Monday, April 20, 2026

The Despicable Democrat Tactic Being Deployed in a GOP House Primary in Missouri

The Despicable Democrat Tactic Being Deployed in a GOP House Primary in Missouri

The Despicable Democrat Tactic Being Deployed in a GOP House Primary in Missouri
Photo: Business Wire

There’s a Republican primary underway in Missouri, and if you want a case study in how modern political hit jobs work, look no further than what’s being done to my colleague, radio talk show host turned candidate Chris Stigall.

Stigall is now running for Congress, and instead of a debate over ideas, records, or vision, his opponent has chosen a different route. A slickly produced video built on selectively edited clips, designed to make it sound like Stigall is saying things he never actually said.

You’ve seen this before. You know exactly how it works.

Before we go any further, watch the video they’re pushing:

Now that you’ve seen it, let’s talk about what’s actually happening.

Because this is not a good-faith critique. This is narrative construction through omission.

And if it feels familiar, it should. This is the exact same playbook used against Donald Trump with the Charlottesville “very fine people” hoax. Take a real quote, strip away the surrounding context, remove the clarifying language, and repeat the edited version until it becomes “truth” to people who never saw the original.

Now let’s break down the six key examples being used against Stigall.

First: “I don’t want Trump to be the nominee.” Clean. Damaging. Totally misleading. In the full exchange, Stigall is responding to a caller and describing a portion of his audience that feels that way. He literally says the caller “articulated exactly” what many listeners are thinking. That’s not a declaration. That’s a radio host doing his job.

Second, the claim: “We’re going to have an indicted nominee running against Joe Biden.” The video presents this as Stigall predicting doom. In reality, he’s carefully walking through competing views inside the Republican base. He even says he’s trying not to upset supporters of different candidates and acknowledges he could be wrong. It’s analysis, not advocacy.

Third, the quote: “A lot of you are over it… tired of defending him.” In isolation, it sounds like he’s dismissing Trump supporters. In context, it’s the opposite. He’s acknowledging fatigue and then immediately pivoting to defend Trump’s enduring bond with working-class voters, arguing that no one should underestimate him. The second half, naturally, is cut out.

Fourth, the line: “Let’s go with a proven leader that’s not being threatened with jail.” That’s being used to suggest Stigall is backing Trump’s rivals. But he explicitly says he is not endorsing anyone. He’s describing what many Republican voters are thinking and even says he respects that perspective. That’s not an endorsement. That’s an observation.

Fifth, the supposed smoking gun: “I will not support Donald Trump.” That clip sounds devastating until you realize it’s his position from 2016. Stigall is recounting his past support for Ted Cruz and his skepticism of Trump before Trump became president. He’s using it to illustrate how his views evolved and how the base saw something he didn’t at the time. It’s reflection, not a current position.

And sixth, the swipe about “Trump people who misbehave and act like jacka**es on social media.” The video frames this as an attack on Trump supporters. In reality, Stigall is doing something refreshingly honest. He calls out bad behavior while also defending Trump supporters from being labeled as cultists. He explicitly says he leans Trump and is not anti-DeSantis. It’s balance. It’s nuance. And it’s exactly what gets cut.

That’s the pattern. Six examples. Same tactic every time.

The words are real. The meaning is fabricated.

Every clip is surgically edited to remove the part where Stigall explains himself, adds context, or acknowledges competing viewpoints. What remains is a caricature designed to mislead.

And here’s the part that should bother you, no matter where you stand politically.

If his opponent had a stronger argument, they’d make it. If they had a better vision, they’d present it. Instead, they’re relying on the same dishonest editing tricks that have eroded trust in media and politics for years.

This is manipulation.

Chris Stigall built his career by talking with his audience, not at them. He respects them enough to acknowledge disagreement, to explore complexity, and to say out loud what many are thinking. That’s how he established credibility.


But credibility is hard to attack directly. So instead, they manufacture something easier to knock down.

We’ve seen how this ends when it goes unchallenged. We lived through years of selectively edited clips shaping national narratives while the full truth sat ignored, just one click away.

Now it’s happening in a Republican primary.

