Monday, June 29, 2026

Tom Homan Just Demolished Trump's Critics in One Fiery Speech

Tom Homan Just Demolished Trump's Critics in One Fiery Speech

Tom Homan Just Demolished Trump's Critics in One Fiery Speech
AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Border czar Tom Homan ripped into Democrats who are fighting the Trump administration’s effort to stop illegal immigration during an appearance with the Faith & Freedom Coalition, as he reminded attendees that the president's actions save lives every single day.

"I don't want to hear another damn word about President Trump being inhumane," the border czar said. "He's saving lives every day."

There's been studies done that 31 percent of women, these studies are done by independent groups, up to 31 percent of women that make that journey coming to the United States get sexually assaulted . Thirty-one percent admitted they got sexually assaulted making that journey. If 31 admitted it, how many is that, how many is that number really? So when President Trump has illegal immigration down 97 percent, how many women aren't being raped? How many children aren't dying making that journey? How many no unsuspecting terrorists aren't coming into country? How many pounds of fentanyl isn't coming across the border to kill Americans?

"President Trump is saving thousands of lives every month but no one wants to talk about it," he said.

He then tore into the left and the media for stoking violence and fear against Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, before delivering a blunt message to his haters and the cartel members who threatened him: “Come get some.”

Don't Forget the Broader Context of the Iranian Memorandum

Don't Forget the Broader Context of the Iranian Memorandum

Don't Forget the Broader Context of the Iranian Memorandum
X/The White House

The tentative "memorandum of understanding" with Iran has caused glee on the Left and furor among many on the Right. The Left might welcome "peace," but surely not as much as it enjoys infighting on the Right over the details.

If last week Democrats were calling President Donald Trump a fascist warmonger, now they deride his peace efforts as those of a Neville Chamberlain patsy. Within 24 hours, the Left's talking points shifted from a mad bomber-style Curtis LeMay in the White House to an impotent appeaser.

A week ago, some Republicans were arguing that not one of the prior seven presidents had dared to use force to stop Iran's nuclear program. Now some of them are deriding him as an Iranian enabler.

What We Are Missing

There are legitimate concerns about the tentative memorandum, including the idea of third-party cash infusions to the regime and claims that violence in Lebanon is somehow Israel's fault. In truth, history shows that Hezbollah, with Iranian financial support, consistently instigates the killing and then whines when Israel—or the U.S. in past conflicts—responds disproportionately.

That said, much of the current hysteria assumes a radical change in Trump's strategy rather than a continuity that has brought us to the current denouement. It also does not consider the wider strategic context of the memorandum, the critical role of domestic public opinion in shaping how wars are conducted, or the broader strategy of isolating and weakening the regime.

A closer look at the current position of the U.S. suggests it has done an enormous amount of fiscal, economic, and military damage to Iran—the full extent of which will not be known until foreigners are allowed into the country.

So why did Trump agree to a memorandum that does not treat Iran as a strategically defeated opponent without options?

Do we really want to micro-manage Iran?

Iran has been militarily devastated, but it does not yet consider itself strategically inert. The regime has little concern for the welfare of its own people and assumes Trump will not retaliate against dual-use targets in the manner of most past presidents who ordered bombing campaigns.

Remember, Trump could have gotten a much better deal had we dealt with the Iranians as we did with the once-defeated Iraqis and Taliban, whose governments were forcibly replaced by ones more agreeable to U.S. demands.

But, with a population of 93 million, Iran is neither Iraq nor Afghanistan, which together required decades of U.S. ground troops, $2 trillion in treasure, 7,000 American deaths, and 53,000 wounded. And in the end, those efforts still did not result in lasting Western-style governments aligned with U.S. interests.

Neither Afghanistan nor Iraq was as large or as formidable as Iran. To fully dictate terms to Iran as if it were an inert protectorate, the U.S. would either have to bomb it to smithereens or send in thousands of ground troops, both politically unpalatable to the American people. Trump must deal with the reality that Americans have been sick of dealing with the Middle East for years. By now, they believe that any costly, enforced regime change on the ground—or any years-long no-fly zone—is not worth the life of a single American soldier.

The War That Is and Is Not Over

Yet Iran remains militarily defeated if not devastated. Its ability to cause havoc should not be confused with the U.S. ability to inflict even greater damage on Iran's economy without significant concern about suffering losses in a "forever" war.

If Iran chooses to hit Kuwait with another dozen missiles this week, Trump can adopt the 1999 Bill Clinton-style approach to Serbia—something he has again so far avoided.

When that bombing stalemated in its fifth week, and Slobodan Milosevic remained defiant, Clinton ordered the bridges on the Danube taken out. And when there were still no concessions, NATO planes began dropping graphite bombs to disable 70 percent of the Belgrade grid, which, along with other dual-use targeting, finally forced Serbia to leave Kosovo.

