Presumptuous Politics

Friday, June 5, 2026

Senate Passes $70B Immigration Enforcement Funding Bill

Senate Passes $70B Immigration Enforcement Bill

The Senate passed legislation to fund President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement agencies early Friday morning, after weeks of delays and fierce backlash to an unrelated $1.776 billion settlement fund that threatened to derail the bill.

Senators voted 52-47 for the $70 billion legislation to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol for the next three years, through the end of Trump’s term.

The final vote came just before 5 a.m., after Republicans narrowly defeated multiple attempts by Democrats and Republicans to add language to the bill that would permanently ban Trump’s settlement fund for political allies who believe they have been politically persecuted.

Republicans cleared a major hurdle overnight when they defeated an amendment proposed by one of their own members, Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, that would have redirected payments from the settlement to members of law enforcement who were injured in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol.

The amendments were a test of party unity that complicated what should have been an easy vote for Republicans who wanted to keep the focus on immigration enforcement in an election year.

Instead, they spent almost a full day haggling among themselves over whether to block the settlement fund, even after acting Attorney General Todd Blanche 

Trump says he will nominate Todd Blanche to be attorney general | CNN  Politics 

had said earlier this week that it would not go forward.

“This would have been done several hours ago if we weren’t having to deal with some of the issues around the fund,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said shortly before midnight.

Thune himself has criticized the judgement fund, which was part of a settlement that resolves Trump’s lawsuit against the IRS over the leak of his tax returns and has angered many of his GOP colleagues.

But he has been pushing GOP senators for weeks to keep the bill focused on the funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol, which Democrats have blocked since early this year, and to avoid adding new provisions that could complicate its passage in the House.

Still, a group of Republican senators pushed all day and into the night to block the settlement’s payouts through legislation.

That effort came after Trump raised new doubts about the settlement’s future Wednesday afternoon — just after the Senate had voted to start debate on the immigration bill — when he told reporters that the settlement is “very important” and said “I don’t know” whether it is dead or on hold.

“I’d have to ask the lawyers,” he said.

The first vote on Thursday morning, a Democratic effort to ban the settlement, was held open for several hours as three senators, including Cassidy, decided whether to support it.

The Democrat motion was narrowly defeated when Cassidy eventually voted against it and the two other GOP senators — Jon Husted of Ohio and Dan Sullivan of Alaska, both of whom are up for reelection this year — voted for it.

The Senate then rejected a second amendment from Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina that would also have banned the settlement fund but moved the money to a separate anti-fraud fund at the Department of Justice. Most Democrats voted against the amendment, guaranteeing its defeat, but more than 10 Republicans supported it.

Tillis said the fund is a political liability for the party.

“If Blanche says this is largely inoperative, why not use this moment to codify that?” Tillis said. “Otherwise, you’re exposing every one of our members who are in cycle to having to deal with this between today and Election Day, and that makes no sense for something that the DOJ says they’re not moving forward with.”

Cassidy's amendment to compensate the injured police officers was a pointed rebuke, as payouts from Trump's fund could have potentially gone to Trump supporters who beat police and attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Despite Blanche's comments, Cassidy said that the fund is still part of an active settlement and “absolutely can be used.”

The Senate rejected several other Democratic efforts to try to block or limit the fund, including amendments to ban payments to Jan. 6 defendants who injured law enforcement officers.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., 

Schumer is doing damage control. It isn't working. - POLITICO 

said Republicans are now “leaving taxpayers to rely on nothing more than a promise from Donald Trump’s personal fixer. That is not accountability. That is a permission slip.”

Enactment of the roughly $70 billion bill to fund ICE and the Border Patrol would end the blockade by Democrats who demanded policy changes after the fatal shootings of two protesters by federal agents in January. The bill would fund the agencies for three years, through the end of Trump’s term.

 

Senate Republicans used a complicated procedural maneuver to get around the filibuster and pass the budget legislation with no Democratic votes. But it took weeks to get the bill to the Senate floor as Republicans navigated various obstacles to passage created by Trump and the White House — including a $1 billion proposal for White House security and Trump’s ballroom that they eventually scrapped and the fierce bipartisan backlash to the settlement fund.