And the question is simple. Are voters going to fall for it again, or are they going to demand the full context before making up their minds?

Because once you see the trick, you can’t unsee it.

https://townhall.com/columnists/larryoconnor/2026/04/17/the-despicable-democrat-tactic-being-deployed-in-a-gop-house-primary-in-missouri-n2674670?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-KfZNFHVx8D&utm_term=&_nlid=KfZNFHVx8D&_nhids=nc40pC6Gsp4qls

The Big Cringe: Obama and Mamdani Sing to Kids, and It's Even Worse Than You Think

The Big Cringe: Obama and Mamdani Sing to Kids, and It's Even Worse Than You Think

Zohran Mamdani and Barack Obama. (Credit: Carolyn Kaster/Angelina Katsanis/AP)

If you’ve ever wanted to know what the height of cringe could look like, we now have an answer. There’s a long list of excruciating moments in the annals of politics and theater, but this one instantly goes to the top of the all-time list.

As we all know, socialist and Marxist philosophies have failed everywhere they’ve been tried, and millions of people are dead as a result.

But that didn’t stop former President Barack Obama and democrat socialist NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani from reveling in the movement’s historical murderous history; in fact, they’re positively giddy about it. Try not to feel queasy as the USSR wannabe Mamdani and the (only partially) closeted socialist Obama conduct a little sing-along with little kids in NYC:

Listen, I am not so jaded that I can’t find it cute that politicians are interacting with children, the lifeblood of our nation. But do you remember how the media savaged George W. Bush for continuing to read to kids as 9/11 unfolded? He tried to keep a sense of normalcy — and not panic — but was ripped for it by our nation’s press. Shameful. He didn’t yet know what was really happening (none of us did), and yet he acted honorably in that horrible moment.

This latest little act isn’t innocent — it’s our nation’s 44th president showing that he’s all-in on socialism/Marxism/communism, the antithesis to everything America has stood for almost 250 years. We always knew it about Obama, but now he’s taken off what was left of a mask and is just outright throwing down with the Comrades.


NO, IT’S NOT CUTE: Mamdani’s ‘Happy Tax Day’ Video Backfires Big Time Thanks to His Family’s Massive Uganda Compound

Ghosts of Former Soviet Union Leaders Grin As Mamdani's $30M NYC Communist Grocery Store Unveiled


Kids are adorable — but Obama and Mamdani are anything but. “The wheels go round and round” brings up visions of the wheels turning only because a totalitarian government says they do, at their discretion, at their command, and only depending upon their whims. Over and over and over again, this model has shown that the buses don’t really run at all, and the people are left waiting in lines begging for transport. Mamdani has been introducing government-run grocery stores, but remember, what was the reality in the Soviet Union?

[Austrian philosopher] Mises called it a century ago. Central planning is economic blindness. The market is humanity's greatest information processor, and no commissar can replicate what emerges spontaneously from free exchange.

Every empty Soviet shelf was a testament to the impossibility of rational economic calculation without private property and market prices.


MORE FAILURE: The Left’s Shiny New Sales Pitch Can’t Hide Socialism’s Brutal Track Record

Ghosts of Former Soviet Union Leaders Grin As Mamdani's $30M NYC Communist Grocery Store Unveiled


Barack Obama has always been an extremist, but he (partially) hid it for years under the disguise of a pragmatist. Now, he’s all in on a radical communist zealot mayor. The kids might be cute, but the communists trying to capitalize off of them is anything but.

The Libs love their wheels going round and round, but is it me, or is it always just incredibly unimpressive?

Weird How ‘The Worst Kept Secrets’ Are Always About Democrats, Isn’t It?

Weird How ‘The Worst Kept Secrets’ Are Always About Democrats, Isn’t It?

Weird How ‘The Worst Kept Secrets’ Are Always About Democrats, Isn’t It?
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

Everyone in Hollywood knew who the perverts were, they’d heard the rumors and seen things for themselves. Many of the people out there experienced it first-hand too. But, for decades, no one said anything. 

Everyone in the media knew who the perverts were, they’d heard the rumors and seen things for themselves. Many of the people out there experienced it first-hand too. But, for decades, no one said anything.

