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This underscores how 'RIDICULOUS' the Left, Dems have become: Jim Jordan
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This underscores how 'RIDICULOUS' the Left, Dems have become: Jim Jordan

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Trump says US ‘MUST RESPOND’ to Iranian attack
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Trump says US ‘MUST RESPOND’ to Iranian attack

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THOUSANDS of illegals, fraudsters getting government housing aid
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THOUSANDS of illegals, fraudsters getting government housing aid

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Is the Iran War Tipping the Gulf Away From the U.S.?
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Is the Iran War Tipping the Gulf Away From the U.S.?

Foreign Affairs Is the Iran War Tipping the Gulf Away From the U.S.? The countries that have borne the brunt of Iranian retaliation have an incentive to diversify their security structures. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images) / On June 3, as messages continued to pass between Iranian and American negotiators, the U.S. endangered diplomacy with renewed aggression against Iran. Enforcing the blockade on Iranian ports, U.S. forces fired a Hellfire missile into the engine room of a Botswana-flagged oil tanker. Moments earlier, per CENTCOM, they had “conducted self-defense strikes on an Iranian military ground control station on Qeshm Island” in the Strait of Hormuz. These were the third round of U.S. strikes on Iran in the past week. The Iranian reply to the attacks included the firing of 13 ballistic missiles and 17 drones at Kuwait. Some of those projectiles penetrated the roof of a passenger terminal at Kuwait International Airport. People rushed away from the huge hole in the roof as flames and smoke filled the building. One person was killed, and 63 others were injured.  There is no legal or moral justification for targeting civilian infrastructure. But, amid all the talk of “criminal Iranian aggression” and of Iran’s “deliberate, calculated, and unjustified attack” on a civilian airport when all the American bases in Kuwait “are dozens of miles from the airport,” one small sentence went unnoticed. Buried in the body of a New York Times article was the single line, “In recent years, American forces have operated out of a site in the Kuwaiti airport complex.” U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently said that “our allies in the region have been very cooperative—some, obviously, very aggressively cooperative, like the UAE, for example. Kuwait’s been fantastic in this part.” Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says Iran is “carrying out self-defense strikes on sites the United States was permitted to use to attack civilian shipping and violate the ceasefire.” The Gulf states believed that hosting U.S. bases provided them with an umbrella of defense against Iran. They have come to see that those bases have become magnets for Iranian ballistic missiles and drones.  But the U.S. has not only failed to protect the Gulf states; it has openly coerced and threatened them. Oman is a small country of outsized importance. It has a long, uninterrupted history of good relations with the United States. Oman has mediated several conflicts and helped get the U.S. out of several jams. It mediated the ceasefire between the U.S. and Yemen last year. Most importantly, Oman helped the Obama administration secure its nuclear deal with Iran. As Trita Parsi lays out in Losing an Enemy, “while the world’s eyes were locked on the ongoing P5+1 [U.S., UK, France, Germany, Russia, China] talks… the real show was taking place in secret in the heat of the Omani mountains.” But none of this history was enough to prevent President Donald Trump from threatening to bomb Oman. The Trump administration is angry with Oman for three reasons. The first is that, on the eve of the U.S. decision to go to war with Iran, the Omani foreign minister, Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, who was mediating the negotiations, made sure the world knew that war was not necessary, saying that a peace deal “is within our reach, if we just allow diplomacy the space it needs to get there.” The second was Al Busaidi’s article in the Economist in which he called the U.S. strikes on Iran “unlawful.” Though calling the strategy “unacceptable,” he empathized with Iran’s decision to strike American bases in the Gulf countries, calling it “probably the only rational option available to the Iranian leadership.” And he criticized the Trump administration, saying it miscalculated and “lost control of its own foreign policy.” Most importantly, Oman has not cut ties with Iran and has reportedly been in discussions with Iran to jointly control the Strait of Hormuz. It was this potential relationship that led Trump to threaten Oman that it must “behave just like everybody else, or we’ll have to blow them up.” The U.S. does not like the neutrality of Oman, which has made it such a valuable asset in the past. It has begun to press Oman to cut diplomatic ties with Iran and align itself unambiguously with America. Despite its long history of friendship, if Oman does not acquiesce to America’s demand, it will be treated the same way as Iran: sanctions and bombs. The day after Trump threatened Oman with bombs, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent threatened it with sanctions, warning that “Oman, in particular, should know that the U.S. Treasury will aggressively target any actors involved—directly or indirectly—in facilitating tolls for the Strait.” The United States no longer aligns with the Gulf states’ interests. They have become instruments for projecting American interests. Kuwait, Oman, and the other Gulf countries lobbied hard to prevent the U.S. from going to war with Iran. When Trump was a day away from restarting the war with fresh strikes on Iran, he said it was the leaders of the Gulf states who asked him “to hold off on our planned Military attack of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which was scheduled for tomorrow.” It was the Gulf states that paid the retaliatory price of the war; it was Kuwait that paid the price for the renewed limited strikes. The Gulf countries’ interests have not been served by this war. Crucial infrastructure, including energy and water desalination plants, has been struck. Investor and tourist confidence have been diminished. Lives have been lost. Hard-won regional diplomatic gains with Iran have been set back. The U.S. failed to take their interests into account by dragging them into the war, and then failed to protect them once it started. The Gulf states’ defense networks are too integrated into the U.S. system to extricate themselves entirely. But diversification is possible. In March, Oman’s Al Busaidi said the time had come for the Gulf countries to reconsider their defense strategies. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan last year signed a Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement that states “that any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both.” Last month, during the war with Iran, Pakistan sent 8,000 troops, 16 fighter jets, and a Chinese air defense system to Saudi Arabia under that agreement.  Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan, the leading military powers in the Muslim world (including the only nuclear power), have all expressed interest in a comprehensive regional security architecture that would encompass all the Muslim-majority nations of the region. Recent events have only enhanced those discussions. The Iran War has highlighted the need for the Gulf countries to update their security arrangements. Washington ignored their warnings, rebuffed their lobbying, and then failed to deliver the promised protection. The war may have accelerated the Gulf states’ decision to modernize and diversify their security arrangements and, perhaps, even move to a more integrated regional security architecture. The post Is the Iran War Tipping the Gulf Away From the U.S.? appeared first on The American Conservative.

