Friday, April 3, 2026

Shutdown Showdown: GOP Plans Big New Beautiful Bill

Shutdown Showdown: GOP Plans Big New Beautiful Bill

AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib

With another Schumer Shutdown causing headaches across the fruited plain, a midterm election fast approaching, and hyper-partisan Democrats seemingly determined to block any Republican effort at any cost, the Republican members of the House of Representatives and the Senate are now planning "One Big Beautiful Bill 2 - This Time, it's Personal."

 In a hyper-partisan Congress that’s facing midterm elections, Republicans in both chambers have united on a plan to pass a second budget reconciliation bill before the balance of power potentially changes.

Their previous reconciliation bill, the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” focused primarily on President Donald Trump’s tax policies, including permanently extending the increased standard deductions from 2017. It also restrained the growth of Medicaid spending over the next ten years and tightened work requirements for both Medicaid and SNAP.

Now, after two Democrat-instigated government shutdowns – the second of which is ongoing – Republicans are considering including a massive funding boost to immigration enforcement agencies, money for the U.S.-Israeli conflict against Iran and possibly some election changes.

Republicans will likely have to at least partially offset any new spending, however, to appease fiscal hawks, many of whom are still bitter over the $3.3 trillion price tag of the OBBB.

Cutting spending is always good, and to the GOP in Washington, I would only say this: This time, use a chainsaw or an axe, not a scalpel. 

There's a catch (there's always a catch): This won't heave the SAVE America Act or its provisions across the finish line.

Additionally, incorporating policies from the SAVE America Act – a voter-ID bill stuck in the Senate – into a reconciliation bill would be difficult, if not impossible. 

The Senate’s Byrd Rule prohibits reconciliation bills from including non-budgetary matters, or “extraneous” policies that would not meaningfully add to or reduce the deficit. Otherwise, the privilege of passing the bill in the Senate with only a majority vote would no longer apply.

Pushing the funding issues out of the way may serve to clear the decks, as it were, to allow the House and Senate to work on the SAVE America Act.


Read More: Senate Deadlock Over DHS Funding Continues As GOP Eyes New Path

Dems Outfoxed Again: Airports Returning to Normal As Trump Finds Way to Pay TSA Agents


There's some serious strategery, as it were, to be considered here. The Democrats aren't going to agree to anything. If we've learned nothing from two record-setting shutdowns, it's that. So, fine; play their game. Ram the spending bills down their throats - metaphorically speaking, of course - with another One Big Beautiful Bill, passed through the reconciliation process. Then put the SAVE America Act, front and center, focus on that, and that alone, until it passes, by hook or by crook. Use a talking filibuster, or get rid of the filibuster altogether; the Democrats are sure to do so the moment they have a Senate majority. They have said as much, and we should believe them.

It's time to start playing hardball. The Democrats already are. The midterms are fast approaching, and we need the SAVE America Act in place to make sure the elections are honest.

And no breaks or recesses until it's all done. Do your jobs, Congress. Otherwise, it's just another case of "Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose."

https://redstate.com/wardclark/2026/03/31/shutdown-showdown-gop-plans-big-new-beautiful-bill-n2200834

The Victory Option

The Victory Option

The Victory Option
AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson

There are two kinds of people: the kind of people who want to end the Iran War and people who want to win the Iran War. The Victory Option encompasses the goal of the first kind of people because it ends the war, but ending the war is not the proper objective. The proper objective in any war is to win it. Anyone glancing at social media sees people with an absolute commitment to America’s defeat. And defeat comes about only if Donald Trump chooses to quit the war – because the Iranians can’t make us do anything since they don’t have a nuclear bomb, thanks to Donald Trump – in a way that doesn’t achieve victory. Victory means regime change. Once again, remember your Clausewitz – war is simply politics with other means. This is a political struggle. The military aspect is just how it’s being done, not what’s being done.