Democrats say any funding bill for the Homeland Security Department should place restraints on federal immigration authorities, including better identification for federal officers and more use of judicial warrants, among other asks.

After federal agents shot Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Trump agreed to a Democratic request that the Homeland Security bill be separated from a larger spending measure that became law. But bipartisan negotiations went nowhere, and the department funding lapsed in mid-February with no agreement on changes to the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement tactics.

Congress eventually funded the rest of the Homeland Security Department at the end of April with Democratic support, but ICE and Border Patrol has remained without regular funding.

 

Eric Schmitt Takes Mazie Hirono to the Wood Shed Over Denaturalizing Fraudsters

 

Mazie Hirono's Years-Long Fight For Labor Secretary Comes To A Head -  Honolulu Civil Beat

On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution held a hearing titled "Protecting American Citizenship III: Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits."  

Under discussion was the Safeguarding Consumers from Advertising Misconduct (SCAM) Act, bipartisan legislation that would require online platforms to secure their sites from fraudulent and deceptive advertising, as well as demand stronger accountability when users on their platforms are victimized by scam artists and fraudsters.

Sen. Eric Schmitt (R-MO) has proposed expanding the SCAM Act to include provisions that would revoke the citizenship of any naturalized citizen within the first 10 years of their being granted citizenship, if they are found complicit in activities that defraud the American people. The committee invited legal and immigration experts as witnesses, including former VA Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, to discuss and debate where the Constitution draws the line on the government's role in revoking citizenship and Congress' plenary powers.

Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI) was also on this committee and chose to use her question time as an opportunity to go on a TDS-laced ramble.

Rinse. Repeat.

After Hirono accused the Trump administration of using the immigration process to target all immigrant communities, Schmitt leveled her. To understand the reason behind his searing response requires hearing exactly how insane Hirono sounded. 

Hirono started with, "This regime said it would only go after the worst of the worst and criminals," then swiftly slid into accusations that the Trump administration only targets legal immigrants and naturalized citizens. Hirono rarely has an independent thought of her own — if she thinks at all — so she read off cue cards no doubt prepared by her staffers. Yet, she still managed to meander through circular logic about travel bans, attacks on international students, and how this alleged targeting of these foreign students made it difficult to "add to the diversity... and also the payment of tuitions," at the Ivy League universities. As if these institutions didn't have billion-dollar endowments to pull from. So, it certainly wasn't hurting them.


Read More: House Hearing Reveals What Auditors Found in Ohio's Medicaid System - It's Worse Than You Think

 To No One's Surprise, Newark Anti-ICE Rioters Coordinate Over Signal Chats and Are Funded by Big Money


But here is where Hirono went completely off the rails. 

Hirono said:

"It's just the latest step in this regime wreaking havoc around our already broken immigration system. Trying to break it beyond repair, from where I sit. He's now telling 24 million... 24 million naturalized Americans that their citizenship can be questioned. And I think when I say this hearing is bizarre, I mean, you're going to use conduct that occurs 10 years after the naturalization was conducted or the application for naturalization was submitted, and conduct 10 years later to somehow go back to the point of the application to determine whether there was fraud was committed, it's very bizarre. So, 24 million already naturalized citizens... I happen to be the only naturalized citizen sitting on this committee, and I am horrified by the implication that naturalized citizens basically get second-class citizenship. Not only, and should they commit crimes ... yes, as citizens, yes, they should be prosecuted like any other U.S. citizen. But what, uhhh... laws... or bills like the SCAM Act does is it subjects the naturalized citizen to even more... ummm... uh... harm,  or, or more than what would be visited upon by a U.S. citizen. Which a naturalized citizen, by definition, is. 

"So, let's be clear. This has never been about law and order for the Republicans, this is all about getting immigrants. It's about terrorizing immigrant communities. Whether it be ICE officers who are acting outside of what would be considered reasonable behavior, and using our immigration system as a pretext, basically, to keep certain people out of our country.

"As a naturalized citizen, I can't think of a more undemocratic, un-American thing to do to someone who chooses to become a U.S. citizen, to hold this over their heads and to treat us as second class citizens." 