And everyone in politics knew who the perverts were, they’d heard the rumors and seen things for themselves. Many of the people out there experienced it first-hand too. But, for decades, no one said anything.

They were all “the worst kept secrets” in their respective fields, and they mostly seemed to be about Democrats. The Hollywood-type perverts paid for the campaigns of the Democrat perverts, so they weren’t about to talk about each other. And the reporters were on the team, so they weren’t about to tell the world about their teammates, especially when they were likely engaging in some level of the same behavior in their own newsrooms – the more you’re around perverts and monsters, the more normal it becomes to you, the more likely you are to become one yourself. 

Each of these groups got away with it for so long because they were each a part of the cabal of professions who should be out there exposing what all of them were doing. Anytime a Republican engaged in anything remotely close to something like this, there was no curtain of secrecy or club courtesy, not that there should have been. It was the difference between seeing steroids in the locker of your opponent’s homerun hitter and telling the world while knowing full well your homerun hitter was juicing. 

Eric Swalwell isn’t the problem, he just the symptom that popped up that could not be ignored. I have to assume the Democrat establishment was fine with whatever he was doing while he was in the House because he was essentially the perfect drone – willing to say that stupid and outrageous things they wanted said, but mostly irrelevant and anonymous enough to not matter.

When he decided to run for Governor of California, they likely assumed he’d be an also-ran. There’s no reason to spill the beans on a 5th place finisher in a jungle primary, especially when that was coupled with his leaving the House. One drone leaves, another takes its place. 

There was nothing special about Swalwell, other than his willingness to look like a moron on television, but the world (especially the world of politics) is full of people willing to do anything to get on television, including say things that make them look like a moron (or just expose that they are). 

You can tell that the Democrat establishment knew about Swalwell by how quickly they turned on him once the stories started being leaked. Adam Schiff and Nancy Pelosi, both of whom demand “full due process” for any illegal alien thug, even if they’re caught on video and with blood on their hands, pulled their endorsements of Eric before the ink was dry on the stories. 

They knew what was out there wasn’t as bad as it was going to get and they had to get away from him before the feces really hit the fan. Once a damn starts to crack, everyone in going to get wet. 

Swalwell was too high profile a cable news goon and was too high in the polls to be allowed to stay. If this story had broken while he was just a House Member running for reelection, he probably would have survived because the first round would’ve been ignored and there wouldn’t have been the later, more serious stories.

But Governor is a different story. It this story breaks after Swalwell is in the top 2 and on the ballot in November (and against a Republican), well, Democrats couldn’t take that chance. Democrats also couldn’t take the chance of this story breaking too late in the primary and not leave his supporters enough time to coalesce behind someone else (leaving the top 2 finishers both Republicans), the trigger had to be pulled now.

None of this was by accident because none of this was unknown. Maybe not the specifics – knowing someone is a philanderer is one thing, knowing there are women claiming rape, while not a giant leap, is still a decent sized step.

Did any Democrats know those stories? Maybe Ruben Gallego, Eric’s best friend. He is still useful to the party as a young Hispanic leftist. His history with women isn’t great, but treating women like garbage by leaving them for younger “upgrades” isn’t a crime in politics, just ask Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy, who recently left his wife and kids for a young activist and is positioning himself to replace Chuck Schumer as their leader in the Senate. 

Those stories are known, as are many others about leftists, but are they the worst? Doubtful. Washington is Hollywood for ugly people, but it’s only “ugly” on the outside, as their insides are all the same rot. Harvey Weinstein didn’t get elected to anything and Bill Clinton didn’t make movies, and Charlie Rose and Matt Lauer didn’t say much about either. The worst kept secrets are often only kept for as long as the person they’re about is useful to the left. If you don’t think there are more – A LOT MORE – you haven’t been paying attention. 

https://townhall.com/columnists/derekhunter/2026/04/19/weird-how-the-worst-kept-secrets-are-always-about-democrats-isnt-it-n2674693?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-kgA4ZZjN67&utm_term=&_nlid=kgA4ZZjN67&_nhids=nczGeHN9S4e8ls

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Iran War’s Impact on the Battle for the U.S. House

The Iran War’s Impact on the Battle for the U.S. House

AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson

It has been quite some time since we looked at the battle for the 2026 House, so its time for some more "strategery."