A victory end-state is one in which Iran is no longer a destabilizing force in the world – note that I said “world,” not just the Middle East. By destabilizing force, I mean the funder of radically jihadi savages all over the world – for example, they blew up a Jewish center in Argentina – as well as enablers of Chi Com mischief by selling Xi oil. They are also a destabilizing force because they seek to be the owners of sufficient numbers of drones and missiles that they can inflict unacceptable punishment on their neighbors. Oh, and there’s the whole nuclear thing. Just imagine Iran with nuclear weapons on top of ballistic missiles. You know, the ballistic missiles they promised they didn’t have, but actually had, since they shot a couple at Diego Garcia? Putting aside all the fatwas the fatheads cite claiming that the ayatollahs had forbidden nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, think about them having Paris and London in hot rock range, with the United States coming soon into the crosshairs as Iran reaches intercontinental capability. That’s when they start dictating to us. Call me crazy, but I prefer we dictate to our enemies instead of vice versa.

So, what we’re fighting for is a neutered Iran, or rather a neutralized Iran, where it stops being an active enemy. It doesn’t have to be a friend. It just has to not be a threat, because they are right now. And that’s one of the things a lot of people on the Democrat side and some of our podcast bros and libertarians misunderstand. Well, they misunderstand a lot of things, but this one’s particularly important. The mullahs hate us and want us dead for reasons that we can’t necessarily comprehend. But the fact that we can’t comprehend why they believe that some missing mahdi requires them to kill us doesn’t mean that they don’t believe that some missing mahdi requires them to kill us. They do. They’ve told us so for 47 years. They’re not out there chanting “Death to America” figuratively. We have real enemies. 

And as American First conservatives, we don’t believe in wishing away enmity because dealing with that reality is inconvenient and clashes with things we’d rather do. There are a lot of things we would rather be doing right now than cleaning out the Iran abscess. We’ve got budgets to cut, frauds to expose, DEI to purge, and illegal aliens – so many illegal aliens – to deport. It would be great to have those things as our sole focus. But, being adults and fans of the first wave Rolling Stones, we understand that you can’t always get what you want.

This was the time to strike Iran. This was the time to win once and for all, to end this forever war by victory. Some people who don’t want victory are mad because they alleged there was no imminent threat. That might be true, in the sense that they hadn’t yet completed building up their arsenal of rockets, missiles, and drones, and they hadn’t finalized their nuclear weapons program. Then the threat would be very imminent, and therefore not subject to the airborne remedy we’ve been applying for the last four weeks. Hit them when they’re weak? When the hell else should we hit them? Is there some sort of Marquess of Queensberry rules we should be applying? When you have a psychotic enemy who wants to murder you because of their false religious dogma, you don’t wait until they have a fair and fighting chance. Kicking them when they’re down is the best time to kick them. And to keep kicking them until they beg to surrender.

Fortunately, Donald Trump understands that. He rejects the idea of half-measures. Can you imagine the pressure that he’s under right now from many within his own coalition to slow down or stop this campaign? But he’s not going to. He won’t give in. He’s putting his agenda at risk, and it is a risk because of the weak-hearted, in order to make America safe again. Oh, and our allies, too. I mean both the useful ones, like the Israelis have proven to be, and the useless ones, like our NATO allies, have proven to be. If you don’t think their leaders in NATO, who are crying because Donald Trump is having an illegal war, which is against international law, to the extent there is such a thing as international law, are not thrilled with the idea of this threat being neutered without them having to offend and aroused their imported third-world, barbarian contingent, you’re not paying attention. But that doesn’t change the level of abuse and harassment from them that Trump is suffering because of this. The Democrats are screaming at him. Some of his coalition members are screaming at him. Foreigners are screaming at him. Everyone’s screaming at him, and he doesn’t care. He doesn’t care because he’s doing the right thing. And he’s strong enough to do it. He’s channeling Winston Churchill, who famously said:

“Never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty—never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.”

And Donald Trump will never quit, not till he gets what he wants. And what he wants is victory.

But that’s not what his opponents want. Oh, some opponents will be perfectly happy to have Iran ruined, including the aforementioned NATO allies and many Democrats who understand what a threat these barbarians are. But they don’t want Trump to get the credit. They don’t want Trump to get the glory. Some of them would accept an Iran unbound in order to deprive Donald Trump of the recognition he will earn for his steadfast commitment to ridding the planet of this strategic threat.