This would have been one response to Hirono's banal pablum:

Hirono thought she still had time, so she bumbled into an actual question, without even being aware of how many witnesses were sitting in front of her. Of course, Hirono took more than the five minutes allotted to her, because the witness she addressed the question to needed to complete his answer. Once he did, Hirono ended the time by saying, "It's just astounding. It should be unconstitutional."

It was now Schmitt's time, and he immediately dived in, addressing Hirono's incoherent diatribe. 

Schmitt began:

 

"Speaking of astounding. Your comments are astounding, Senator. You mentioned a few words. 'Horrific.' I think to the American taxpayer that's been ripped off from people who came to this country to rip them off, that's Horrific.

"You talk about, 'Bizarre' —"

Hirono attempted to interrupt Schmitt, but he was having none of it.

"No, no, NO. It's my time now. It's my time. You went over time, it's my time. 

"'Bizarre' is the idea that you would be here in this committee defending violent murderers from being deported. That you would be defending violent rapists from being deported. That you would defend people who took advantage of the good people of this country of their taxpayer dollars, that is bizarre. A terrorist who kills American citizens. You know what's bizarre? Is your defense of that.

"So, forgive me if your 24 million Americans — or naturalized citizens — should be afraid. That's ridiculous."

Hirono tried again to interrupt Schmitt, and he showed her the back of his hand! 

"No, no, no — nothing but fearmongering here. You have nothing but fearmongering here. 

"What I'm saying in this bill is, if you do those things to the American people, if you take advantage of taxpayers..."

Hirono tried a third time to interject, but Schmitt once again showed her his hand, saying, "You're not recognized!"

Wow. Schmitt took no prisoners as he concluded his blunt and unequivocal address.

"If you commit a terrorist act. If you commit wholesale welfare fraud, within 10 years, you're damn right we're deporting you.

"If you're convicted, it's not being accused of anything. If you are convicted in a court of law of these crimes, absolutely we should not only convict you, but we should deport you. 

"Gone.

"And if you think that's some sort of like, negative assertion towards me, I'll take it. I love it. That's what we should be doing more of in this country. 

"Because people are coming here and they're ripping off taxpayers. And I, for one, don't want to see it anymore. And if you want to have that debate in public we can do it, but that's what this hearing is about: to examine the SCAM Act. So, I'd just like to expose a few of your lies in your most recent dissertation on the dais here."

That's bound to leave a mark, especially on Mazie Hirono's already soft head. So far, we have six Republican senators who are not seeking reelection and two who have been primaried. It would be a wonderful thing if their replacements have an ounce of the knowledge, fire, and conviction of Sen. Eric Schmitt in doing the business of the American people and standing up for the concerns.

 

Trump Demolishes Hunter, Talarico, and 'Basket-Case' Platner All in One Hilarious Take on '28 Election

Donald Trump spoke to reporters Thursday from the Oval Office at an event touting the administration’s major new coal‑energy initiative, and, as is often the case, he had some brutal but pointed lines directed toward his political adversaries.

Fox News’ Peter Doocy asked him the question of the day:

DOOCY: Hunter Biden. He's on social media now, and he has suggested ­— maybe joking, I don't know — that he could run for president in 2028. How would he do, Hunter Biden, in a 2028 Democratic primary?

Trump had a great answer, pointing out that since the Democrats have apparently dropped all standards of decency, maybe Joe’s son would do well:

TRUMP:  You would think that, you know, past is something to do with winning an election, and I would say his past is not the greatest.
[...]

Um, I'm not gonna say bad [things].

I'm sure, you know, hey, if the guy from Maine can do well, I guess Hunter could do well, too, 'cause the guy from Maine is a basket case, and I would say worse than him is the one from Texas, that looks like Alfred E. Neuman.

I would say that if he can do, well, maybe Hunter can do well. I'm not sure, It would be pretty close as far as I'm concerned.

The “basket case” would, of course, be Maine's Democratic nominee for Senate, the scandal-plagued, ethically challenged Graham Platner, who has behaved so badly in his history that a new disturbing report drops almost every single day. The Texan who looks like Alfred E. Neuman, meanwhile, is the Lone Star State Senate "meat-loving" nominee, James Talarico.


