Friday, June 5, 2026

The Collapse Was Not an Accident

The Collapse Was Not an Accident

The Collapse Was Not an Accident
AP Photo/Eugene Garcia, File

Katie Abraham should still be alive.

Instead, my youngest daughter was killed because government systems failed to stop dangers they were supposed to prevent.

Her death was not just one man’s actions. It was the result of reckless policies, weakened enforcement, diffused accountability, and political leaders who placed ideology above public safety.

And Katie is far from alone.

Across America, innocent people are killed, victimized, and left carrying lifelong trauma because systems repeatedly fail to intervene before preventable tragedy occurs.

What has been most staggering since Katie’s death is the reaction afterward.

Instead of confronting failed policies, too many politicians spend their time defending broken systems. Public safety concerns are dismissed as political attacks. Critics are ignored. The priority becomes protecting narratives and preserving power.

Even worse, many of these same leaders spend enormous energy attacking law enforcement while excusing or rationalizing people who repeatedly break the rules that hold civilized societies together. Increasingly, political sympathy seems reserved for offenders, activists, and ideological causes rather than ordinary citizens expected to absorb the consequences quietly.

Meanwhile, families like mine are left staring at graves.

Katie’s death reveals something larger than one policy or one administration. It reveals how modern government systems themselves increasingly produce these outcomes.

One of the great political illusions of modern history is the belief that centralized systems fail because the wrong people take power.

History teaches the opposite.

The systems themselves reward the wrong people.

Over time, these systems reward people who hold power, not people who tell the truth. They reward self-preservation, narrative management, and institutional loyalty over honesty and accountability.

This pattern appears throughout history.

Communism and socialism did not repeatedly fail because compassionate idealists briefly lost control. Systems built around centralized power inevitably attract ambitious people detached from the citizens forced to live with the consequences of their decisions.

Yet after decades of repression, corruption, economic failure, and human suffering produced by these systems, many modern political movements still argue that the solution is more centralized power.

More bureaucracy.
More dependency.
More government control over daily life.

All while existing government systems already struggle to perform their most basic responsibilities competently.

History is clear. Societies grounded in liberty, decentralized authority, free enterprise, private property rights, and personal accountability have consistently produced more prosperity, stability, innovation, and opportunity than heavily centralized systems ever have.

At some point, government expansion stops being governance and becomes institutional self-preservation.

And when the government tries to do everything, it eventually becomes incapable of doing anything well.

Unlike the private sector, government rarely faces real corrective pressure when it fails. When private organizations fail repeatedly, customers leave, leadership changes, investors walk away, and organizations collapse if they refuse to adapt.

Government often works in reverse.

When government fails, politicians rarely change course. They demand more money, more power, and less accountability. Failure becomes justification for expanding the very systems that created it.

Illinois’ sanctuary-state framework is a perfect example.

Governor JB Pritzker and his political allies, including Dick Durbin, Tammy Duckworth, Toni Preckwinkle, Alexi Giannoulias, Kwame Raoul, and the Illinois supermajority, spent years weakening cooperation with federal immigration enforcement while dismissing public safety concerns as political attacks.

To be clear, the argument is not that illegal immigrants commit more or less crime than anyone else.

That misses the point.

The real question is simple:

Do government policies increase or decrease preventable harm to innocent people?

In Katie Abraham’s case, it is impossible to honestly argue that these policies reduced risk. They weakened enforcement, diluted accountability, reduced intervention opportunities, and allowed preventable danger to persist longer than it otherwise would have.

The TRUST Act.
The Way Forward Act.
Expanded driver’s licenses.
Reduced cooperation with ICE.
Expanded benefits regardless of immigration status.

Each policy was defended.
Each warning was dismissed.
Each criticism was politicized.

Until innocent people ended up dead.

And even afterward, the instinct was self-protection.

Protection of narratives.
Protection of policies.
Protection of political reputations.

Entrenched systems protect themselves first.

Always.

Because once institutions become large enough, preserving institutional legitimacy becomes more important than confronting failure honestly.

That is how societies decline. Not usually through one dramatic collapse, but through layers of tolerated incompetence, diffused accountability, ideological rigidity, and leadership classes disconnected from the citizens forced to live with the consequences.

Katie should still be alive.

And no carefully managed political language changes the fact that multiple layers of government failed the most basic responsibility any government has: protecting innocent citizens from preventable harm.

The collapse was foreseeable.