The libertarians are just unserious idiots, so I’m not even bothering with them. But there is a contingent of Democrats who are not only upset about Donald Trump potentially getting credit but about America potentially winning. They hate America. They think we’re the problem. They’ll run their mouths about a 1953 coup in Iran as if that somehow gives these turbaned jerks a free pass to butcher our people in perpetuity. These Democrats despise America. They want America to lose. AOC’s preferred end-state is this country’s humiliation and defeat. Ilhan Omar would celebrate America’s loss like she would celebrate her wedding anniversary with her brother. And the only thing that could please Rashida Tlaib more than an American being killed by these Islamic scumbags is if that American was also Jewish.

So, what’s the answer for Donald Trump? It’s easy. It’s the same answer it always is, the same as it has always been through history when fighting a war. It’s to win the war. Victory is the answer. Not ending the war. Ending the enemy. There is no substitute for victory. We didn’t fight to victory in Korea, Vietnam, or even Iraq or Afghanistan. And you know what? That was the problem. You’ve got to win. Fortunately, our president is Donald Trump, and he just doesn’t know how to lose.

https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2026/03/30/the-victory-option-n2673609?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-HaXd3mYBj8&utm_term=&_nlid=HaXd3mYBj8&_nhids=nck9ztQlIEwnls

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Dems Are Eating It Over Opposing This Trump Tax Break

Dems Are Eating It Over Opposing This Trump Tax Break

Dems Are Eating It Over Opposing This Trump Tax Break
AP Photo/Alex Brandon

It may not happen right away, but Trump will make you eat it. He’s done that to Democrats throughout his public career. When you count him out, he comes back stronger. Oppose him, and you’ll end up eating crow. The Left thought they pushed him out in 2020, only for him to return more powerful than ever four years later. Like in his first term, he introduced a series of middle-class tax cuts that Democrats predictably claimed would favor the wealthy. Their usual line is getting tired, and it's also wrong.

Over 20 million Americans claimed the overtime tax break this year, which expires in 2028. It’s a reminder that working people are now Republicans. Even worse for Democrats, the Obama coalition has been absorbed by MAGA. As of now, Democrats don’t know how to respond, with some privately admitting they like the policy. Others are clinging to the hope that Scott Bessent’s Treasury Department made an error. In what lifetime has the government ever been wrong about tax records, guys? It’s probably the only thing the government does well—keeping track of for obvious reasons (via Politico): 

President Donald Trump’s new tax deduction for overtime looks like a hit this filing season, and that’s shaping up to be a big challenge for Democrats. 

Nearly 20 million taxpayers so far have claimed the break, internal Treasury data shows. Republicans created the allowance — a Trump campaign pledge — as part of their signature tax cuts the president signed into law last July. It’s already more popular than well-known provisions like the mortgage interest deduction.

Republicans are gloating over having stolen their colleagues’ working-class thunder as they look to fend off Democrats in November’s midterm elections. 

“If I were them, I’d say, ‘This is who we used to be,’” said Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), a senior member of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee.“They were always the blue-collar people.” 

Democratic lawmakers are divided over how to respond. For all their antipathy toward Trump’s signature tax cut, some say they like the overtime provision. It’s set to expire at the end of 2028, and some want to not only extend it but make it more generous. Others are offering competing plans aimed at one-upping Trump with proposals to excuse people under certain income thresholds from owing income tax. 

And some are skeptical of the Treasury figures, wondering if many of the claims are illegitimate. 

It’s still a funny script. Democrats lambast the Bush tax cuts, but made most of them permanent in 2013. The Trump tax cuts during his first presidency were criticized by congressional Democrats, but they ended up liking most of those. It’s almost as if the GOP has better tax policy, and this case was no exception.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2026/04/01/dems-are-eating-it-over-opposing-this-trump-tax-break-n2673744?utm_source=pjmediambvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm

Quote of the day

Quote of the day

 by Scott Johnson in Iran, Media

Citing two recent New York Times stories that recount the actual progress made by American and Israeli forces fighting Iran’s political leaders and military assets, Abe Greenwald adds a dose of optimism in the daily Commentary newsletter: “The Iranian regime is dysfunctional, and its air defenses are negligible—and the New York Times has been forced to admit it. Which means that in addition to destroying key targets in Iran, the U.S. armed forces have, in their own way, degraded the mainstream propaganda regime here at home. Accomplishing that in four weeks is also no mean feat.”