TROUBLED PASTS: Latest Platner Oppo Drop Is Brutal - Paints Ugly Pattern of Abuse

Talarico Desperately Tries to Clean Up His 'Cringey Comments,' but Just Makes It Worse


Good comedy is often effective because it shines a light on reality, and excellent satire works best when the story could be true. Trump’s comments here might give you a chuckle, but he’s hit the target: the Dems would seemingly prop up a demon if they thought he could win. Character is irrelevant to them in modern times.

Speaking of despicable character, Hunter Biden has recently become active on social media and is apparently trying to mimic the juvenile Gov. Gavin Newsom press office X account, which tries and fails to mimic Trump and be funny. It’s a weird look for a guy who says he’s in recovery and is trying to rebuild his shattered reputation. Here he was Wednesday echoing Rep. Ted Lieu's (D-36) ludicrous tin-foil hat theory that nobody had seen Trump for eight days (even though he was on TV and at events constantly).

Trump hasn’t made a public appearance in 8 days. This after an unscheduled visit to the hospital- because he “likes getting check ups.” Thank God Jake Tapper (or as I like to call him- the Brick Tamland of his generation) is on the case hunting down clues in a book about my mom’s experience as First Lady four years ago.

If the Dems can get behind the freakish Graham and James, why not Hunter? I say go for it. It would certainly be entertaining.

Meanwhile, a reporter asked the president if he had noticed former President Biden’s decline when they met at the White House in ’24. Trump retorted that Biden was never all there:

REPORTER: When you met with Joe Biden, President Joe Biden, right here in the Oval Office on November the 13th of 2024, could you detect any cognitive decline in President Biden at that time?

TRUMP: No, not really. I mean, he was the same guy I've been watching for a long time. 

[...]

He was fine as far as I was concerned. I don't know, something happened to him during the debate. It could have been me.

Gold. 

 

Four Senate Republicans Join Democrats to Sink Save America Act Vote

Image

 Four Republicans joined Democrats to stop the Save America Act from passing the U.S. Senate on Thursday on a vote of 48-50

The motion aimed to attach the Save America Act to the budget. The bill needed 60 votes. It aimed to ensure that only citizens vote in federal elections. 

Sens. Thom Tillis (R-NC), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Susan Collins (R-ME) voted “no” along with Democrats. 

The Save America Act fails in the Senate, 48-50. pic.twitter.com/2dBTvnmRQ0

— America First Policy Institute (@A1Policy) June 5, 2026

NO MORE GAMES. Pass the SAVE America Act without delay! pic.twitter.com/I8i1rv7gTp

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 4, 2026

I just voted for the SAVE America Act on the senate floor

— Chuck Grassley (@ChuckGrassley) June 4, 2026

🚨 BREAKING: The US Senate has just REJECTED the SAVE America Act as part of budget reconciliation, 48-50 — would've required voter ID and proof of citizenship nationwide

REPUBLICAN NAYs: Thom Tillis, Lisa Murkowski, Mitch McConnell and Susan Collins

UNBELIEVABLE!!

It needed… pic.twitter.com/sTCsOgn4B3

— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) June 4, 2026

BREAKING: Four Senate Republicans just joined Democrats to block one of President Trump’s key legislative priorities.

In a setback for the White House, GOP Sens. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Thom Tillis and Mitch McConnell broke with their party to help stop the SAVE America… pic.twitter.com/ynjwdxsdEC

— Fox News (@FoxNews) June 4, 2026

🚨 BREAKING: The US Senate has just REJECTED the SAVE America Act as part of budget reconciliation, 48-50 — would've required voter ID and proof of citizenship nationwide

REPUBLICAN NAYs: Thom Tillis, Lisa Murkowski, Mitch McConnell and Susan Collins

UNBELIEVABLE!!

It needed… pic.twitter.com/sTCsOgn4B3

— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) June 4, 2026

🚨 UNBELIEVABLE.