And the people responsible are still pretending it was unavoidable.

https://townhall.com/columnists/joe-abraham/2026/06/03/the-collapse-was-not-an-accident-n2677113?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-hfpAdhPjpJ&utm_term=&_nlid=hfpAdhPjpJ&_nhids=ncgMncLWuDQnls

Mamdani Is Running the Classic Socialist Playbook: Blaming Capitalism for Problems the Government Created

Mamdani Is Running the Classic Socialist Playbook: Blaming Capitalism for Problems the Government Created

Mamdani Is Running the Classic Socialist Playbook: Blaming Capitalism for Problems the Government Created
AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura

Socialists like New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani rely on a tried-and-true political strategy: convincing people that government is never truly trying to address their problems. The narrative is essential to their political appeal because, if people believe nothing is being done, they become more willing to support expanding government power in the hope that figures like Mamdani will finally deliver results. 

Daniel Di Martino, an economist and fellow at the Manhattan Institute, highlighted the dynamic, arguing that Mamdani is relying on New Yorkers' lack of awareness about the steps their government has already taken to address issues such as the housing affordability crisis. More importantly, many voters do not realize that the government itself played a major role in creating and exacerbating the problem in the first place.

"Where are we headed in New York?" Fox News' Trey Gowdy asked.

"Well, I think New York is going to continue to decline, especially on the housing front, which is the most important part of cost of living, right?" Di Martino replied. "I think that the mayor wants people to believe that there's already nothing happening in the city, as if everybody was being taken advantage by landlords, when the truth is most renters in New York City live in either rent-stabilized apartments or in government housing."

"And his supposed capital investment is actually an idea to expand government housing. Who wants to live in public housing, Trey, really?" he asked. "Who wants to turn their apartment into government housing? That is what the Mamdani Plan is. And it does do some cosmetic improvements in, say, permitting. But the problem of building in Manhattan, in Brooklyn, in even Staten Island, is not this cosmetic thing."

"It's really basic things, that it's just illegal to build large buildings in many parts of the city," Di Martino said. "It's that the unions control the construction sector, and it's the most expensive place to build and for labor in the entire planet. And so that's why it's so expensive to build, and that's why it's so expensive to live in New York."

In other words, rather than address basic issues that could bring down housing costs, Mamdani would rather enact policies that make it seem as though he's the city's savior. 

So instead of reforming zoning laws, repealing rent-control policies, or dramatically increasing the housing supply, Mamdani wants to impose new burdens on struggling landlords who already face the crushing weight of the city's regulatory structure. At the same time, he is pushing for additional rent-control measures that are set to further reduce the quality and availability of housing.

In an announcement last week, Mamdani even revealed plans to seize poorly managed properties from "bad landlords" and transfer them to nonprofits, community organizations, and even tenants themselves, a proposal that would only deepen New York City's housing problems.

The trick with socialists is often the same in the United States: when there is a problem in society, claim government is the only engine capable of solving it. When government exacerbates the problem with its solutions, shift the blame to corporations and “capitalism,” and then try the process over again.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/dmitri-bolt/2026/06/02/economist-rips-into-mamdanis-housing-plan-n2677037?utm_source=thdailypmvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-S4nAcXq3KT&utm_term=&_nlid=S4nAcXq3KT&_nhids=nc53XulvfGN1ls

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Forget the Consumer Surveys, Businesses Say We’re in a Boom

Forget the Consumer Surveys, Businesses Say We’re in a Boom

Gloom and doom is everywhere these days — except in the economic data or in business planning meetings.

Surveys of consumers suggest that these are the worst of times. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index keeps hitting all-time lows. The Economist/YouGov poll shows 63 percent of Americans say the economy is getting worse, including a third of Trump voters. Eighty-four percent of Democrats say we are either already in a recession or likely to be in one in the next 12 months.

Businesses aren’t seeing it. The Atlanta Fed released its latest Survey of Business Uncertainty on Tuesday, and the results are worth reading carefully — especially by anyone who has spent the past several months waiting for the American economy to crack under the weight of war, energy costs, and uncertainty. It has not cracked. If anything, the businesses that actually run the economy appear to be betting on something closer to expansion.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell in New York on May 27, 2026. (ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images)

The survey’s smoothed index showed firms expecting sales revenue to grow 5.1 percent over the next 12 months in May. That number deserves some historical context. Before COVID, when the economy was humming along through what now looks like a golden era of low inflation and steady growth, the survey averaged 4.5 percent.