The conventional wisdom for the 2026 House elections now holds that the Democrats are strongly favored to win as the “out party." To hold the House, the GOP must avoid losing three or more (net) seats. The GOP currently has a majority of 217 Republicans plus 1 independent to 214 Democrats, with 2 GOP and 1 Democrat held seats vacant. Only twice in recent times has the majority party picked up seats in a midterm election, in 1998 and in 2002. 

Of course, the House has a boom or bust cycle, and the exact numbers that are won by the parties are often determined by the over- or under-exposure of the respective parties in the House. And the GOP is NOT overexposed. During the “blue wave” of 2018, the GOP lost 41 seats and won only half of those seats back in 2020 and 2022. In 2024, thanks to some shenanigans in California, the Republicans lost 2 seats.

There is still no sign of another “blue wave.”

The GOP strategy to hold the House originally included: 1) push GOP redistricting; 2) minimize retirements; 3) spend big; 4) take primary challengers off the table; 5) raise gobs more money; 6) ramp up recruiting; and 7) push certain salient issues. But the minimizing of the retirements fell apart, and the GOP largely succeeded in preventing primary challengers and in recruiting. So, now, the GOP strategy is to: 1) push GOP redistricting; 2) raise and spend big; and 3) push certain salient issues.

So far, re-redistricting has been a big bust for the GOP. The GOP made progress in MO, NC, OH, and TX, but left seats on the table in IN, KS, and NE. In CA, the Democrats won a ballot measure to redistrict the lines put in place by the (fake) independent commission to stick it to the GOP. VA is facing its own special election on April 21, where the polling shows that the Democrats are narrowly up to re-redistrict – again overturning a (fake) independent commission’s lines – mostly because the Democrats have heavily outspent the GOP there (good job, guys). Both groups’ ads have been shockingly deceitful. Of course, the Republican controlled Virginia Supreme Court has worked overtime to dodge its responsibility to declare the whole Democrat scheme illegal. However, VA isn’t the end - FL is likely waiting until VA, and then may attempt to make up for any Democrat gain. Further, there is still an outside chance that the U.S. Supreme Court may rule on a redistricting case that would greatly damage Democrat prospects. 

Overall, though, neither party is likely to gain or lose many (net) seats because of redistricting. 

The Republicans have certainly raised huge amounts of money. Speaker Mike Johnson amassed $34 million in the first quarter, the largest election-year quarter ever by a GOP leader. Johnson has doled out $18 million to incumbents and nearly $30 million to the NRCC. Johnson’s 2025-26 cycle total is now more than $116 million raised. Meanwhile, President Trump’s MAGA Inc. super PAC has stockpiled more than $300 million. The RNC has raised $172.3 million to $145.8 million for the DNC, and the RNC has a huge cash-on-hand advantage, with $109 million in the bank compared to $16 million. The NRCC edged out the DCCC, $117.2 million versus $115.3 million last year, its best-ever off-election year haul other than 2021. In the competitive individual races, for every single quarter this campaign cycle, Republicans have dominated House Democrats. The allied House super PACs, however, showed a Democrat edge. Democrats’ House Majority PAC and House Majority Forward outraised their GOP counterparts, bringing in a combined $69 million in the first quarter — while the Republican-aligned Congressional Leadership Fund and American Action Network raised $56.6 million. But there are other Republican oriented super PACs who expect to contribute tens of millions more. 

Then there are the non-partisan Super PACs, whose partisan affect is unclear. 

In 2025, Democrat organs spent over $60 million more than the GOP, and of course, the MSM is extremely biased towards the Democrats. The GOP will boost its spending as we get closer to the election.

The issues most important to the voters now all relate to the war in Iran. In addition to unease about the conflict itself, U.S. strikes there have led to occasional spikes in inflation, creating economic worries, and concerns that President Trump is not focused enough on the homefront. The Democrats and the MSM, driven crazy by their TDS, have actively been supporting the Iranian regime barbarians, and plan to double down on this. Only a few Democrats, including Sen. John Fetterman, and Rep. Jared Golden, have remained immune. 