The Senate just REJECTED the SAVE America Act, a bill that would’ve required voter ID and proof of citizenship nationwide.
Vote: 48-50. It needed 60.

The Republicans who voted NO: Tillis, Murkowski, McConnell, and Collins. pic.twitter.com/GzadYIYfAj

— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) June 4, 2026

The Senate just rejected the SAVE America Act as part of budget reconciliation

The 4 Republicans who voted no:

Thom Tillis
Lisa Murkowski
Mitch McConnell
Susan Collins
pic.twitter.com/MbKPBhnrDF

— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) June 5, 2026

Thom Tillis, Lisa Murkowski, Mitch McConnell and Susan Collins just voted No against Voter ID.

They are backstabbing RINOs. https://t.co/SO2RhQRulx

— DC_Draino (@DC_Draino) June 4, 2026

Hakeem Jeffries Does Not Want to Talk About Florida's Democrat Civil War

Hakeem Jeffries Does Not Want to Talk About Florida's Democrat Civil War

Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) faces a tough situation in Florida: a fierce civil war is emerging in the Sunshine State, as the new maps have set Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz on a collision course with Democrats from a predominantly black district. She is running to take the seat, upsetting local community leaders who believe a person of color should represent it. Thus far, he doesn’t want to weigh in at all (via Axios):

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said Tuesday he has not yet decided whether to support Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz's (D-Fla.) reelection amid anger over her decision to run in a majority-minority district.

 

Why it matters: Jeffries is known for uniformly backing even his most polarizing members. This rare deviation stunned some of his colleagues.

"He's never done that," one senior House Democrat told Axios. "He supports incumbents."

Jeffries himself declared Tuesday in response to a different question: "I stand behind every single House Democratic incumbent."

Wasserman Schultz, a member of Jeffries' leadership team, has stoked the anger of Black Democrats by running in a plurality Black district. "People are pissed off," a second senior House Democrat told Axios.

Driving the news: "Haven't made a decision as it relates to that particular race," Jeffries said at a press conference when asked whether he is supporting Wasserman Schultz for reelection.

"Everybody has a right to run where they see fit, they've got to go make their case to the people that they hope to represent moving forward, and that's what I communicated directly to Congresswoman Wasserman Schultz," he added.

It’s basically a political race war, and it could get very ugly. Even Jeffries could take heat for endorsing or not endorsing. 

 

Fetterman says he’ll ‘wear a suit every day’ if Platner releases messages with mystery women

 

Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman sharply criticized embattled Senate candidate Graham Platner over his history of inflammatory remarks and challenged him to release messages linked to a Kik account at the center of controversy in Maine’s Senate race.

Platner (D-Maine) faces accusations of exchanging explicit messages with multiple women on the messaging app Kik, drawing severe public criticism from Fetterman (D-Pa.), who openly mocked the candidate’s “pHustle” online handle and labeled him a “creep.” The Pennsylvania Democrat then escalated the feud, offering an unusual personal concession by daring Platner to release the full text logs in exchange for Fetterman promising to “wear a suit every day” on the Senate floor.

“This is a guy that had a problem with me, how I dress, but he seemed to have no problem posing in a towel at a disgusting website that consistently had serious problems about that kinds of depravity,” Fetterman stated.

“Let me make a deal. I’ll tell P-Hustle I’ll wear a suit every day, if he releases all those texts and messages that he’s had … [with] the dozen women. You can prove [to] America… what’s [in] these conversations. Can P-Hustle prove how old these people are?” he added.

 

Platner’s campaign claims that he deleted the Kik app from his phone, but did not deactivate the account, making it the latest hotspot in a growing cascade of controversies for the candidate. The profile, which dates back to June 2016 and connects to Platner’s past Reddit and Instagram handles, remained active and featured a photo of a shirtless Platner with a towel wrapped around his waist.

Fetterman also argued that Platner should release the logs if he has nothing to hide, raising concerns about age verification on anonymous messaging platforms.

 

The remarks follow comments Fetterman made to reporters earlier this week, where he vowed to never “carry water” for Platner. Fetterman questioned why some Democrats continue to back the candidate, comparing the situation to past political scandals involving explicit messaging.

