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Trump Set to Receive CENTCOM Briefing on Military Options Against Iran as Blockade Holds and Coalition Takes Shape
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Trump Set to Receive CENTCOM Briefing on Military Options Against Iran as Blockade Holds and Coalition Takes Shape

President Trump is expected to receive a briefing Thursday from U.S. Central Command Commander Adm. Brad Cooper on new plans for potential military action against Iran. The briefing, first reported by Axios on April 30, comes as the administration simultaneously pushes allies to join a new international maritime coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. The message from the White House is straightforward: the naval blockade stays until Iran agrees to a deal on its nuclear program. Military options remain on the table if Tehran refuses to budge. Trump made his position clear after rejecting an Iranian proposal that would have eased the blockade first and pushed nuclear negotiations to a later stage. He told Axios the blockade is “somewhat more effective than bombing” and that “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.” EXCLUSIVE: Trump tells Axios he rejects Iran's proposal: He's going to keep Iran under a naval blockade until reaching a deal on on its nuclear program. https://t.co/S4dhBsynAx — Axios (@axios) April 29, 2026 That rejection set the stage for Thursday’s expected briefing, which will reportedly include several distinct military options that CENTCOM has been preparing. Axios reported that Adm. Cooper is expected to present Trump with new plans for potential military action, with Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine also expected to attend the briefing. Two sources with knowledge of the meeting told the outlet what the president will hear. Among the options CENTCOM has prepared is a short and powerful wave of strikes against Iran, likely targeting infrastructure, designed to break the current negotiating deadlock. The idea behind the strikes is to hit hard enough that Tehran returns to the table with more flexibility on its nuclear program. A second option focuses on taking over part of the Strait of Hormuz itself in order to reopen it to commercial shipping. One source told Axios such an operation could include ground forces. A third option that has been discussed involves a special forces operation to secure Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium. The briefing signals that Trump is weighing whether to resume major combat operations, either to shatter the logjam or to deliver a decisive blow before ending the conflict on American terms. Sources told Axios that Trump currently views the blockade as his primary source of leverage over Tehran but would consider military action if Iran continues to refuse meaningful concessions. As of Tuesday night, Axios reported, Trump had not ordered kinetic action. The White House did not respond to Axios’s requests for comment. The range of options is notable. A strike campaign, a ground-supported operation in one of the world’s most critical waterways, and a special forces raid on uranium stockpiles represent three very different escalation levels, and all three are reportedly heading to the president’s desk at once. U.S. President Donald J. Trump is slated to receive a briefing on new plans for potential military action against Iran on Thursday from the Commander of U.S. Central Command, Adm. Brad Cooper, two sources with knowledge tell Axios. Some of the options that Trump is expected to be… pic.twitter.com/ryBVepL60Z — OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) April 30, 2026 While the military track sharpens, so does the diplomatic one. The administration is not just squeezing Iran alone. It wants allies to share the burden of keeping the Strait of Hormuz open once conditions allow. Reuters reported on April 30 that the Trump administration is actively pushing other countries to form an international coalition to restore freedom of navigation in the strait, citing an internal State Department cable. The cable described a new initiative called the Maritime Freedom Construct, a joint State Department and Pentagon effort approved by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The cable invited partner nations to contribute to the coalition and framed the effort as a first step toward building a post-conflict maritime security architecture for the broader Middle East. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed two months into the conflict, disrupting a significant share of global oil and gas supply and fueling fears of prolonged energy-price spikes. France, Britain, and other countries have already held preliminary talks about contributing to the coalition. However, some nations told Washington they would be willing to help reopen the strait only after the conflict ends, a condition that underscores how delicate the diplomacy remains. The cable was due to be delivered orally to partner nations by May 1. Oil prices have surged on fears that the disruption to Hormuz shipping could drag on, putting additional pressure on both Tehran and Washington to find a resolution before economic damage spreads further across the global economy. The US reportedly moves to form an international coalition to secure one of the world’s most critical oil routes, the Strait of Hormuz. Reports suggest the Trump administration has approved a new initiative—the Maritime Freedom Construct (MFC)—to restore freedom of navigation. pic.twitter.com/wm53Q2whrO — Firstpost (@firstpost) April 30, 2026 The strategy taking shape here has a clear logic: keep the blockade as the primary chokehold, build an international coalition so the U.S. is not shouldering the maritime mission alone, and hold credible military options in reserve so Iran’s leaders understand what happens if they keep stalling. Trump is not bluffing about the blockade, and Thursday’s CENTCOM briefing will ensure he is not bluffing about the alternatives either. Whether Iran reads the situation correctly is now the only real question left.

