Wednesday, May 27, 2026
WH Pushes NDAs After Reports on Iran, Venezuela Leaks
The Trump administration is moving to require all current and future federal employees to sign nondisclosure agreements as part of a broader effort to tighten controls on leaks of non-public government information. The move comes as part of a wider push that officials have linked to recent media leaks involving sensitive national security matters, including reporting on U.S. military operations and internal assessments tied to the Iran war and earlier Venezuela-related operations. A proposed notice posted Tuesday on the Office of Personnel Management website and expected to be published in the Federal Register seeks public comment on a draft NDA that could apply to both new and existing employees across federal agencies. The form is intended to document employees' acknowledgment of existing legal obligations to protect confidential, proprietary, or otherwise non-public information obtained through their official duties while preserving lawful whistleblower protections. The proposal also asks agencies to weigh whether the NDA should apply only to unclassified material and what penalties should apply to employees who refuse to sign. OPM said it was responding in part to what it described as "several recent instances" of unauthorized disclosures involving internal agency communications related to rulemaking and policy development. The notice specifically cited cases in which FBI and Department of Homeland Security personnel allegedly disclosed details about planned immigration enforcement actions without authorization. The push comes as the administration continues an intensified crackdown on leaks, including high-profile disclosures involving national security and military operations. That effort has increasingly overlapped with investigations tied to reporting on the Iran war, where officials have raised concerns about unauthorized disclosures of sensitive war planning, internal deliberations, and post-strike assessments of U.S. operations. According to reporting citing administration officials, President Donald Trump has privately pressed senior Justice Department leadership to aggressively pursue individuals responsible for leaking information related to Iran military operations, including details that officials say revealed internal debates and early intelligence assessments of strike effectiveness. Some of those disclosures reportedly involved Pentagon warnings about the risks of an extended campaign and reporting on damage assessments that undercut the administration's public claims about the scope of the strikes. Other reports have described internal concern over the release of information related to classified or sensitive evaluations of Iran's remaining military capabilities following U.S. operations, as well as earlier reporting tied to Venezuela-related military planning and operations. The leak investigations have also reportedly included discussions about whether media organizations should be compelled to provide records or testimony in order to identify government sources behind the disclosures. Journalists and press freedom advocates have warned that such steps, combined with broader leak prosecutions, could chill reporting on wartime decision-making and national security policy. The administration has defended its approach as necessary to protect classified information, safeguard troops, and prevent unauthorized disclosures that could compromise operations. The OPM proposal also highlights tensions inside the federal workforce over transparency rules and discipline, noting the balance between safeguarding sensitive information and preserving legally protected whistleblower activity. The American Federation of Government Employees has criticized the NDA proposal as an attempt to silence career civil servants and expand political control over the federal bureaucracy. Labor leaders argue the measure could deter employees from reporting waste, fraud, and abuse, while administration officials maintain it is aimed narrowly at protecting legitimate national security and policy deliberations. Legal experts have also questioned the need for new agreements, noting that existing federal statutes already prohibit the unauthorized disclosure of classified and sensitive information, and raise questions about how additional NDAs would be enforced. |
Another Vapid Hollywood Leftie Comes After Spencer Pratt — but He's Ready With the Killer Response
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It seems as if most in the dominant Marxist community in Hollywood are coming after LA Mayoral Candidate Spencer Pratt
— which tells you one thing: he’s on the right track. He’s been eviscerating incumbent mayor Karen Bass,
who has led the already-struggling city into further ruin, and a lot of the entrenched powers that be don’t like him calling out that reality. TV someone Lisa Rinna was the latest to give him some lip: she said at the American Music Awards on Monday that she doesn’t think a reality star is qualified to run the second most-populous city in the nation. Pratt wasn’t having it:
Notice how Variety, the “Hollywood Bible,” says Pratt “claimed” Bass was a Castro supporter way back when. No, he didn’t just claim it; there are receipts, and independent journalist Andy Ngo has them:
MORE: Spencer Pratt: Proof That Donald Trump Has Ushered in the 'New Age' of Republican Candidates Ya Think?! Karen Bass Accuses Spencer Pratt of Tapping Into 'A General Sense' of Anger Pratt hit back hard on the vacuous actress’ criticism:
As RedState’s Becky Noble wrote on Tuesday, Pratt has repeatedly shown political combat skills that resemble those of… none other than Donald Trump.