 

“As a Democrat, I’m never going to carry water for a guy that calls an American hero a dumb MFer, or someone that smears Chris Kyle,” Fetterman said while on Fox News, referring to the late Navy SEAL. “He has said so many offensive things that it’s hard to keep up with it.”

Breaking away from party leadership who have quietly maintained support for Platner ahead of the primary to protect a crucial Senate seat, Fetterman made his opposition clear.

“As a Democrat, I’m never going to carry water for a guy that calls an American hero a dumb MFer, or someone that smears Chris Kyle. He has said so many offensive things that it’s hard to keep up with it,” said Fetterman.

 

Platner’s campaign has not responded to requests for comment.


 

Graham Platner's Anti-Corporate Act Crumbles Amid Donor Scandal

May be an image of text that says 'V M Bernie Sanders backs Graham Platner in Maine Senate race despite sexting scandal SCRIPPSTNEWS'

Graham Platner has spent his campaign whipping up anger at “Big Tech,” “Big Pharma,” and corporate power while selling himself as a working-class champion. But recent campaign finance records and other disclosures paint a different picture — one of mixed messaging, family money, and troubling personal baggage. Voters in Maine deserve plain talk about what that means for the Senate race and for the credibility of populist politics.

Money versus message: the donations that don’t add up

Recent campaign finance and lobbying disclosure records show Platner accepted more than $30,000 in donations from lobbyists and corporate executives. That fact undercuts his central pitch: that he is standing up to corporations on behalf of everyday Americans. It is one thing to criticize an industry and accept grass-roots small-dollar support. It is quite another to rail against an industry and then take checks from people who work for it. For a candidate who built a national reputation as an “anti-corporate crusader,” optics and consistency matter — and donors matter a lot when you are trying to sell outrage as authenticity.

“Working-class” branding versus reality

Platner insists he is a working-class guy living a working-class life. But reporting shows he attended elite schools, received a substantial loan from his father to buy a home, and relied on veterans’ benefits while trying ventures like an oyster farm. Those details don’t prove someone can’t relate to working people, but they do show a big gap between campaign branding and reality. When a candidate trades on the language of populism, voters rightly ask whether that language is being used sincerely or as a marketing tool.

Personal scandals and credibility problems

 

Beyond money and biography, Platner has faced a string of personal controversies that have made national headlines. Reports about offensive social media posts, a tattoo with troubling symbolism, and messages sent to multiple women have all been disclosed during the campaign. His campaign and family say they worked through some of these issues, but the pile-up of revelations raises a simple question: why should voters trust the judgment of someone who finds himself repeatedly in the middle of self-inflicted controversies?

What voters should demand now

Maine voters should demand clear answers. If Platner wants to lead a fight against corporate power, he should disclose his donor list fully, explain the nature of those donations, and pledge how he would avoid conflicts if elected. He should also answer candidly about his past behavior and show sustained proof of changed conduct. Populist rhetoric without transparency is just theater. In a tight Senate race against Sen. Susan Collins, clarity and honesty are what will matter most — not clever ads and catchy slogans.

 

President Trump: Democrats Hiding Mail Ballots to Steal CA Primaries

Trump accuses California Democrats, without evidence, of trying to 'steal'  elections - ABC News

President Trump fired off fresh claims on Truth Social that Democrats are trying to “steal” the California primaries by hiding late mail‑in ballots and slowing the count. His posts name both the California governor’s primary and the Los Angeles mayoral primary — and he even wrote that the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles is investigating the delays. That sudden public accusation puts election integrity and transparency front and center — and it deserves a clear answer, not a shrug.

What Trump said and why it matters

Trump’s posts accused the “Dumocrats” of using a late surge of mail‑in ballots to flip the results away from Republican candidates like Steve Hilton and Spencer Pratt. He claimed the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles was looking into the counting delays. Whether you love or hate the man, a sitting president publicly alleging federal investigation into vote counting is a big deal. It raises real questions about transparency, trust, and the need for fast, clear official statements from law enforcement and election administrators.

Mail‑in ballots and counting delays: normal or suspicious?