DEVELOPING: House To Consider Amendments To Farm Bill Tonight, Including To Remove “Pesticide Liability Shield”
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DEVELOPING: House To Consider Amendments To Farm Bill Tonight, Including To Remove “Pesticide Liability Shield”

The House of Representatives will vote on amendments to the farm bill on Wednesday night and attempt to pass the legislation on Thursday, including an amendment to strip a controversial provision that critics say will provide “liability protections” for pesticide manufacturers. “MAHA win! The Farm Bill will get a vote today with our amendment to remove liability protections for pesticide companies!” Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) said. MAHA win! The Farm Bill will get a vote today with our amendment to remove liability protections for pesticide companies! pic.twitter.com/TQSVVELYi5 — Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (@RepLuna) April 29, 2026 “The farm bill is back on the menu tonight. This place is insane. Keep up the pressure to pass the amendment to strip out pesticide labeling ban / immunity from the farm bill. It’s now possible we will vote on it tonight,” Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) commented. The farm bill is back on the menu tonight. This place is insane. Keep up the pressure to pass the amendment to strip out pesticide labeling ban / immunity from the farm bill. It’s now possible we will vote on it tonight. https://t.co/dFw3e845zK — Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) April 29, 2026 POLITICO has more: The House will meet at 9 p.m. to start consideration of dozens of amendments and will continue amendment votes before final passage, according to a whip notice sent to lawmakers on Wednesday evening. The last-minute change comes just after GOP leaders said they would delay a farm bill vote following a revolt from Republicans during a procedural vote earlier Wednesday. After meeting with leadership, some livid farm-state Republicans agreed to decouple a plan to allow year-round sales of E15 fuel with the farm bill following outcry from oil state lawmakers. The whiplash over the path forward has irritated many swing district Republicans who have been pushing for a vote on the agriculture package. They’ve billed the legislation as a crucial win for the party ahead of November midterms. Rep. Zach Nunn (R-Iowa), one of the lawmakers who was outraged by the potential farm bill delay, said he and others “fought” to get the bill on the floor this week. “Candidly, since we passed it months ago, there was real danger that that was going to be indefinitely delayed,” Nunn told POLITICO. “You know where I stand on E15, I’m going to make sure it comes to the floor in the same way we just did the farm bill.” The vote on final passage is expected to be supported by dozens of Democrats, despite efforts by caucus leaders to whip against a bill that they’ve said doesn’t meet farmers’ needs and locks in Republicans’ proposed cuts to nutrition programs. “The House is now rushing toward a vote tonight at 9:00 PM on the Farm Bill. That means the pesticide liability shield could move forward within hours,” MAHA Action wrote. “We need ALL OF MAHA, every parent, every advocate, every American who cares about health, to call Rep. Austin Scott (202-225-6531) and Rep. Mary Miller (202-225-5271). Tell them clearly: vote YES on the Luna Amendment to remove Sections 10205, 10206, and 10207. We will not accept liability shields that protect corporations over public health,” it added. The House is now rushing toward a vote tonight at 9:00 PM on the Farm Bill. That means the pesticide liability shield could move forward within hours. We need ALL OF MAHA, every parent, every advocate, every American who cares about health, to call Rep. Austin Scott… pic.twitter.com/JHBMeentOb — MAHA Action (@MAHA_Action) April 29, 2026 The Hill shared further: Also in the midst of controversy is the farm bill, which will now need to go back to the Rules Committee. In one apparent compromise, the rule included language that would tack on a bill to allow year-round E15 ethanol fuel sales to the Farm Bill before it is sent to the Senate. Corn-state Republicans have long pushed for the measure as part of the farm bill or other measure. The provision, however, caused heartburn for other Republicans. “There’s still some negotiation, deliberation and consternation” about the farm bill and the E15 provision,” Johnson said after the vote. “And so we’re going to allow a little bit more time, for especially the E15 issue, to be worked through with members.” It would also allow for an amendment vote from Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) to repeal provisions relating to pesticides, which opponents say would shield pesticide makers from liability and strip protections to keep pesticides out of drinking water. The amendment is a major priority for those aligned with the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement. Luna said she was getting severe pushback over her amendment: “They’re getting super nasty. I also had a member that called me on the phone and accused me of being a damn liar, texted it to me and had to get talked to by the Speaker about backing off, not threatening me.”