During the normalization period of late 2023 through late 2024 — after the post-pandemic boom had faded but before the current run-up — it averaged just 4.1 percent.

The current regime, running from early 2025 (not coincidentally, matching Trump’s return to office) through May, has averaged just under five percent. In other words, businesses are not projecting a return to normal. They are projecting something better than normal. The 5.1 percent May reading matches, almost exactly, the average from the post-COVID expansion boom of 2022 and early 2023.

This is not the survey of an economy bracing for a downturn.

Strong Employment in a Slow-Growing Workforce

Expected employment growth came in at 1.5 percent for the year ahead in May, down from 1.7 percent in April and 2.3 percent at the February peak. Taken at face value that looks like deteriorating hiring intentions. But looks are deceiving here.

The labor market is operating under a constraint that most standard economic indicators were not designed to measure. Dallas Fed economists estimated earlier this year that break-even employment growth — the monthly job gains required to hold the unemployment rate steady — had fallen from roughly 250,000 per month in 2023 to near zero by late 2025. The primary driver was the sharp reduction in labor-force growth that followed the tightening of immigration enforcement. When the inflow of new workers slows dramatically, the economy needs far fewer new hires just to stay even.

That changes what 1.5 percent employment growth means. In 2023, when break-even was around 250,000 a month, expected employment growth of 1.5 percent was treading water at best. Today, when break-even is near zero, 1.5 percent is genuine expansion, showing firms adding workers into a labor pool that is not being replenished from below. This is tight-labor-market hiring, not reluctant hiring.

The sales-employment gap tells the same story from a different angle. In May, firms expected sales to grow 3.6 percentage points faster than employment. That gap has been widening: it was 2.8 points two years ago, 3.1 points a year ago, and it is 3.6 points now. But the widening is not primarily a story about firms pulling back on workers. It is a story about firms expecting revenue to outrun a structurally constrained labor supply.

This should not be a worry for workers. Unemployment is very low and has been holding steady. Jobless claims are at historic lows, indicating a very low level of layoffs despite dire headlines about AI stealing everyone’s jobs and big tech firms reducing headcounts.

Growing Revenue without Growing Headcount

The more striking implication of the survey is what it says about how firms expect to close that gap. They are not projecting that limited hiring will limit their sales. They appear to believe they can expand revenue without a comparable expansion in payrolls. How? The survey does not ask firms to explain themselves, but the options are not mysterious. Higher prices account for some of it. We’re still suffering from the inflationary conflagration sparked by President Biden’s reckless spending. But productivity gains account for more. Firms are investing in automation, software, and the more intensive use of existing workers. The tight labor market itself may also be a factor: when workers are scarce, firms tend to allocate them more efficiently rather than hiring to cover inefficiencies.

The realized data supports the forward-looking picture. Firms reported actual sales growth of 4.8 percent over the prior year in May, up from 3.9 percent in April. Reported employment growth came in at 2.5 percent. Businesses are growing sales much faster than headcount.

Absorbing Costs without Blinking

The survey also tracks what firms expect to happen to their own costs and prices. In May, businesses expected their costs to grow 3.8 percent over the coming year while expecting their prices to rise only 3.0 percent. The gap means firms anticipate absorbing roughly 80 basis points of cost growth that they will not pass on to customers.

They have been absorbing a similar spread for more than a year. The average cost-price gap over the past six months runs about 84 basis points negative.

This is being presented in some quarters as evidence of margin compression, and in a narrow accounting sense it is. But the broader picture does not support a gloomy narrative. Corporate profits reached a record high as a share of GDP in the first quarter of 2026. Labor’s share of output fell to 54.1 percent, its lowest level since 1947. Firms have been absorbing elevated costs for over a year, and their profits have never been larger relative to the size of the economy. This is one reason the stock market keeps hitting record highs.

Sales growth expectations are running at expansion levels. Businesses are reading the same depressed consumer surveys you are and concluding that the results are unlikely to be replicated in actual consumer behavior. The employment picture, properly translated through the labor-scarcity lens, is firmer than the headline suggests. Firms see no meaningful obstacle to revenue growth from the constrained labor supply. And despite absorbing cost pressures that would have triggered profit warnings in a less robust environment, corporate profitability has never been higher relative to the size of the economy.