Rinna is way out of her depth here. Those infamous lips may be moving, but what she says is, “let’s vote for more decline.” Many Tinseltown “stars” sound off, but unfortunately, most of what they say is as real as silicone implants. Pratt, who has a political science degree from the University of Southern California, has repeatedly shown that he has a firm grasp of the issues and has tapped into a public zeitgeist of major dissatisfaction for the way things are being run in the City of Angels. And once again, he proved he was ready for battles against intellectual lightweights. While he still faces an uphill battle in this deepest of blue enclaves, he’s shown all the right moves. Too bad there aren’t more like him. |
Hoover Dam Just Delivered the Most American Thing You'll See All Week
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While the left spent Memorial Day weekend protesting and posting takes about American guilt, the Trump Administration lit up Hoover Dam with a 300-foot American flag and 500 LED lights blazing red, white, and blue into the Nevada canyon walls. The display runs every night through July 4. This is the kind of America 250 celebration the country actually deserves. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum posted a video of the display on X, accompanied by a patriotic message and a song with lyrics to match. The numbers are staggering. More than 500 automated LED lights, powered by the dam's own hydroelectric generators, run on over 126,000 feet of wire installed by 30 lighting technicians. The flag weighs 2,000 pounds and covers roughly the size of a football field. It took five days of sewing just to get it ready, and it also previously flew at Indianapolis Colts and Las Vegas Raiders games. Organizers called it the "most ambitious long-duration installation" ever put together at the site. Bureau of Reclamation acting regional director Genevieve Johnson set the patriotic tone from the podium:
The dam went up in the middle of the Great Depression, with more than 21,000 workers over five years, resulting in more than 100 deaths. There were no DEI consultants, no environmental impact statements, and no six-week public comment period. But they built it anyway. Nearly a century later, the Hoover Dam still delivers water and power across the Southwest. Concrete doesn't care about the news cycle. Read More: Even Democrats Are Condemning the DNC’s Memorial Day Post Reporter's Attempt to Get Medal of Honor Recipients to Bash America Doesn't Go According to Plan Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo (R) was there, along with Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs (D), Clark County Commissioner Jim Gibson, and LVCVA President Steve Hill. To her credit, Hobbs showed up. Lombardo, though, actually said something worth quoting.
Gibson put it more simply:
Weather permitting, the lights run every night through July 4, with Saturday fireworks shows scheduled through June and July as part of the broader America 250 summer lineup around Las Vegas. Tours run $15 to $40 per person. Visitors can also view the display for free from the Mike O'Callaghan–Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge. On July 4, the lights go up one last time over something 90 years old that still works, built by Americans who didn't wait for permission. In a country that can't seem to finish a highway on-ramp anymore, that's worth more than a celebration. It's a reminder. |
Remember the Tapes From Special Counsel Robert Hur That Showed Joe Was a Drooling Vegetable? Well...
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Joe Biden was sharp as a tack, remember? We knew that was a lie — all you had to do was watch this man in action for five minutes, and you could tell he was mentally frail. He was done, and anyone who’s dealt with elder relatives could see he wasn’t fit for the job. We had to endure the longest version of ‘Weekend at Bernie’s’ before finally wheeling him out of the White House. Yet, during that failed presidency, Biden was the subject of a special counsel investigation into whether he mishandled classified documents after numerous sensitive materials were discovered unsecured at multiple locations, including the garage at Biden’s residence. Joe took records about the Afghanistan war. He recorded tapes with a ghostwriter; Biden took these files as he wanted the final say about the 2009 troop surge, which he opposed (via ABC News):
The lawsuit follows an intervention by Biden in a separate lawsuit brought by the conservative Heritage Foundation over a FOIA request that sought records from the investigation by former special counsel Robert Hur.