House Votes On Extending Controversial FISA Surveillance Program
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House Votes On Extending Controversial FISA Surveillance Program

The House of Representatives approved a three-year extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which empowers U.S. intelligence agencies to collect and review the electronic communications of foreign nationals located outside the United States without obtaining individual court orders. The provision has faced intense scrutiny for enabling the intelligence community to collect information on Americans without a warrant through its surveillance of foreigners. In a 235-191 vote, the House advanced the extension of the controversial spy tool. The legislation moves to the Senate with an attached ban on central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). However, it’s believed the Senate will scrap the CBDC ban. FISA HAS PASSED THE HOUSE 235-191 Will travel to the Senate with a CBDC ban. 22 GOP nos. 42 Dem yeses — Jake Sherman (@JakeSherman) April 29, 2026 POLITICO explained further: The Senate is unlikely to clear the House-passed extension, which will be sent over with an unrelated, permanent ban on the Federal Reserve’s ability to issue a digital currency attached. That provision was included at the behest of ultraconservatives, but it is so divisive across the Capitol that it has stalled a major affordable housing package for months. Senate Majority Leader John Thune earlier this week warned that the digital currency ban was “not happening” as part of spy law renewal. That means the Senate could send its own version of a Section 702 extension back to the House with just hours to spare before the law expires Thursday night. The major U.S. spy program targets foreigners but also sweeps up data on Americans in the process, and privacy hawks on both sides of the aisle are demanding new guardrails to prevent the federal government from conducting warrantless surveillance on its own citizens. After initially pushing for a White House-backed straight 18-month extension, GOP leaders agreed to add clarifications on Fourth Amendment protections and additional penalties for privacy violations to get many holdouts on board. “Any Republican telling you they’re voting yes on FISA in exchange for a CBDC ban is a liar or a fool. The Senate will strip the CBDC ban. They know this or should know it. And no one should support FISA regardless!” former Congressman Justin Amash said. The House will vote today on a three-year FISA 702 extension. Any Republican telling you they’re voting yes on FISA in exchange for a CBDC ban is a liar or a fool. The Senate will strip the CBDC ban. They know this or should know it. And no one should support FISA regardless! — Justin Amash (@justinamash) April 29, 2026 “THUNE tells reporters the Senate is likely to try to pass a 45-day extension of FISA,” Punchbowl News reporter Laura Weiss commented. “Comes after the House passed an extension with CBDC ban, which Senate leaders believe couldn’t pass the chamber. Senate will need UC to speed up passage of any FISA bill before tomorrow’s deadline,” she added. THUNE tells reporters the Senate is likely to try to pass a 45-day extension of FISA, per @rachelj_uc Comes after the House passed an extension with CBDC ban, which Senate leaders believe couldn’t pass the chamber Senate will need UC to speed up passage of any FISA bill before… — Laura Weiss (@LauraEWeiss16) April 29, 2026 Fox News has more: Johnson has voiced optimism that the upper chamber will take up the House bill without modifications. “I speak with Leader Thune all the time. They’re watching this very closely, and hopefully they can process what we send them,” Johnson told Fox News Wednesday. “No one, on the Republican side anyway, wants to play around with letting these critical national security tools go unfunded or expire,” he added. “So, I think they’ll move it expeditiously.” The Trump administration has pressured House Republicans for weeks to back an extension of the spy law, arguing the surveillance authority is too vital for national security to expire. “This department strongly supports the reauthorization of FISA 702,” Department of War Secretary Pete Hegseth told lawmakers Wednesday. “It is not hyperbole to say many of the most important missions we have executed could not have happened without the intelligence gathered through FISA 702.”

Obama Meltdown Over Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Ignores What the Justices Actually Said
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Obama Meltdown Over Supreme Court Voting Rights Ruling Ignores What the Justices Actually Said

