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Amanda Head: Liberal WaPo Singles Out Pennsylvania Democrat Candidate

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Pennsylvania Democrat John Fetterman is facing off against Trump-endorsed Republican Mehmet Oz for retiring Senator Pat Toomey’s seat has relied on multiple excuses pertaining to his poor health and a stroke he suffered earlier this year to avoid debating his opponent.

Fetterman’s campaign tactics are akin to President Biden’s basement method in 2020 and now even liberal-leaning publications like the Washington Post are taking notice and calling out the Senate hopeful’s behavior.

Watch Amanda break down the problem HERE.

Senator Responds To Trump Considering Him For Vice President

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[Photo Credit: The White House from Washington, DC, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons]

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott (R) responded to former President Donald Trump’s comments over the weekend naming him as a potential running mate.

Trumpย revealed to Fox News’s Maria Bartiromoย over the weekend he is considering Scott, along with South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem to be the next vice presidential running mate. (RELATED: Trump Names Two People When Asked About Potential VPย Picks)

“The only thing I can tell you is that the one thing we need is four more years of President Donald Trump,” Scott told Fox News Digital on Monday.

“We were better off under Trump. In order for us to be successful, the one thing I can’t afford to do is take my eye off the ball. The eye on the ball means making sure that President Trump gets four more years,” he added.

Over the weekend, Trump told Bartiromo that his top priority in choosing a vice presidential candidate is selecting someone who could easily step into his shoes in case of an emergency.

“Always, it’s got to be who is going to be a good president. Obviously, you always have to think that because in case of emergency. Things happen, right? No matter who you are, things happen. That’s got to be No. 1,” Trump said.

On Monday, former Trump senior adviser Kellyanne Conway advised the President to consider choosing a person of color for VP during an op-ed published in The New York Times.

โ€œWith a crisis on the border, economic dissatisfaction, fears about crime, a parentsโ€™ rights renaissance and multiple wars and threats across the globe, Mr. Trumpโ€™s deputy must be able to navigate chaos and challenges at home and abroad,โ€ Conway wrote.

โ€œTaking all of this into consideration, if I were advising Mr. Trump, I would suggest he choose a person of color as his running mate, depending on vetting of all possibilities and satisfaction of procedural issues like dual residency in Florida,โ€ Conway wrote. โ€œNot for identity politics a la the Democrats, but as an equal helping to lead an America First movement that includes more union workers, independents, first-time voters, veterans, Hispanics, Asian Americans and African Americans.โ€

Conway listed Sen. Tim Scott, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), and Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) among the potential options.

Democrat Senator Signals Openness To Supporting Trump Nominees

A step in the right direction…

Sen. Andy Kim (D-NJ) signaled during an interview on Sunday that he is open to voting to confirm some of President-elect Donald Trumpโ€™s nominees.

Kim made the remarks during a Sunday interview on CNNโ€™s โ€œState of the Unionโ€ with Dana Bash when asked if he would be open to voting for Kash Patel for FBI Director or Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense.

โ€œI have had conversations with Congresswoman Elise Stefanik. I had to sit down with Senator Rubio. Iโ€™m still going through the process and I want to make sure Iโ€™m doing it right,โ€ he said. โ€œBut those were good conversations, where we were able to dive in deep. And so I think that there are some nominees that are people I think I can work with.โ€

He signaled that with some of Trumpโ€™s other nominees that he had questions about past remarks that they made.

โ€œI also am deeply concerned about what I have heard Mr. Patel say in the past and about going after things. Like, he is being nominated for a role to lead an agency that he has talked about dismantling, talked about the deep state and going after,โ€ he said. โ€œI was a career public servant before in the federal government. I worked under both Bush and Obama. I served the country, not a party. And I worry about some of the tones there.โ€

โ€œWith Hegseth, I hope to have a chance to be able to speak with him, but some of what he said before about not thinking that women should serve in combat, some of the other allegations that we have heard about,โ€ he added. โ€œI have worked at the Pentagon before in the office of the secretary of defense. I know what that job is like. And I need to know whether or not he is up to the task.โ€

WATCH:

Democrat Ousts Republican Rep. Yvette Herrell in Stunning Flip

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In a shocking upset in New Mexico, Democrat Gabe Vasquez has successfully unseated GOP incumbent Rep. Yvette Herrell.