So far, Trump has avoided the Clinton-Obama-style bombing of such targets in Serbia and Libya (e.g., Libyan TV/radio stations, industrial works, docks, ports, private homes and compounds, etc.). But should Iran begin to ignore its promises and renege on its agreements (and it will), the regime would have no ability to keep its utilities, roads, and transportation viable if the U.S. were even only to spend 48 hours to knock them all out.

In short, the U.S., by disproportionally hitting an entire array of dual-use targets, can force Iran to adhere to its agreements at any time.

Trump's Political Viability?

Why, then, did Trump agree to the memorandum instead of a few days of dual-use targeting?

He likely did so thinking he could manage the next four months until the midterms without an energy- and media-driven recession in the U.S. or abroad, which would likely ensure that the Republicans lose the House and perhaps also the Senate. And a Democratic Socialist-driven Congress would paralyze the MAGA agenda, guarantee two years of frenzied House subpoenas, and prompt a nonstop impeachment circus.

However, while 38 of the last 41 midterm elections have seen the in-party lose congressional seats, a Republican loss is not preordained this November.

Republicans will likely win the redistricting wars, both in red state legislatures and through the Supreme Court outlawing racial gerrymandering. They might then pick up between five and 10 new seats.

The Democratic Party has gone full socialist. And it has de facto embraced a number of unpopular 30/70 issues, including property confiscations, open borders, transgender chauvinism, restoration of DEI, the New Green Deal, and 10,000 illegal border entries a day.

Opening the Strait will soon crash the price of oil to prewar levels. And the U.S. economy, despite all the hysterical doom and gloom, plows ahead with record stock prices, strong employment figures, record foreign investment, more fossil fuel development, and massive deregulation and tax cuts in progress.

By November, we might even see inflation cooling with far lower gasoline prices and the memory of an active war abroad dissipating.

The Memorandum Is Not the End but the Beginning

The cessation of American bombing and economic strangulation of Iran, if both should follow, would not mark the end but the beginning of a new phase of problems for Iran. Once "peace" arrives, so will the internet of some sort in Iran, and, with that, a horde of Western reporters. And then the world will begin to witness hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of damage done to the Iranian military-industrial complex.

The already restless people will feel even more contempt for the Revolutionary Guard and theocracy, who talked a grand game, but whose imbecility and weakness caused the wreckage of their country. They will especially resent the regime's effort to rebuild a half-century, multi-billion military infrastructure while subsidizing nihilist Arab terrorists—all at their expense. Arming the resistance is another tool when Iran breaks its word.

Critics of the preliminary memorandum of understanding, not without merit, argue that the Gulf states will effectively underwrite the rebuilding of Iran's civilian and military infrastructure. Regrettably, perhaps.

But not so fast. What the Gulf states say now, and what they actually do, are, as we know from the past, two different things. It will not be popular in the Gulf to aid the reconstruction of an Iran that had preemptively bombed Gulf nation airports, hotels, tourist centers, and oil refineries and caused them billions of dollars in damage.

Time Is Not on Iran's Side

Iran thinks time is on its side, as Trump—at least for now—faces high gas prices and the midterms. In truth, time and dragging out negotiations are not in Iran's interest, given the midterms are not a sure Democratic bet, and the price of gas is already falling in the U.S.

Even if it behaves for the next four months as the memorandum of understanding morphs into armistice negotiations, sooner or later, the Iranian regime will revert to its innately terrorist nature and begin violating its agreements. And then Trump can hit Iran hard, but not to the point of crashing oil prices or restarting the war.

And once the midterms are over, and oil prices return to—or fall below—prewar levels, Trump will be unbound to force Iran to comply with new demands or let it wail and gnash its teeth among the rubble of its own ruin.

The World of Oil Is Changing

Even more worrisome to Iran is the current mad scramble of the Gulf states to build new or to expand existing pipelines to the Red Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Arabian Sea—thereby neutering the strategic importance of the Strait of Hormuz altogether.

Indeed, in a year or two, Iran may find its enemies can far better bottle up Iran's imports and exports by closing the Strait than Iran can do anything to interrupt the oil exports of the Gulf producers.

If Iran increases oil production, alongside Russia and expanded output in the United States and Venezuela, prices would likely drop—perhaps precipitously—and that would hit the economies of illiberal regimes in Moscow and Tehran far more than that of the U.S.

Geo-Strategy Does Not Favor Iran or Its Former Allies

Despite recent U.S. verbal, performance-art remonstrations against Israel, the Gulf and Israel will both see their interests increasingly aligned; for all the demonization of Israel, it poses no threat to the Gulf or moderate Arab nations. After all, in the past it has taken out two nuclear reactors in an unstable Iraq and Syria, demolished Hamas, intimidated the Houthis, and done more damage to Hezbollah than any other Western nation—all, ironically, to the profit and interest of the Gulf nations and the United States.