Former President Barack Obama took to social media Wednesday to blast the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision in Louisiana v. Callais, calling it a fatal blow to the Voting Rights Act and accusing the justices of enabling racial discrimination in redistricting. The actual majority opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, said something quite different: that the Constitution almost never permits government discrimination based on race, and that lower courts had been forcing states to do exactly that. Obama’s post landed later the same day, and it read less like measured analysis and more like a five-alarm political fundraising appeal. Today’s Supreme Court decision effectively guts a key pillar of the Voting Rights Act, freeing state legislatures to gerrymander legislative districts to systematically dilute and weaken the voting power of racial minorities – so long as they do it under the guise of… — Barack Obama (@BarackObama) April 29, 2026 Obama wrote that the decision “effectively guts a key pillar of the Voting Rights Act” and frees state legislatures to “gerrymander districts to dilute and weaken minority voting power under the guise of partisanship rather than explicit racial bias.” He accused the current Court majority of “abandoning its role in ensuring equal participation in democracy” and urged voters to mobilize at every level. Strong words. But the opinion itself tells a more careful story, and it is worth reading before accepting Obama’s version of events. Here is what the Supreme Court actually held in its majority opinion: Justice Alito wrote that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act was designed to enforce the Constitution, not collide with it, and that lower courts had sometimes applied Section 2 in a way that forced states to engage in race-based discrimination. The opinion held that the Constitution almost never permits government discrimination based on race and that strict scrutiny applies to any such classification. The Court traced the long history of Louisiana’s post-2020 census map fight, from the state’s original congressional map, to litigation claiming Black voters were packed into one district and cracked among five others, to Louisiana’s later SB8 map creating a second majority-minority district. The majority concluded that because the Voting Rights Act did not require Louisiana to create an additional majority-minority district, no compelling interest justified the state’s use of race in creating SB8, and the map was therefore an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. Read that again: the Court did not strike down the Voting Rights Act. It said the law was never meant to require the kind of race-based map-drawing that a federal court had imposed on Louisiana. The state’s SB8 map, which created a second majority-Black district, failed strict scrutiny because the VRA did not demand it in the first place. Justice Elena Kagan dissented, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Jackson. Democrats immediately treated the ruling as a catastrophe. Democrats admit Supreme Court ruling weakening Voting Rights Act is “devastating blow” https://t.co/A9c54Xuv90 — Axios (@axios) April 29, 2026 The political stakes are real. Axios laid out the potentially enormous electoral consequences of the decision: The ruling could reshape voting across the South and could boost the Republican majority in the House by an additional 19 seats compared with 2024 maps. Louisiana v. Callais does not erase Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, but it narrows the test courts use when protected seats collide with the ability of state lawmakers to draw partisan gerrymanders. That makes the decision immediately relevant to the midterms, because maps that were previously vulnerable under Section 2 may now be much harder to challenge. The majority’s reasoning turned on the conclusion that because the VRA did not require Louisiana to create an additional majority-minority district, no compelling interest justified the state’s use of race in creating SB8. Partisan gerrymandering was already a shield in racial-gerrymandering cases because lawmakers could argue that they drew maps for party advantage rather than anti-Black intent. In the Callais framework, partisan goals can also help protect maps against Voting Rights Act lawsuits, giving Republican-led legislatures across the South a stronger hand as they revisit district lines. Up to 19 additional Republican seats is a seismic number in a closely divided House, and it explains why Democrats are treating this ruling as an existential threat. But the constitutional question is separate from the partisan math. If courts were forcing states to sort voters by race to draw districts, that is a constitutional problem regardless of which party benefits from fixing it. BREAKING: The Supreme Court struck down a majority Black congressional district in Louisiana, weakening a landmark voting rights law’s protections against discrimination in redistricting. https://t.co/bzYNbFduSA — The Associated Press (@AP) April 29, 2026 AP framed the ruling in terms of its broader implications for voting-rights law: The case concerned a Black-majority congressional district in Louisiana and a dispute over whether the state’s second Black-majority district, drawn after litigation over a prior map, had an unconstitutional racial basis and failed ordinary districting standards such as compactness. The 1965 Voting Rights Act has long been treated as the centerpiece civil-rights statute that opened the ballot box to Black Americans and reduced persistent voting discrimination. The Louisiana fight became a test of how far courts may go when using that law to order new maps. Election law experts estimate nearly 70 of the 435 congressional districts are protected by Section 2. It remains unclear how much of Section 2 survives after the ruling, but the decision could open the door for Republican-led states to eliminate Black and Latino electoral districts that tend to favor Democrats and could affect the balance of power in Congress. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill applauded the decision, saying the Court had ended Louisiana’s long-running nightmare of federal courts coercing the state to draw a racially discriminatory map. Attorney General Murrill’s point is the one that Obama’s meltdown conveniently ignores. Louisiana was being told by a federal court to draw a congressional map using race as the organizing principle. The Supreme Court said that command violated the very Constitution the Voting Rights Act was supposed to enforce. Obama framed the ruling as the Court choosing to look the other way on racial discrimination. The majority framed it as the Court stopping racial discrimination that was happening under the banner of the VRA itself. Those are two fundamentally incompatible readings, and the six-justice majority put theirs in writing with constitutional authority behind it. There is a serious debate to be had about how far this decision reaches and what it means for the roughly 70 congressional districts currently drawn under Section 2 protections. But Obama’s response skipped past the legal question and went straight to emergency language. The Supreme Court did not erase the Voting Rights Act. It told the government it cannot use race to draw maps unless the law specifically requires it, and it found the law did not require it here. If that conclusion sends the Democratic establishment into a panic, perhaps the panic says more about how much the party relied on race-based redistricting than it does about the Court.