Special Counsel Robert Hur got trashed by congressional Democrats for adding excerpts for his interview with Biden, noting that he did willfully retain classified materials but won’t be charged due to those mitigating factors. Remember, Hur’s report is also a preview of what could be encountered in court. It also shredded the Democrats’ narrative about the man.
Biden is on tape admitting to keeping classified materials, while Biden’s lawyer, Bob Bauer, argued for the Hur tapes to be released. He said the interview went well, but Hur disagreed—DOJ has transcripts of those interviews. Let’s compare. Some parts of those interviews were made public, and they were brutal.
Biden forgot when his son, Beau, died, for example. |
Here's Your Texas Run-Offs Round-Up
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The Texas run-off elections produced a number of wildly interesting results. While Paxton won with a commanding lead,
Jeff provided you with that coverage earlier tonight. I’ll give you an update on the most important results down the ballot. The MAGA candidates secured a clean sweep in each of the state-wide races. Mayes Middleton, the state senator who secured the endorsement of Republican U.S. Senate nominee Ken Paxton in the run-offs, cruised to a win in the Texas Attorney General primary race. Rep. Chip Roy, one of the more effective legislators who notably broke with President Trump at some key moments, will be out of office come January. Further down the ballot, the anti-Islam crusader with a bright future in Texas politics of Bo French had the narrowest victory of the the right-most candidates. His opponent Jim Wright had managed to get the endorsement of countless top Republicans in the state, but was unable to get over the finish line. In Texas’ 18th District, Rep. Al Green faced off against Rep. Christian Menefee.
Menefee won his seat in January after a special election and is one of the most junior legislators in Congress. Green was widely known for his antics during Trump’s State of the Union addresses and his attempts to impeach Trump. The race was not remotely close, as Menefee wholly routed Green. In Texas’ 35th District, Democrats chose not to nominate Maureen Galindo. Galindo, who works as a “sex therapist,” gained national attention after suggesting that ICE should be defunded and that their detention facilities should be used to imprison and castrate American Zionists and former ICE agents. Johnny Garcia will instead face off against Trump-endorsed Carlos De La Cruz who managed to beat State Rep. John Lujan in a narrow race. Lujan faced significant controversy in his race after Townhall’s reporting of his employment of a Democrat consultant who helped the progressive Castro brothers ascend to power. With the margin of victory displayed by those deep in the Trump-orbit, last night can only be considered a total blowout in favor of the MAGA movement. |
DHS blasts N.J. Dems, accusing them of coordinated falsehoods over ICE detainees
Trump Assembles Hardline Cabinet at Camp David to Confront Iran
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President Donald Trump has called a rare, Cabinet-wide meeting at Camp David to tackle the knotty Iran situation. This isn’t a photo-op or a feel-good weekend retreat. Bringing the whole Cabinet together — including Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Vice President JD Vance, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — sends a clear message: the White House is treating Iran as an immediate, top-tier threat that could touch everything from our energy markets to the lives of sailors in the Strait of Hormuz. Why Camp David Matters: Serious Talks, Not Small TalkCamp David has long been the place presidents go when the stakes are high. This is where wartime strategy and sensitive diplomacy happen. If President Trump wanted a routine briefing, he could do that in the West Wing. He didn’t. Choosing Camp David signals Washington is ready to combine tough diplomacy with credible military options. The goal — as the administration says — is to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, choke off Iran’s path to a bomb, and secure regional guarantees that actually hold Tehran accountable. The Balancing Act: Diplomacy Backed by StrengthMake no mistake: diplomacy is wise if it produces real results. But we have been down the road of “negotiations” before, and the last era taught us that vague promises and toothless inspections don’t stop bad actors. President Trump knows a deal that reads like an apology will only bring temporary