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/04/quote-of-the-day-98.php

The EV Bubble Is About to Burst

The EV Bubble Is About to Burst

The EV Bubble Is About to Burst
Townhall Media

When did getting from point A to point B get so complicated? When the government decided which cars Americans should buy. With the economic and scientific premises behind electric vehicle (EV) mandates collapsing, the EV bubble may burst completely. There is one mandate left to burst: California’s Advanced Clean Cars II (ACC II) regulation, which requires all new vehicles to be 100 percent electric by 2035, or else automakers get penalized. 

With the federal repeal of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s Endangerment Finding in February, the government’s formal scientific basis for EV mandates is gone. State governments no longer have a rational scientific basis for requiring EV sales.

The concept of an EV mandate was first made formal policy by the Biden administration when it issued its de facto EV mandate in the form of a 2024 executive order, which changed EPA standards with the clear goal of forcing consumers to start buying EVs over gas-powered vehicles. Though the Trump administration has reversed this policy at the federal level, nearly a dozen state governments have followed a coercive plan to extend EV mandates. 

Yet, as I noted in RealClearEnergy, the reasoning behind EV mandates is extremely dubious. The federal government recently emphasized that carbon dioxide emissions, like those from gas-powered cars, should not be considered a pollutant at all. Ironically, EVs don’t dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions due to the reliance on conventional hydrocarbons, like coal and natural gas, to power their batteries and charging stations.

In fact, the federal government had never ruled that carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions were a pollutant until the 2009 politically-motivated determination known as the Endangerment Finding. In 2003, the EPA rejected a petition for the agency to declare CO2 a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. When the Obama administration’s EPA issued the Endangerment Finding, it made no effort to quantify the supposed harm of CO2 emissions; rejected every request by Americans to consider contrary evidence; and, puzzlingly, never consulted the EPA’s Scientific Advisory Board. 

Fortunately, state EV mandates are not going unchallenged. With the help of Congress, President Donald Trump rescinded the California EV mandate in May 2025. California and the other states doubled down, kicking off a legal battle with the Trump administration. In the ping-pong match of legal battles, the Trump administration sued California on March 12, over its violation of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, which directs the federal government to establish uniform fuel economy standards nationwide. 

Due to the political inconvenience of admitting that one’s policies are unwise, it may be unreasonable to expect states to reverse course. However, some already are. In addition to Oregon and Vermont, Maryland has already walked back its EV mandates in the past year. Maryland’s governor has decided to delay imposing penalties on automakers who do not meet EV sale quotas and has paused other measures to penalize gas-powered cars. 

Leading U.S. automaker executives are also reversing course. GM’s luxury division, Cadillac, has admitted it cannot fulfill its pledge to shift to an all-EV fleet. In December 2025, GM CEO Mary Barra said that Biden-era vehicle regulations, if left in place, would have forced GM to “start shutting down plants.” Ford CEO James Farley, days later, revealed that U.S. automakers are “in a fight for our lives” in the global market, largely due to “aggressive carbon mandates.” 

Farley, in particular, wasn’t kidding. Ford has taken tremendous losses in its EV initiatives. The auto giant has lost more than $16 billion on its EV ventures since 2022, and Ford’s financial pain is slated to keep coming for years. 

Unfortunately, this situation is not unique to Ford. Other car companies are suffering losses. GM, Stellantis, and Honda have cumulatively sustained a nearly $30 billion loss from jumping into the EV abyss.

We don’t need to reinvent the wheel—and we don’t need to reinvent the engine. There is an opportunity for American EV companies to dominate the market, for example, by leveraging U.S. advances in critical minerals. To require brand new critical mineral supply chains for batteries inevitably creates inefficiencies. For now, though, gas-powered vehicles are the better option, and consumer behavior shows that.