Yes, gas prices are still too high. So, it’s probably uncouth to mention that this looks a lot like a golden era for the U.S. economy.

https://link.breitbart.com/view/5d13e215fc942d626ce65d9erbrqp.2l6n/c76629b7

America's New Red State Corporate Renaissance

America's New Red State Corporate Renaissance

RoschetzkyIstockPhoto/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Boy, howdy, is Texas ever having an interesting year. They are the location of one of the midterm election's highest-profile Senate races, with Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton squaring off against Democratic contender James Talarico, who appears to have the testosterone level of arugula and who thinks running a vegan campaign in a state renowned (rightly) for its barbecue beef brisket is a great strategy. There's another exciting thing happening right now, if you're a Texas businessman: The Lone Star State is also undergoing quite the business boom. 

That last part isn't exactly new. Texas has been the recipient of one of the more interesting trends of the Great Sorting, that being the flight of major corporations from blue states to red ones.

 Texas has emerged as the biggest winner in corporate America’s flight from high-tax blue states, attracting a wave of headquarters relocations as companies increasingly abandon costly coastal hubs for lower-tax Republican strongholds.

The relocation wave is reshaping the balance of economic power in America, boosting red-state economies while raising fresh questions about whether high taxes and regulation are driving companies out of blue-state strongholds.

Dallas-Fort Worth led the nation with 111 headquarters relocations between 2018 and 2025, according to a (Coldwell Banker Richard Ellis) CBRE report, while Austin added 88 and Houston gained 31. Together, the three Texas hubs have become one of the nation’s biggest magnets for corporate relocations.

Florida's also on the winning side of this, and the big loser? The impeccably coiffed Gavin Newsom's California.

CBRE found 725 companies relocated headquarters during that seven-year period, with many citing growth opportunities, lower operating costs and lighter regulation as key reasons for moving.

Florida, particularly Miami, also emerged as a major beneficiary. Over the past year alone, six companies moved operations to Miami from costly hubs like Los Angeles, the Bay Area and Boston, drawn by Florida’s lower taxes, growing tech sector and access to East Coast markets.

Companies told CBRE that Miami’s expanding startup scene and growing pool of finance and tech talent are making the city increasingly attractive. International firms are also flocking to South Florida for its strong tourism, travel and beauty industries.

Meanwhile, California suffered the nation’s steepest corporate losses.

Is there even one Democrat out there who, looking at this data, might have a sudden and unexpected rush of brains to the head and say to his or her fellow Dems, "Hey, guys, have you noticed this?"


Read More: Low-T Talarico Really Wants You to Know He Likes Meat (and Makes Buttigieg Look Normal by Comparison)

Let's Go: Ken Paxton Opens General Election Campaign With a Not-So-Gentle Message for James Talarico


If we consult our Magic 8-Ball on this, it comes up "Signs Point to No."

Look, this is, as pointed out, all part of the Great Sorting, and the red-state folks should be glad of it - and I bet the more business and economically-savvy among them are. There's always the concern that some of the people moving from blue to red may take some of their liberal voting habits with them, but one has to think that at least a strong plurality of them are fully aware of who made their old homes so intolerant to any business from major oil companies down to neighborhood lemonade stands. In Texas, it certainly can't hurt that their Senate race is likely to drive conservative voters to the polls, if for no other reason than to vote against a Democrat candidate who manages to be less manly than Pee Wee Herman.

Any future Republican majorities may well owe as much to this part of the Great Sorting as to the GOP's ongoing redistricting efforts. This trend can't go denied or ignored by the left forever, but Democrats and the far left (but I repeat myself) in this election cycle seem more concerned with keeping boys on girls' high school track teams and defunding ICE than doing anything for the economy.

And so, the Great Sorting moves into another phase. In California, there are signs that there may be a seismic shift in the politics of the once-Golden state, where their governor's race has Republican Steve Hilton breathing down Democrat Xavier Becerra's neck. Gavin Newsom will, of course, never get it; if there was any capacity in the man for changing his mind, we would have seen it by now. The man has all the mental agility of an Easter Island statue, while lacking the rugged profile. 

But California voters? The voters who are seeing major employers fleeing California for Texas and Florida? That, we can hope, may be a different story.

https://redstate.com/wardclark/2026/05/31/americas-new-red-state-corporate-renaissance-n2202893?utm_source=rsafternoonbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Yeah, About That 'Hunger Strike' at Delaney Hall

Yeah, About That 'Hunger Strike' at Delaney Hall

Yeah, About That 'Hunger Strike' at Delaney Hall
AP Photo/Andres Kudacki

The duel outside Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, descended into chaos. It was a riot. We saw reporters assaulted, their phones stolen, and overall chaos. Eventually, the state police were called, but the anti-ICE movement must be shut down, which goes without saying, even though they can hold out for weeks. Independent reporters, like Nick Sortor, managed to get inside one of their tents: it’s stocked with plenty of supplies, again raising questions about who’s funding this circus. 

