night hats.

“The writing on the cap violates our rules, and consistent with normal practice, we have warned the players about future violations,” Pat Courtney, MLB’s chief communications officer, told The Athletic on Monday.

Vice President JD Vance responded to a Sports Illustrated post on X reporting the reprimand.

“Trump won, we don’t have to do this anymore,” said Vance.
And on the subject of that appearance on The View, Vance is getting praise from legacy right-wing sites like RedState (headline: "JD Vance Ventures Onto 'The View,' Serves Up an Unforgettable Schooling") as well as from contemporary Republican influencers:


Other Republican candidates might seem more personable or presidential, but Vance likes to bang heads with Trump critics -- probably less out of loyalty to Trump than because he simply likes fighting with liberals. He enjoys the culture war. Nobody's asking him to weigh in on baseball's Pride Night -- he just did it, apparently for the sheer joy of fighting.

Marco Rubio will do this kind of thing if he's asked to, but Vance clearly enjoys it more. He didn't need to go on The View -- I'm sure he could have limited himself to a few mainstream-media TV appearances where he wouldn't face questioning from a team of hostile interviewers. He wanted this. That's why I still think he's the candidate to beat in the 2028 Republican primaries.