quiet and long-term danger. The Cabinet meeting is about building leverage — economic, military, and diplomatic — so any agreement restricts Iranian nuclear capability and its regional aggression in enforceable ways. What Republicans Should DemandConservative voices are right to be skeptical of any deal that looks too familiar to past failures. Republicans must insist on three non-negotiables: verifiable limits on nuclear enrichment, robust maritime security to keep shipping lanes open, and regional security guarantees backed by allied forces and clear enforcement mechanisms. If diplomacy can lock that down without dragging U.S. forces into a costly ground conflict, great. If not, the administration must be ready to act decisively — and the current lineup at Camp David shows it understands that reality. Markets, allies, and adversaries are all watching. Oil prices wobble on every headline out of the Strait of Hormuz, and America’s credibility is the one leverage we can’t afford to squander. President Trump’s Camp David summit is the right kind of dramatic: focused, forceful, and practical. Now the test is turning tough talk and high-level strategy into a deal that actually protects American lives and interests — not another headline that sounds impressive and does nothing. |
DOJ Greenlights 15 Medicaid Prosecutors After $90M Minnesota Bust
The Department of Justice just announced a real step up in the fight against Medicaid fraud: authorization to hire 15 new prosecutors focused on Medicaid cases nationwide. That is the news, plain and simple, and it came with a high-profile Minnesota takedown that alleged more than $90 million in fraud. If you care about taxpayer dollars — and you should — this is a development worth watching.
DOJ authorizes 15 new Medicaid prosecutors
Assistant Attorney General Colin M. McDonald said the DOJ’s National Fraud Enforcement Division has authorization to create 15 new trial attorney positions dedicated to Medicaid fraud. That’s not a feel-good slogan. It’s a staffing move aimed at building a real, nationwide enforcement capacity. McDonald told reporters “This is just the beginning,” and he wasn’t speaking in public relations clichés. This expansion is part of the DOJ’s broader push under the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, and it involved HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz, and FBI leadership. The message: the federal government is moving beyond talk and into manpower.
Minnesota takedown underscores scale of the problem
The staffing news was announced alongside charges in Minnesota where federal prosecutors say 15 defendants were tied to schemes with more than $90 million in intended loss. DOJ described those cases as among the largest Medicaid fraud matters in that district and even “first-of-their-kind” allegations in some programs. United States Attorney Daniel N. Rosen and FBI Co‑Deputy Director Christopher G. Raia joined the announcement. A coordinated strike-force approach — the Midwest Strike Force expansion — was highlighted as the model for knocking down complex, multi-defendant schemes. In short: the DOJ is testing how to turn authorization papers into real courtroom results.
Why this matters and what to watch next
Authorization to hire is one thing; filling the jobs and getting cases to trial is another. Watch for how fast the DOJ posts and hires the 15 trial attorneys, and whether budget or bureaucratic hurdles slow things down. The practical results will also depend on continued co‑operation with HHS, CMS, and state partners. Expect more coordinated takedowns in places where officials suspect organized fraud. For taxpayers tired of watching money vanish into fake clinics, sham providers, or phantom services, the promise of dedicated prosecutors is welcome — but the proof will be in more indictments, convictions, and money returned to the public coffers.
This effort should make state leaders squirm, too. Program design and local oversight will face scrutiny as federal teams follow the money. If state officials want fewer federal probes, they can start by tightening controls and demanding accountability from the managers of Medicaid funds. If the DOJ follows through — and that’s a big “if” that depends on hiring and budgets — this expansion could mark a turning point. For now, the high-level announcements and the Minnesota charges give conservatives and taxpayers a reason to cheer, and give fraudsters every reason to start worrying.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
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