Vasquez declared victory Wednesday afternoon while the race at that time was still too close to call. However, the Associated Press has since called the race for Vasquez.

Herrell, a member of the Cherokee Nation, became the first Republican Native American woman to be elected to the House of Representatives following her 2020 victory when she flipped the seat from blue to red.

Throughout his campaign, Vasquez faced repeated criticism over his support to defund police officers despite a streak uptick in crime in New Mexico over the past year. Fox News previously reported that the Democrat pledged to cut police budgets by more than 50% if elected.

“I wholeheartedly and absolutely support police reform and the #blacklivesmatter movement, and will not be stopping short of transformational reform that brings justice to our city and to people of color in our community. You can count on my support,” Vasquez wrote to a constituent demanding “at least” a 50% reduction of the Las Cruces police department budget.

This story is developing. Stay with Great America News Desk for the latest updates.

Trump-aligned Texas Congressman Loses Primary

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Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America,

Republican Congressman Dan Crenshaw of Texas lost his primary bid Tuesday night, marking a major upset and ending the four-term lawmakerโ€™s run for a fifth term in Congress.

Crenshaw was defeated by Texas state Rep. Steve Toth, a staunch conservative who successfully rallied support from the partyโ€™s most hard-line voters in the Houston-area district. The loss makes Crenshaw one of the first Republican incumbents to be ousted in the 2026 election cycle and underscores ongoing ideological divisions within the GOP.

Although Crenshaw has voted consistently in support of former President Donald Trumpโ€™s policy agenda, he entered the race as the only House Republican in Texas on the ballot without Trumpโ€™s endorsement. Toth seized on that dynamic, presenting himself as the more reliable ally of the president and the conservative grassroots base.

The contest intensified when Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) publicly backed Tothโ€™s campaign and appeared in a political advertisement promoting the challenger.

โ€œYou deserve an unwavering fighter, a Republican who walks the walk. Thatโ€™s why Iโ€™m proud to endorse Steve Toth for Congress. Steve Toth has a strong record of standing up for limited government, faith and freedom, and fiscal responsibility. Washington needs a no-nonsense Texan like Steve Toth to secure our border, fight alongside Trump, and put money back in peopleโ€™s pockets. Please join me in electing Steve Toth,โ€ Cruz said in the ad, which was funded by the Alamo Freedom Fighters PAC.

Toth also sought to portray Crenshaw as out of step with the partyโ€™s conservative base. During the campaign, he criticized the congressman for refusing to repeat Trumpโ€™s claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen and for supporting a bipartisan immigration proposal negotiated toward the end of the Biden administration.

Crenshaw rejected the criticism and defended his conservative record in office.

โ€œIโ€™m out there defending Trump in places where Republicans are too scared to go,โ€ Crenshaw told The New York Times during the campaign.

First elected in 2018, Crenshaw quickly became one of the Republican Partyโ€™s most recognizable figures. A former Navy SEAL who lost his right eye in Afghanistan, he built a national profile as a foreign-policy hawk and vocal advocate for military veterans. In Congress, he often supported aid to Ukraine in its war against Russia and backed tough sanctions against Venezuelaโ€™s socialist government.

Despite that record, Crenshawโ€™s relationship with segments of the conservative movement grew strained in recent years. His willingness to criticize some right-wing media personalities and his refusal to embrace claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent drew backlash from MAGA-aligned activists and commentators.

The congressman also faced personal controversy last year after an incident during a congressional delegation trip to Mexico. According to Punchbowl News, Crenshaw was having drinks with a group of Mexican officials when one official made a crude remark that made a woman present uncomfortable.

โ€œDuring an August trip to Mexico, Crenshaw was having drinks with a group of Mexican officials,โ€ reported Punchbowlโ€™s Andrew Desiderio. โ€œOne Mexican official cracked a crude joke that made a woman present uncomfortable. Crenshaw toasted the remarks.โ€

The incident led to a tense meeting between Crenshaw, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), and House Intelligence Committee Chair Rick Crawford (R-AR). Crawford ultimately banned Crenshaw from international travel with the committee for three months, a rare disciplinary step. Crawford also sought to remove Crenshaw from the Intelligence Committee entirely, though leadership declined to do so. Instead, Johnson shut down Crenshawโ€™s proposed cartel task force within the committee.