Republican Senator Urges State To Redraw Congressional Districts Following Supreme Court Ruling, Proposes 9-0 Map
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Republican Senator Urges State To Redraw Congressional Districts Following Supreme Court Ruling, Proposes 9-0 Map

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), who is running for Governor of Tennessee, urged the state legislature to reconvene and redraw congressional districts. “I urge our state legislature to reconvene to redistrict another Republican seat in Memphis. It’s essential to cement @realDonaldTrump’s agenda and the Golden Age of America,” Blackburn said. “I’ve vowed to keep Tennessee a red state, and as Governor, I’ll do everything I can to make this map a reality,” she added. I urge our state legislature to reconvene to redistrict another Republican seat in Memphis. It's essential to cement @realDonaldTrump’s agenda and the Golden Age of America. I've vowed to keep Tennessee a red state, and as Governor, I'll do everything I can to make this map a… pic.twitter.com/qljW0mxiqG — Marsha Blackburn (@VoteMarsha) April 29, 2026 More from The Tennessee Star: Tennessee’s 9th Congressional District is currently represented by U.S. Representative Steve Cohen (D-TN-09), who was first elected to represent the district in 2006. Despite his two decades in the district, Cohen has found himself in a fierce primary contest against State Representative Justin Pearson (D-Memphis), who has the support of Justice Democrats, a political action committee (PAC) launched by former staffers of U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT). Should the General Assembly redraw the district’s boundaries, allowing a Republican to compete in Memphis, it could lead to the first Republican elected in the 9th Congressional District since 1970. However, the call from Blackburn comes only days after the General Assembly concluded its legislative session, allowing lawmakers to begin campaigning for reelection. To redraw the district, Governor Bill Lee would need to call lawmakers back for a special session to pass the boundaries. Despite the incentive to conclude work at the Legislature and begin campaigning, at least one state lawmaker has similarly called for the General Assembly to act. State Representative Johnny Garrett (R-Goodlettsville) wrote in a post to X on Wednesday, “The Tennessee legislature should reconvene to redistrict another Republican seat in Memphis. Tennessee should do its part in supporting [Trump]’s America First agenda by getting rid of the woke [Cohen].” One reporter asked President Trump if GOP-led states should redraw their congressional districts following the Supreme Court’s ruling. “I would. I mean, it depends. Some states don’t need to redraw, and some do,” Trump responded. “Yeah, I would say generally I would think that they would want to do it,” he added. Check it out: Q: Should GOP states redraw their maps?@POTUS: "I would. I mean, it depends. Some states don't need to redraw, and some do… Yeah, I would say generally I would think that they would want to do it." pic.twitter.com/cYBY7tOfNp — Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) April 29, 2026 More about the consequential Supreme Court case below: NOW: US Sen. Marsha Blackburn has PROPOSED a 9R-0D redistricting map for Tennessee to redraw, thanks to the Supreme Court ruling against racial gerrymandering under the VRA YES! Every southern state: FOLLOW SUIT BLACKBURN: "I urge our state legislature to reconvene to… pic.twitter.com/VZZucA4axY — Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) April 29, 2026 The Hill has more: The GOP’s advantage in the Volunteer State began after the Republican-controlled legislature approved a new map in 2022 that split the Democratic stronghold of Nashville into three red-leaning districts, according to The Associated Press. The capital city had been represented by Rep. Jim Cooper (D) for 20 years before that decision, but he decided not to seek reelection that year, and Republicans flipped the seats. Blackburn’s push for another round of redistricting — mid-cycle this time — comes amid an ongoing tit-for-tat ahead of the November midterms, in which Republicans are defending a slim House majority. The jockeying started last summer when President Trump pressed Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) to overhaul the state’s congressional map to gain five additional seats in the House. Texas followed suit, enacting a new congressional map last August that was recently upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. Since then, Republicans have also passed new maps in North Carolina and Missouri, while Democrats have gained pickup opportunities by redrawing lines in California and Virginia and from a court-ordered map in Utah.