As the anti-ICE crusade ramps up outside, some detainees inside—which include what some call the scum of the Earth—were reportedly on a hunger strike. However, Jennie Taer from The Daily Wire revealed that it was all nonsense, as they’re eating chips and honey buns inside. The supposed strike was over visitation rights:

The Delaney Hall detainees engaging in a purported “hunger strike” are opting to not eat their regular meals while going to the commissary to purchase snacks instead, according to a source familiar with the situation. Meanwhile, activist groups are claiming that detainees are being fed spoiled food and meals contaminated with worms.

Democratic New Jersey Rep. Frank Pallone recently called for the facility’s closure over concerns about possible retaliation against “hunger strikers,” “all because they were advocating for better food, access to basic medical care, and judicial hearings.”

“Delaney Hall is a disgrace to our country,” he said.

The source said the commissary snack store has seen an “increase in sales and detainees maxing out on items they can purchase weekly.”

So-called hunger strikes like the one playing out at Delaney Hall are all too common in ICE detention centers and the playbook is usually the same, former ICE New York field office deputy director Scott Mechkowski told The Daily Wire.

“I’ve seen real hunger strikes during my time as an ICE official, managing detention facilities. What’s happening at Delaney Hall is not a hunger strike,” Mechkowski said.

“When detainees are buying up Honey Buns and Snickers bars, and those with money are helping others get snacks, that’s not a hunger strike, it’s just a publicity stunt,” he added.

It’s all an illusion; that’s the Left’s game. Also, let’s stop framing Delaney Hall as our CECOT—it’s been there for years. So, shut it, Frank.

Now, New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill is trying to do a victory lap, as visitation rights will be honored at a private facility for some 1,000 detainees. The Department of Homeland Security added that those rights were suspended because of the riots outside of the facility (via NY Post):

The Department of Homeland Security ripped New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill for claiming that she had solved a major issue behind the violent protests at the ICE detention center Delaney Hall in Newark Sunday.

Sherrill announced that visitation rights for the 1,000 migrants who are being held at the privately run facility — one of the grievances that had led to a prolonged hunger strike by some detainees and clashes between anti-ICE protesters and feds.

Instead, DHS officials claimed that visitation rights were restored after they were able to bring the violent protests under control — after Sherill and her allies fomented them.

[…]

“We did not cave to the Governor’s demands. Visitation was suspended because the violent riots outside the facility made it unsafe for our officers, detainee’s families and lawyers to visit the facility,” a DHS spokesperson said in a statement.

“With Delaney Hall secure, ICE operations continue as normal,” the spokesperson added. “To be clear: Visitation was only suspended because of violent riots. Now that we have a secure perimeter, visitation can resume.”

Anti-ICE protests had engulfed Delaney Hall, an immigration detention facility in Newark since at least May 22.

There’s a timeline here, governor. We can follow what’s going on.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2026/06/01/yeah-about-that-hunger-strike-at-delaney-hall-n2676967?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-PNRK6S5Qqq&utm_term=&_nlid=PNRK6S5Qqq&_nhids=ncvGmH1AS91Nls

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

I've Lived in California for 3 Decades — and I've Never Seen Anything Like This

I've Lived in California for 3 Decades — and I've Never Seen Anything Like This

Spencer Pratt, Karen Bass, Steve Hilton, and Xavier Becerra. (Credit: Andy Kropa/Mark J. Terrill/Rich Pedroncelli/Damian Dovarganes/AP Photos)

I’ve lived in a lot of places: I spent my early years in Chicago, then we moved to Manhattan, then I went to school in Boston and North Carolina, and I even once had a low-level banking job in St. Paul, Minnesota. There are many good experiences I’ve had in all those places, and I’d like to think that my wanderings have given me a better understanding of the different regions of America and the people who inhabit them.

To those elitist West Coasters, all too many of whom I have encountered, who consider the South nothing more than a racist backwater, I say to you: you're idiots. There are so many patriots and wonderful people below the Mason-Dixon line who put your America-hating views to shame. Many wonderful things are happening there, and you can live in your misery and eschew it all you want, but they're living the dream and you're not. 