Those controversies, combined with ideological attacks from the right, helped erode Crenshawโ€™s standing with Republican primary voters in the newly drawn district.

‘Sopranos’ Star Admits There Are Lots Of ‘Quiet’ Trump Voters

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By Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America - Drea de Matteo, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=132661983

Sopranosย actressย Drea de Matteoย told Fox News hostย Jesse Wattersย there are โ€œa lotโ€ of โ€œquietโ€ย Donald Trumpย supporters in Hollywood despite liberal media’s portrayal otherwise.

The actress, who playedย Adriana La Cervaย on the critically acclaimedย Sopranos, joined Watters on Monday and reacted to Presidentย Joe Bidenโ€™sย recent Hollywoodย fundraiserย where he raised $30 million and celebrities likeย Jack Blackย andย Jimmy Kimmelย took to the stage. Watters aired footage from the event, as well as a clip ofย Robert De Niroย rantingย againstย Donald Trumpย outside hisย hush money trialย in Manhattan.

Watch:

โ€œIs there a quiet Trump voter out there in Hollywood?โ€ Watters asked.

โ€œHello there, first of all. And I think there is a lot of them. I think there are a lot of โ€” that was a hard intro to watch. Iโ€™m sorry,โ€ de Matteo said.

โ€œWas it Jack Blackโ€™s legs?โ€ Watters asked.

โ€œNo, itโ€™s the Italian, man. Weโ€™re talking aboutย [Anthony] Fauci, weโ€™re talking about De Niro. I am mortified right now by my people,โ€ de Matteo said. โ€œI donโ€™t understand what weโ€™re doing here.โ€

โ€œThere are a lot of quiet Trump supporters, there are a lot of Kennedy supporters. And wow, I wonder how much the actors got paid to endorse Biden at this point. Iโ€™m curious, because that seems โ€” I wonder if De Niro got paid a locations fee because he had to travel to the courtroom to do that,โ€ she said.

The actress appeared to be joking as she said doesnโ€™t know the specifics of celebrities working with campaigns, calling herself and other Sopranos actors โ€œoutcasts.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t really maneuver inside that industry. I never have. First of all,ย Sopranos, we were the outcasts, even though we were critically acclaimed, we still were outcasts. So Iโ€™m still an outcast, here I am. Theyโ€™re going to take me out into the woods and shoot me for not endorsing Biden,โ€ she said.

Elise Stefanik Announces Run For New York Governor

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Elise Stefanik with Donald Trump via Wikimedia Commons

New Yorkโ€™s own Elise Stefanik, one of the most influential Republicans in Congress and a close ally of President Donald Trump, has officially entered the race for governor โ€” and sheโ€™s ready to fight for hardworking families fed up with Democratic mismanagement.

Appearing on Fox & Friends Friday morning, Stefanik declared:

โ€œIโ€™m running for governor to make New York affordable and safe. We have seen decades of single-party rule led by Democrats. And Kathy Hochul is the worst governor in America.โ€

Fighting for Affordability and Safety

For years, New Yorkers have endured crushing taxes, skyrocketing costs, and unsafe streets โ€” the direct result, Stefanik says, of failed Democratic leadership.

โ€œNew York is the most unaffordable state in the nation, with the highest taxes, the highest energy bills, the highest utility bills,โ€ Stefanik said. โ€œWe also have a crime crisis because Kathy Hochul has brought us failed bail reform and has embraced the defund-the-police Democrats.โ€

She continued:

โ€œAfter this weekโ€ฆ when we saw a raging anti-Semite pro-Hamas communist who wants to raise taxes. And frankly, he barely won the majority of New York City voters, Kathy Hochul endorsed him and bent the knee.โ€

Stefanik made it clear that this campaign will be a coalition of common-sense New Yorkers โ€” Republicans, Independents, and Democrats โ€” united to take back their state.

โ€œThis is a broad coalition of Republicans, independents, and Democrats who know that enough is enough. We need commonsense leadership to make New York affordable and safe again.โ€

A New Generation of Leadership

Stefanik is already assembling a seasoned team, including respected Republican strategist Tony Fabrizio, who served as pollster for President Trumpโ€™s 2024 campaign.