Europe may despise Trump. But his antics have prompted it to spend more money on defense, more rapidly, than at any time in NATO's history. And within a year, a bleeding Russia will have limited ability to threaten European NATO nations. Most are turning rightward and, despite denials, are trending toward the Trump model of increasing fossil fuel production, rearmament, tighter borders, deportations of criminal aliens, and a crackdown on crime.

Meanwhile, Russia is losing or stalemated in Ukraine. China can no longer buy cheap, sanctioned oil. For all the talk of its rise, Beijing now imports over 10 million barrels of oil per day and 30 percent of its food.

China's technological position depends on espionage and on sending the West half a million Chinese students each year—at a time when illegal and legal immigration, along with student visas and green cards, are all under scrutiny in Europe and the U.S.

Lies About the Past

Two other unhinged left-wing talking points claim that Iran is better off now than it was when it was never bombed during the 2015 Obama "Iran Deal" and that only Trump ensured the closure of the Strait, which was open before his war.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has been repeating both absurdities.

Warren should ask the late supreme leader and some 80 of his theocratic terrorist cronies whether they would have preferred the ascendant Obama years a decade ago to their current domain in a fiery inferno.

Are we to believe the lunacy that the Iranian air force, air defenses, navy, and missile arsenal were actually in bad shape during the Obama and Biden years because of American sophistry and rhetoric, and that now, after 40 days of bombing, they are in their greatest form ever?

The Strait was closed for a few weeks because Iran lost most of its military and had its nuclear program buried under a flurry of bombs. It remained mostly open under prior presidents, who repeatedly warned Iran to stop work on a bomb and then failed to back up their threats.

This year, beleaguered Iran was desperate to shut down the Strait as Tehran saw its military and economy in shatters and its nuclear ambitions buried under rubble. Prewar Iran was content to keep the Strait open while the regime spread terror and fear throughout the Middle East and beyond without fear of consequences.

In sum, the memorandum and what follows are not the end of the story but merely the beginning. What will follow—years of costly Iranian reconstruction, the absence of a nuclear deterrent, the ability of the U.S. to strike at will, an increasingly sidelined Strait of Hormuz, the Israeli diminishment of its proxies, new anti-Iranian alliances, the loss of nuclear patrons, and an even angrier and more restive populace—will not require an Iraq- or Afghanistan-like intervention.

As the Iranians digest all this, they will stop bragging about the memorandum and increasingly try to lie, finagle, and escape their doom loop—efforts that will only ensure further fragmentation and destruction of the regime.

https://townhall.com/columnists/victordavishanson/2026/06/25/dont-forget-the-broader-context-of-the-iranian-memorandum-n2678329?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-veF8AuDR2b&utm_term=&_nlid=veF8AuDR2b&_nhids=ncrzZsKgHNqDls

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Ken Paxton's New Ad Against James Talarico Is Brutal

Ken Paxton's New Ad Against James Talarico Is Brutal

Ken Paxton's New Ad Against James Talarico Is Brutal
AP Photo/Eric Gay

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton lashed out at state Rep. James Talarico in a new campaign ad as both candidates seek to become the state’s next senator.

The ad slams Talarico by revealing him to be a radical leftist who is out of touch with Texas values. It intercuts footage of the Democratic candidate with scenes of a family at dinner, drag queen story hours, oil fields and pipelines, and a gas pump showing prices over $4 per gallon. The spot points out how Talarico pushes transgender ideology in schools, destroying jobs in the energy sector, and raising taxes and prices in a way that harms families.

Talarico’s numbers surged after he won the Democratic Senate nomination. But since then, Paxton and Republicans have attacked him with a flurry of his previously stated views on gender ideology, taxes, and other matters.

The candidate has made transgender issues one of his primary issues over his years as a politician and has often pushed for the embrace of gender ideology in schools. During a 2021 speech on the Texas House floor he opposed a bill prohibiting biological males in girls sports. “Trans children are God’s children, made in God’s own image,” he said. “There’s nothing wrong with them. Nothing at all. They are perfect. They are beautiful and they are sacred.”

He has also stated that “God is nonbinary.”

Talarico has also backed strict energy industry-killing climate policies. He’s praised activist groups seeking to phase out fossil fuels. In a June 2024 video with a climate group pushing for the government to force 100 percent renewable energy, the candidate called their work “the most important work in the most important time in the most important place.”

He has also authored bills to make deep cuts to greenhouse gas by 2050 that would have forced major changes in the fossil fuel industry. This could have endangered hundreds of thousands of Texas jobs.

The candidate has also voted against tax relief and pushed for raising taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations. He even voted against a constitutional ban on a state income tax and against a measure that would require voter approval before local property tax increases.