However, voter fears will ease as the war winds down with a U.S victory. The TDS fueled belief that the U.S. will lose to the Iranian regime is ludicrous propaganda. 

This will leave the issue environment similar to what we had before the Iran war. With Republicans having some potential wedge issues they can still use against the Democrats. With the MAGA Inc. spending starting around Memorial Day, and the Republican Midterm Convention expected to occur sometime after Labor Day, possibly in Dallas, that is when things will really heat up.

But "We'll (Just Have to) See What Happens." 

Notes:

  • President Trump certainly needs to boost his approval ratings. Today, the RCP average has him at 41.5 percent approval, with 56.2 percent disapproval. He is again below the 43 percent that is a danger zone for presidents. 
  • It is unclear how President Trump’s status as a two-term-but-non-consecutive president will affect the normal vote patterns in House politics. 
  • In a reversal of the situation prior to 2016, the Republican vote is less likely to turn out in years where the president is not on the ballot. This means the GOP must find a way to motivate its weaker voters in 2026.

This GOP Rep Reveals Who She Thinks Is the Biggest Obstacle to Save America Act

This GOP Rep Reveals Who She Thinks Is the Biggest Obstacle to Save America Act

This GOP Rep Reveals Who She Thinks Is the Biggest Obstacle to Save America Act
AP Photo/Ben Curtis

We need to pass this bill. It’s just as important as the big, impressive bill, though it has been hindered by procedural obstacles, disagreements within the GOP Senate caucus on how to move forward, and the ongoing drama over the Department of Homeland Security shutdown. The agency has been shut down since Presidents’ Day weekend, but all workers are still being paid from last year’s tax cut bill. 

Still, it’s a circus. We need to protect election integrity and women’s sports, but it’s the provision that ensures only our citizens can vote that worries Democrats most. We need 60 votes to clear the procedural hurdles. Since we’re unlikely to get several Democrats to switch sides, I say nuke the filibuster. Pass this bill, pass anything we want, and finally give Republicans a long sheet of what to tell their constituents at town halls. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) was more blunt as to who shoulders most of the blame for the Save America Act stalling: it’s John Thune. She mentioned this during an interview with reporter Catherine Herridge (via RealClearPolitics):

CATHERINE HERRIDGE, STRAIGHT TO THE POINT, LA TIMES: Let's take that a step further. I mean, Republicans control the House and the Senate. Why can't they get the Save America Act, which requires evidence that you're an American, and ID to vote?

REP. ANNA PAULINA LUNA (R-FL): John Thune is a problem. I do not like what he's done because he has every ability, and really it's him that's blocking voter ID. He has every ability to embrace the standing filibuster or remove the filibuster.

Democrats are going to do it anyways. And by the way, the current form of the filibuster is a perversion of what it initially was. But there's this position in the Senate that people need to protect the institution.

I get protecting the institution, but let's also talk about what the institution's become.

HERRIDGE: Is John Thune weak?

HERRIDGE: I think John Thune is doing the wrong thing. I don't know if I would necessarily say weak because he's clearly stubborn. He's not doing voter ID.

But he can't honestly blame the Democrats for this because he's the one in control. And so what I would say and what I've continued to say is it's John Thune blocking voter ID. We have FISA up for a vote this week.

I'm trying to do everything I can to get voter ID on to FISA. But I'm having to work against my own party to do that. And I'm just one person and it takes multiple votes to do that.

Yes, FISA needs reform, but I think the number one most important issue in the country right now is voter ID. And if we can't deliver on that, then people like John Thune do not deserve to come back to Congress. Vote him out. He's not up for reelection, but when it's time.

Thune is opposing nationwide voter ID. That’s not something you want to be associated with, sir. I understand he’s doing his best, but now it’s time to get drastic because we’re facing an opposing party that’s not rational and will do anything to satisfy their radical activist base. 

FISA was given a short extension, through April 30, via a voice vote on the House floor at 2am this morning. They're adjourned now. The initial plan was to give FISA a five-year extension. The vote on that rule failed, as 20 or so Republicans defected.