Election officials routinely point out that signature checks, ballot processing, and post‑election audits can slow final tallies — especially in big states like California and big cities like Los Angeles that use lots of mail ballots. That’s a boring bureaucratic truth, but boring isn’t the same as unimportant. Still, when a count favors Democrats and the count slows, suspicion follows. Republicans who care about election integrity should want those processes to be transparent and efficient so people stop assuming the worst.

Demand answers, not hashtags

Here’s the conservative case: if the president claims a federal probe exists, the U.S. Attorney’s Office should say so — yes or no — and provide a short statement about the scope. Local election officials should say how many ballots remain, why they’re slow, and when the public will see final numbers. If the process is clean, swift transparency will shut down the rumor mill. If not, Republicans should press for forensic clarity and reforms that prevent the same confusion next time.

We don’t need conspiracy theater. We need clear, public facts and faster, cleaner ballot handling. If Democrats are playing games, expose them. If the delays are procedural, fix the system so nobody believes the worst. Either way, voters deserve answers — and President Trump was right to demand them, even if his delivery was loud and a little theatrical. Now let’s get the facts, end the suspense, and move on to real debates about policy instead of counting controversies.

Thursday, June 4, 2026

CartoonDems


 








Trump Won't Break Iran Ceasefire Unless US Troops Are Killed: WSJ

Trump Won't Break Iran Truce Unless US Troops Are Killed: WSJ
Trump Won't Break Iran Ceasefire Unless US Troops Are Killed: WSJ

President Donald Trump has told aides that he will not break the ceasefire with Iran or resume full-scale military operations unless American troops are killed, according to a report Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal.

The administration continues to pursue a broader agreement with Tehran despite signs the ceasefire remains fragile.

Trump has publicly suggested a deal could be near, while Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said this week there has been "no tangible progress" toward a final agreement.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, meanwhile, argued Wednesday that "the war is over" and said the administration's focus is now on securing a lasting settlement.

According to the Journal, Trump has resisted pressure to respond to recent Iranian attacks with a broader military campaign, instead viewing the current ceasefire as the best opportunity to secure a diplomatic outcome and avoid a prolonged conflict in the Middle East.

The newspaper reported that the president remains focused on reaching an agreement that would prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon while reducing tensions in the region and protecting navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most important energy corridors.

Trump has repeatedly voiced optimism about the prospects for a deal.

Speaking this week, the president suggested negotiations were moving in the right direction and indicated that only a limited number of issues remained unresolved before an agreement could be reached.

Iranian officials, however, have offered a far more cautious assessment.

"There has been progress, but no agreement has been reached," Araghchi said, according to reporting cited by Newsmax.

The Iranian foreign minister also rejected suggestions that a breakthrough was imminent and said significant differences remain between the two sides.

Araghchi's comments highlighted the gap between Washington's increasingly upbeat public messaging and Tehran's insistence that major obstacles remain.

Rubio, meanwhile, sought to reassure lawmakers that the military phase of the conflict has largely ended.

"The war is over," Rubio said during congressional testimony, according to Newsmax. "We are not at war with Iran."

 

While acknowledging that isolated attacks and security incidents continue, Rubio argued they do not amount to a resumption of the broader conflict that erupted earlier this year.

"We're not looking to restart a war," Rubio said. "We're looking to prevent one."

The secretary also pointed to what he described as extensive damage inflicted on Iran's military capabilities during the fighting.

"Other than that, they're doing well," Rubio said sarcastically after listing damage to Iranian military infrastructure, including missile-launch facilities, air-defense systems and naval assets.

According to Rubio, Iran emerged from the conflict significantly weaker and less capable of threatening U.S. interests and regional allies.

The president has told advisers that the deaths of American service members would constitute a red line requiring a more forceful response, but absent such a trigger he intends to continue pursuing diplomacy.

That approach faces significant challenges.

The ceasefire has been tested repeatedly by sporadic attacks and continuing regional tensions, while negotiators continue to struggle with fundamental disagreements over Iran's nuclear program and the terms of any long-term settlement.

Still, the administration appears determined to keep talks alive.

© 2026 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

 

CartoonDems