It would be bad enough if Americans were just forced to buy certain kinds of cars and not others. Yet EVs themselves have real—even dangerous—drawbacks. According to a 2024 study from Consumer Reports, EV models had 21 percent more defects than gas-powered vehicles.

Of course, if consumers want to buy EVs, that should be their prerogative. State governments mandating that Americans buy them, though, is the problem. And the impracticality of many EVs, in their current form, is partially why the free market has not spurred a consumer shift.

Take one personal anecdote that I believe many share. I thought EVs were relatively harmless until my own run-in with a rental EV in South Florida. While at my first charging station, my vehicle stopped charging without my knowledge. However, I calculated that, driving at a normal pace, I could get to another charging station many miles away but closer to my destination.

Big mistake. Two hours later, I was stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic, trying to enter a highway that was blocked off due to a foreign leader’s visit to Mar-a-Lago. I watched with dread as the projected mileage continued ticking down to less than 20 miles. 

After a fairly dramatic escape, I was just five miles from my destination when the EV was flashing a warning signal on the screen. It would not tell me how many miles I had left—it just told me to charge my vehicle immediately. That was not an option. Miraculously, I made it to my destination.

Thank God I was in an urban area because in the rural United States, the sparse charging infrastructure is even more inaccessible.  

For these reasons and others, EVs are unlikely to outpace gas-powered vehicles, and that is perfectly fine. In this sense, it is reminiscent of a strikingly similar historical parallel. In the early 1900s, EVs were all the rage and became a major focus of visionaries like Thomas Edison and Ferdinand Porsche. Gas-powered vehicles, though, easily surpassed EVs in popularity within a few years, for the same reason they are more popular now: gasoline fueling is simple, cheap, and widely accessible. EV charging stations are not. 

As one of the largest purchases in someone’s life, car ownership is a serious decision. Moreover, America is a car-dependent country. The United States has the second most cars in the world, after China, and ranks seventh in per capita car ownership. Americans need to exercise their choice, and their choice alone, in one of the largest purchases of their life.

EV mandates only burden individuals and companies. Their scientific basis is gone. States that mandate EV sales should re-evaluate immediately. We are at an inflection point of breaking free of the EV shackles and making consumer choice great again.

https://townhall.com/columnists/sydney-rodman/2026/03/28/the-ev-bubble-is-about-to-burst-n2673568

The climate scaremongers: How can these Oxford ‘scholars’ get so much so wrong?

The climate scaremongers: How can these Oxford ‘scholars’ get so much so wrong?

FOR those not familiar, the Conversation is, according to its website,

 ‘an independent source of news analysis and informed comment written 

by academic experts, working with professional journalists who help share 

their knowledge with the world’.

I have no idea if this is true in other areas of research, but I do know that when it comes to climate science, the Conversation becomes simply a mouthpiece for the climate establishment, printing often woefully inaccurate studies and refusing to publish alternative opinions.

Their latest article, ‘Would more North Sea drilling lower UK energy bills? Our analysis says no’, is par for the course. But of more concern, it is written by three ‘experts’ from Oxford University:

·         Cassandra Etter-Wenzel, PhD candidate in energy policy

·         Anupama Sen, head of policy engagement, Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, and fellow in environmental change

·         Nadia Schroeder, head of strategy and new initiatives, Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment

The article is so full of errors, naivety and wishful thinking that it is damaging to Oxford’s reputation.

Let’s start with their opening statement: ‘As the Middle East conflict intensifies and oil and gas prices swing wildly, the UK has seen renewed calls to drill more in the North Sea. The argument is straightforward: if Britain produces more of its own oil and gas, household energy bills should fall.

‘But our analysis suggests the effect would be minimal. Even if the UK maximised North Sea extraction and returned revenues directly to households, the reduction in energy bills would be at most a modest £82 per year – far smaller than the savings expected from accelerating the shift to renewable energy.’

Bear in mind the study was written before the Iran crisis. Nobody that I am aware of ever argued that energy bills would fall significantly if we maximised the North Sea. In their ivory towers it may not seem a lot, but I can assure them that most people would welcome a cheque for £82 from the Government.