On the campaign trail, he said, "I absolutely think that billionaires need to pay their fair share in taxes.”

However, his record shows he also wants taxes to be higher on ordinary Texans.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/jeff-charles/2026/06/26/ken-paxtons-campaign-ad-against-james-talarico-n2678347?utm_source=rsafternoonbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

The DSA Hates America. Democrats Helped It Grow.

The DSA Hates America. Democrats Helped It Grow.

The DSA Hates America. Democrats Helped It Grow.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
For years, Democratic Party leaders convinced themselves they had struck a clever bargain with the Democratic Socialists of America.

The DSA would provide the energy. The activists. The volunteers. The small-dollar donations. The army of young true believers willing to knock doors, flood social media, and spend weekends campaigning.

In return, Democrats would provide the ballot line.

The arrangement worked because each side believed it was using the other.

Democrats thought they were harnessing the DSA's enthusiasm while keeping the socialists safely on the back bench.

The DSA thought it was infiltrating one of America's two major political parties.

This week, following Zohran Mamdani's stunning victory in New York and a string of successful socialist-backed campaigns, it is becoming increasingly clear which side understood the arrangement better.

The Democratic Socialists are no longer content to serve as the Democratic Party's foot soldiers.

They intend to command the army.

What makes this development particularly alarming is that many Americans still do not understand what the DSA actually believes. The media often portrays the organization as little more than an energetic progressive movement advocating for free college, universal healthcare, and higher taxes on the wealthy.

The organization's newly adopted national platform tells a very different story.

As Stu Smith reported in City Journal's analysis of the DSA's new platform, the organization has embraced a sweeping agenda that would fundamentally transform the American constitutional system.

"The document commits DSA to scrapping the U.S. Senate, 'abolishing the carceral forces of the capitalist state,' defunding the Department of War, amnesty for all immigrants, and 'replac[ing] the President and Supreme Court with an executive and judiciary chosen by and subordinate to Congress.'"

Smith further notes that the platform calls for abolishing the Electoral College, drafting a new constitution, creating a "democratic socialist republic," expanding public ownership throughout the economy, closing overseas military bases, ending sanctions as a tool of American foreign policy, and granting broad immigration amnesty.

Read that list again.

Abolish the Senate.

Abolish the Electoral College.

Replace the presidency.

Subordinate the Supreme Court.

Draft a new constitution.

Create a socialist republic.

This is not a reform agenda.

This is a replacement agenda.

The DSA does not look at America's institutions and conclude they need improvement.

The DSA looks at America's institutions and concludes they need elimination.

That distinction is critical.

Most political movements seek to change policies.

The DSA seeks to change the country.

Its leaders frequently describe America's economic system as inherently exploitative. Its platform treats constitutional restraints as barriers to be overcome. It regards many of the institutions that have defined the American experiment for nearly 250 years as fundamentally illegitimate.

The movement's problem is not that America occasionally fails to live up to its ideals.

Its problem is with the ideals themselves.

But there is another irony here that should keep Democratic strategists awake at night.

The DSA doesn't merely despise the American political system.

It despises the Democratic Party.

For years, socialist activists have portrayed Democrats as corporate collaborators, defenders of capitalism, and obstacles to genuine revolutionary change. The DSA's own platform frames politics as a choice between "far-right Republicans and corporate Democrats."

Think about that.

The same activists Democrats have welcomed into their coalition do not regard Democrats as allies.

They regard them as adversaries.

Temporary adversaries, perhaps. More useful adversaries than Republicans. But adversaries nonetheless.

This is where Democratic leaders made their fatal mistake.

They assumed that because the DSA helped elect Democrats, it wanted to strengthen the Democratic Party.

It never did.

The DSA viewed the Democratic Party the same way a parasite views a host.

As a vehicle.

As a means to an end.

As something useful until it is no longer needed.

That reality is becoming impossible to ignore.

Mamdani's victory was not simply a win for a charismatic candidate. It was proof of concept for a movement that has spent years building grassroots infrastructure, recruiting activists, training candidates, and preparing for exactly this moment.

The Democratic establishment believed it could benefit from the DSA's money, manpower, enthusiasm, and turnout operation while preventing socialists from exercising real power.

Now those socialists are winning primaries.

They're defeating establishment Democrats.

They're reshaping local parties.

They're demanding ideological conformity.

And they're openly declaring that their ultimate goal is not to reform the Democratic Party but to transform the country itself.

Republicans should pay attention to this movement because it represents one of the most radical ideological projects in modern American politics.

Democrats should pay even closer attention because they invited it into their coalition.

For years, Democratic leaders treated the DSA as an eccentric faction that could be managed.

The DSA never saw itself as a faction.

It saw itself as the future.

The socialists knocking doors for Democrats were not auditioning for supporting roles.

They were preparing for a takeover.

And now they're making their move.