Sometime in the early 1990s, after I’d moved back to the Big Apple following graduation, it dawned on me that The City was not my forever home. Some people adore the excitement, the pace, the incredible energy, and I don’t judge them for that. I just knew it wasn’t for me.

I wanted a backyard, a little space to call my own, a different experience — one without subways. I packed up my relatively few belongings and moved to Los Angeles, sight unseen. It was exactly what I was looking for, and I’ve never left.

It was a vibrant place, a creative hotspot, and naturally, I didn’t mind the fantastic weather. We had a spate of earthquakes my first year, and I did find those a little, um, unnerving, but they weren’t enough to chase me away.

One thing I noticed right away that was different from my experiences on the East Coast: nobody seemed to give a rat’s patootie about local politics. In New York City, if there was a mayoral race going on, believe me, you knew about it. You’d see the screaming tabloid headlines from The New York Daily News and its rival, The New York Post, on every street corner and train station, coverage would be wall-to-wall on TVs at every watering hole, and people would be talking about it at every party. It was a thing.

In Los Angeles, meanwhile, you wouldn’t even know a race was happening. People didn’t talk about it at cocktail soirees, obsessively read the news, or even seem to give it much of a thought. It really weirded me out. 

Believe it or not, a Republican, Richard Riordan, won in both 1993 and 1997 — and that’s the last time we saw a non-leftie take the prize.

One reason it’s saddened me to see the state and the city in such decline under one-party extremist leadership is that I came out here with hope, and hope was delivered. I met my future wife here, we raised our four kids here, and we worked our butts off to create a business and make our house our dream home. Sure, it’s easy to say, “Just leave! California sucks.” 

But the Golden State did not use to suck, it doesn’t have to always suck, and it’s a lot easier for someone to fire off a tweet than it is for me to give up the life I've created over three decades.


TUESDAY’S COMING: Wow: Surging Donations and Latest Polling Show Big News for Spencer Pratt

California Dems Cleared the Field for Becerra - but Steve Hilton Isn't Going Away


Which is why I’m so thrilled and heartened by something I have never witnessed out here on the Left Coast: genuine passion and pushback from people who don’t want us to become a communist hellhole. You can feel the electricity in the air.

You see the signs for LA Mayoral Candidate Spencer Pratt — they’re everywhere, even in deep blue neighborhoods. You hear people at get-togethers talking about gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton. You see the non-stop coverage on the TV and in print, while the duo’s viral campaign videos, as well as those made by content creators, continue to garner millions of views. It’s become a regular occurrence for me to have someone walk up and whisper in hushed tones, “Can Spencer really win?” And it’s not just conservatives asking.

Amazingly, even some in Hollywood are advocating for change, for a new direction. That I can tell you is certainly novel, except for a few brave outspoken conservatives — some of whom have lost their careers for speaking out.

This is not an official Spencer Pratt campaign video; it's one of many made by a grass-roots collection of rebels:

Now, I’m no naïve fantasist — I know full well that the climb is steep and the deck is stacked against us. On Tuesday, the endless primaries will mercifully come to an end, and eventually we'll know the finalists for the November general election (it won't be right away because California's pernicious system often takes weeks to publish official results).

Right now, the polls are showing that Hilton will likely face off against the listless Democratic Machine candidate, former Biden-era HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. 

In the mayoral race, nobody is likely to get more than 50 percent of the vote to win outright, so it’s looking like Pratt against Cuba acolyte Karen Bass. Once the field is settled, expect the dark money to flow from the Dems and special interest groups, and watch for the powerful unions to ramp up for serious battle. They will not give up easily, and as they showed with the anti-Democratic mid-decade redistricting measure, Prop. 50, they are more than willing to use any and all tools at their disposal.

Even if neither Pratt nor Hilton achieves victory, they've already severely shaken up a corrupt progressive one-party regime that is not used to even the slightest pushback.
 
Bonus: Win or lose, this is all horrible news for the imminent Gavin Newsom presidential campaign. He’s been in power for seven years, yet he can't easily hand over the keys to the car to his clones? It shows how deeply he's failed Californians, and he's going to answer for that when JD Vance or Marco Rubio takes him to task. Good luck with that, pal.

Change is in the air. Is it enough to turn back the managed decline that has become the policy of the once Golden State? We’ll see where we stand after Tuesday. May God have mercy on our souls.

https://redstate.com/bobhoge/2026/06/01/ive-lived-in-california-for-decades-but-ive-never-seen-anything-like-this-n2202910?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl