Courts, liberals, and media oppose Trump’s deportation of 238 Venezuelans to El Salvador, including an MS-13 member hyped as “Father of the Year,” despite some having asylum cases. Debunks rumors of Elon Musk leaving the White House, calling them false. On trade, Trump’s tariffs closed China’s loopholes via Cambodia and Vietnam, angering the EU and China, though Russia is notably absent from the tariff list. U.S. products struggle to enter foreign markets due to uneven trade deals. Politically, Florida’s special election shifted Congress to 220–213. In Wisconsin’s Supreme Court race, Susan Crawford, backed by liberal billionaires like Soros and Spielberg, beat Brad Schimel. Crawford insists Wisconsin isn’t for sale, yet the media focus on campaign cash by Musk, a smaller contribution in comparison.
- The court, the liberals and the media want the criminals back. They didn’t get their due process. They want Trump in court over deportation flights. Trump deported 238 Venezuelans to El Salvador dozens have active asylum cases. The media wants you to believe they scooped up the man that won Father of the Year. This father is a member of MS-13.
- They want you to believe that Elon Musk is leaving the White House. It is not true.
- China moved production to Cambodia and Vietnam to avoid tariffs, now Trump has closed that loophole. The imports that were coming to this country for free. The loopholes are being closed. The EU and China are upset. There were areas all over the world that had trade deals that had no tariffs so China goes and sets up. And our products are not on their shelves. Trump’s tariffs list is missing a big country: Russia.
- The balance of power changed a little bit. The FL special election congressmen were sworn in yesterday. 220–213
- They are going on and on about Wisconsin. The big emphasis is on the amount of money that was spent on the campaign. Crawford came to the mic to tell you that WI is not for sale. The media wants to tell you about the money Elon put into the race but only counts for a fraction of the total spent. The billionaires that elected Susan Crawford. Crawford raised $21M in direct contributions, much of it from billionaires like George and Alex Soros, Reid Hoffman, JB Prtizker and Steven Spielberg. Schimel, her opponent, raised $10M in direct donations. Both campaigns were also bolstered by roughly $40M in outside spending.