But the real argument for new drilling is that it increases our energy security, cuts reliance on liquefied natural gas imports, which are invariably more expensive, generates billions in tax revenue and sustains thousands of well-paid jobs. Oh, and yes, it reduces emissions by reducing the use of LNG.

But then the three authors drift off into some dreamworld La La Land, stating: ‘In Britain, the wholesale electricity price is usually set by the most expensive generator needed to meet demand. That generator is often a gas-fired power station. As a result, electricity prices tend to rise and fall with gas prices – even when much of the electricity is produced by cheaper sources such as wind or solar.

‘A different policy direction – one that reduces the role of gas in electricity production – produces much larger savings . . . If the price of electricity was set by cheaper renewable energy rather than by gas, our analysis suggests households could save £105 to £331 per year through lower wholesale energy costs.’

Note how they jump from an accurate statement – ‘the wholesale electricity price is usually set by the most expensive generator needed to meet demand. That generator is often a gas-fired power station’to a fake claim – ‘even when much of the electricity is produced by cheaper sources such as wind or solar’.

This paragraph shows they have no clue about how the energy market operates, something you might have thought was essential for a PhD candidate in energy policy or the head of policy at the Smith School of Enterprise. They have probably fallen for the ‘wind is free’ fable, no doubt something they read in the Guardian.

I am sure most readers of this column are now well versed in the myriad of renewable subsidies which are added to our bills. But for the benefit of our three Oxford scholars, here is how it works.

Most renewable energy is subsidised via the Renewables Obligation (RO) scheme. This covers most wind and solar farms and biomass plants built or under construction before 2016, when a new subsidy mechanism was introduced; they cover about a quarter of total electricity supply.

All of the schemes covered by RO receive a subsidy payment on top of the price they receive from selling electricity at market prices. Last year this subsidy averaged about £97/MWh, adding about £7billion to bills. For reference, the wholesale market price of electricity last year was under £80/MWh – in total therefore, we had to pay £177/MWh for renewable electricity.

Because all of these wind farms know they will get their nice, fat subsidy, they will always undercut the price of gas power. This is not because they are ‘cheaper’ – it is because they won’t get their subsidy at all if they do not sell their electricity. Even if they sell for a penny per unit, the subsidy itself covers their cost.

Newer renewable generators, those coming on stream since 2016, are subsidised by Contracts for Difference (CfDs), which pay them a guaranteed, index-linked strike price. Whatever the market price is, it is irrelevant for these generators, who get their guarantee anyway. If the market price is lower, they are paid a top up subsidy; if higher, they must pay the difference back to the Government.

CfDs cover about 15 per cent of our electricity supply. Last year, market prices were substantially lower than the guarantee, meaning a subsidy of £2.6billion was handed over. Indeed, other than during the Ukraine energy crisis of 2022, every year has seen subsidies paid out. Since 2017, these have totalled £12billion.

As with RO, this subsidy is added to energy bills. And, as with RO, the CfD generators will always undercut the price of gas when bidding, because they know the guaranteed price is what they will get, regardless of what they bid.

The reason our electricity is so costly has nothing to do with the price of gas, which prior to the present crisis, has not been high in historical terms when general inflation is stripped out. It is costly because of the billions we have to pay in renewable subsidies, not to mention the billions more needed to balance the grid, pay for standby capacity and upgrade the transmission network, none of which would be required if we did not have intermittent renewables.

The article, of course, uses its faulty logic to demand more renewables!

Apparently Jeremy Corbyn’s Magic Money Tree must be alive and well in La La Land, because they suggest one way to cut energy bills is simply to transfer subsidy costs on to general taxation. There, problem solved!

The whole article is full of childish naivety. Just to pick out one comment: ‘Producing more gas in the North Sea would not create the UK’s “own special supply”, nor could its price be set specifically for UK citizens. That’s because any new production would be sold on international markets at international prices.’

Maybe somebody should tell them there is no such thing as ‘an international price’ for gas. If there was, US prices would not be much lower than ours.

Maybe next time, these ‘experts’ might spend a bit of time talking to real energy specialists and less time reading the Guardian, before writing their next study.

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/the-climate-scaremongers-dear-oxford-wind/