In her official statement, she promised:

โ€œI am running for Governor to bring a new generation of leadership to Albany to make New York affordable and safe for families all across our great state.โ€

โ€œOur campaign will unify Republicans, Democrats, and Independents to Fire Kathy Hochul once and for all to Save New York.โ€

Stefanik didnโ€™t mince words about her opponentโ€™s record:

โ€œIโ€™ve always put New York families first. Kathy Hochul has put New York families last again and again and again. Sheโ€™s an accidental governor. Sheโ€™s only in this position because she was Cuomoโ€™s lieutenant governor.โ€

Taking the Fight to Albany

For many voters, Stefanik represents the kind of energy and clarity the Republican Party needs in New York. Her campaign centers on restoring economic freedom, supporting law enforcement, and defending traditional American values that Albany elites have ignored for too long.

โ€œPeople are very concerned about affordability and I have a strong record of delivering for families,โ€ she emphasized. โ€œKathy Hochul has made New York the most unaffordable state in the nation. We have the highest taxes, the highest energy prices, the highest utility prices, the highest grocery prices, and rent that continues to skyrocket.โ€

Her focus aligns with what many Republicans see as the winning issue for 2025 โ€” the economy. As families struggle under high costs, Stefanik is promising to restore fiscal sanity and keep the American Dream alive in the Empire State.

Democrats Already on Defense

Predictably, Democrats responded with the same tired attacks. A spokesperson for the New York State Democratic Party claimed Stefanik โ€œis a rubber stamp for Trumpโ€™s deeply unpopular agenda,โ€ while the Democratic Governors Association tried to paint her as โ€œTrumpโ€™s cheerleader.โ€

But these criticisms only highlight Stefanikโ€™s strength โ€” her loyalty to a movement that prioritizes working Americans, law and order, and energy independence.

Governor Hochulโ€™s campaign immediately launched a website called โ€œSelloutStefanikโ€ โ€” a move that many conservatives see as a sign of fear rather than confidence.

The Road Ahead

While Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman may also explore a run, Republican insiders widely view Stefanik as the frontrunner for the nomination. With strong fundraising ability, national connections, and a powerful message on affordability and safety, Stefanik has the potential to unite the GOP like no one else has in years.

Haley Defeats Trump In DC Republican Primary

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Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley has secured her first victory in the Washington, D.C. Republican presidential primary contest

Haley garnered 1,274 votes to formerย President Trumpโ€™sย 676 with all precincts reporting, according to Decision Desk HQ.

The win for the former United Nations ambassador breaks a streak of more than a half dozen victories for Trump to start out the GOP contests for the nomination.ย 

Despite trailing behind former President Trump throughout the race Haley has pledged to remain in the race at least until Super Tuesday when more than a dozen states will vote.

the win in the winner-take-all D.C. primary will give her all of its 19 delegates. Voting in the District took place across three days from Friday to Sunday.ย 

Candidates need at least 1,215 delegates to mathematically clinch the Republican nomination.ย 

Candace Owens Gets Swift Backlash After Unveiling New Project Targeting Erika Kirk

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Image via Gage Skidmore Flickr

Candace Owens announced Monday that her show will return to the air on Wednesday with a new โ€œinvestigative seriesโ€ targeting Erika Kirk, the widow of slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk โ€” and the backlash was immediate.

The teaser trailer, which Owens shared on X, opens with news coverage of Charlie Kirkโ€™s assassination before pivoting sharply to its apparent target: his widow. The trailer splices together clips of Erika Kirk with critical commentary about her, references to โ€œZionistsโ€ and Israel, and even an implication that the Turning Point USA CEO was somehow connected to a Romanian human trafficking scandal.

The series is titled โ€œBride of Charlie,โ€ and its promotional banner depicts Erika wearing a crown โ€” imagery that many critics have described as taunting and grotesque given the circumstances.

Owens, who has promoted a range of conspiracy theories about her former colleagueโ€™s death, initially claimed she would stop discussing the matter if Erika asked her to. Over time, however, her commentary shifted. What began as insinuation evolved into increasingly direct suggestions that the widow herself may have played a role in betraying her husband.

In the hours after Owens publicized the project, social media filled with condemnation from across the political spectrum.

โ€œEveryday, thereโ€™s some new line being crossed by this lunatic that makes me wonder whether certain people will finally speak up,โ€ mused RedStateโ€™s Bonchie. โ€œThey wonโ€™t, though. Not even this will be enough, and itโ€™s probably time to start asking why they are so invested in Owens.โ€

The timing of Owensโ€™ blistering attack is especially striking. It comes just as the criminal case against Tyler Robinson โ€” the man accused of assassinating Charlie Kirk at a Sept. 10 event at Utah Valley University โ€” reaches a critical juncture.

On Tuesday morning at 10:30 a.m. local time, Judge Tony Graf is scheduled to rule during a WebEx hearing on whether to disqualify state prosecutors over an alleged conflict of interest. Robinson is expected to listen from jail.

The defense has argued that a conflict exists because one of the prosecutorsโ€™ children was present at the university event where Kirk was killed. According to Robinsonโ€™s attorney, Richard Novak, that connection could compromise the integrity of the prosecution โ€” particularly in a case where the state is seeking the death penalty.

There have already been two hearings on the issue.

During a Feb. 3 proceeding, Novak questioned Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray in an effort to determine when prosecutors decided to pursue capital punishment โ€” a decision that was publicly announced shortly after Robinsonโ€™s arrest. An unnamed senior prosecutor, identified only as โ€œProsecutor A,โ€ also testified about the officeโ€™s internal handling of the case and its decision to disclose the childโ€™s presence to the defense.

The prosecutor said there was no recollection of a specific conversation with Gray about how to proceed given the childโ€™s presence, though it was acknowledged that Gray routinely consults senior prosecutors in death penalty cases. The testimony also revealed that Gray expressed early on that he intended to seek the death penalty and wanted that decision announced at the same time charges were filed โ€” earlier than is typical, as such notices often follow a preliminary hearing.

For its part, the state maintains there is no conflict of interest. Prosecutors have argued in court filings that thousands of people witnessed the shooting and that the child in question did not have a direct line of sight to the alleged gunman. Even if a conflict were found, the state contends, it would not justify disqualifying the entire prosecutorial team.

As the court weighs a decision that could significantly alter the course of the trial, Owensโ€™ decision to launch a provocative series targeting the victimโ€™s widow has only deepened the sense of outrage surrounding an already tragic case.

Fox Host Predicts Next Top Dem to Be Axed โ€” Once They Oust Chuck Schumer

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Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer attend medal ceremony via Wikimedia Commons

As Democrats face growing internal turmoil, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is under fire from members of his own party โ€” and some say the unrest may soon spread to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY).

During Thursdayโ€™s segment of Fox & Friends, host Lawrence Jones offered a pointed prediction about who might be the next Democrat to fall out of favor with the partyโ€™s increasingly fractured base.

โ€œQuick prediction: Jeffries is next,โ€ Jones told co-hosts Brian Kilmeade and Ainsley Earhardt. โ€œTheyโ€™re gonna get rid of him next. First, it was Schumer. Theyโ€™re not happy with Jeffries either. They donโ€™t like his alignment with AIPAC and have been very critical of how he operates.โ€

Jones added that many progressives in the Democratic Party โ€œdonโ€™t respectโ€ Jeffries and that his position had been shielded for years by former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA).

โ€œNancy Pelosi kind of protected him,โ€ Jones said. โ€œBut now that sheโ€™s retiring, I believe heโ€™s going to be the next target.โ€


Democrats in Disarray

The Democratic Partyโ€™s internal divisions have been on full display amid the historic 43-day government shutdown, the longest in U.S. history. Schumer, struggling to hold his caucus together, lost seven Democrats and one Independent who sided with Republicans to support a short-term continuing resolution that ultimately reopened the government.

That rebellion has led several prominent progressives โ€” including Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) โ€” to openly question Schumerโ€™s leadership and even call for his ouster. Although no formal challenge has yet materialized, the discontent is unmistakable.


Pressure Mounts on Party Leadership

Many Democrats are torn between the partyโ€™s traditional pro-Israel establishment figures like Schumer and Jeffries, and the ascendant left-wing faction that has become increasingly critical of Israel and of AIPACโ€™s influence in Washington.

Jonesโ€™s comments reflect a broader sense that Democratic leadership is losing control of its own base โ€” particularly among younger, more progressive voters frustrated by what they see as political compromise and a lack of clear vision.


A Growing Divide

The potential downfall of two of the partyโ€™s most powerful figures โ€” Schumer in the Senate and Jeffries in the House โ€” would mark a stunning shift within Democratic ranks.