Mike Pence’s ‘Progressive GOP’ Delusion
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Mike Pence’s ‘Progressive GOP’ Delusion

Politics Mike Pence’s ‘Progressive GOP’ Delusion Republicans’ “leftward” economic drift has been overstated, to say the least. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images) The now-irrelevant Mike Pence still knows how to get back in the news. The former vice president has a new book out warning America of the GOP’s “dangerous” lurch to progressivism. Among his complaints is that he believes his old party is at risk of abandoning the fiscal conservatism it was built on in favor of left-wing economics.  “Some right-wing populists have decided that American families need the support of industrial policies and the welfare state,” he argues in his new book. He claims all this rhetoric amounts to “a warmed-over version of big-government Republicanism.” It’s become fashionable to speak of a realignment in American politics, with Republicans now promoting economic populism to support the working class while the Democrats go full neoliberal to please financial elites. Many 2028 Republicans like to indulge this image. And a number of conservative intellectuals and commentators want to make it a permanent reality.  Even though President Donald Trump departs from conservative orthodoxy in many ways, the MAGAfied Republican Party is still fiscally conservative. The populist rhetoric is mostly just talk. When push comes to shove, Republicans and conservative commentators oppose more taxes and regulations. Contrary to Pence’s hysteria, they’re not going to implement Zohran Mamdani’s economic agenda. We can see this with Trump himself. He did upend the standard conservative views on free trade. The president has never shied from his support for protectionism and enacted a radical tariff regime with his second administration. That upset Pence and other traditional conservatives. But, besides that, his economic policies aren’t too different from conservative orthodoxy. The One Big Beautiful Bill, Trump’s primary legislative accomplishment, made the tax cuts from his first term permanent. His admin has also made it easier for corporations and individuals to get tax breaks. The president has pursued an aggressive deregulatory agenda that eliminated over 600 federal regulations in 2025 alone.  This is all typical of a Republican administration. There is little indication of the administration adopting measures to expand the welfare state or impose new taxes on billionaires to pay for industrial policy. One of the New Right’s favorite Republicans also illustrates how Trump’s party has stuck to its old guns. In spite of his bruising primary defeat to Trump, Florida’s Gov. Ron DeSantis continues to be one of the most admired conservatives in the country. He’s arguably the Republican most eager to translate the latest ideas from the New Right into policy. But his main issue right now isn’t industrial policy or expanding the welfare state. He’s turned to a remarkably libertarian idea to build up clout potentially for another presidential run: banning property taxes. He’s made his mark as one of the foremost proponents of this idea. The governor relies on standard conservative lines to advocate for his policy. He believes these taxes harm the middle-class. They also undermine the concept of property ownership and make the state, the bogeyman of libertarians, the true master of your home. It’s a proposal that could’ve easily come from Tea Party Republicans, with their desire for less taxation and less government.  Republicans all over the country are embracing this idea far more any economic populist idea. Texas’s Gov. Greg Abbott made property taxes one of the key issues in his reelection campaign this year. At least 13 states, most of them red, are looking at ways to significantly curb property taxes. None of them are looking at ways to expand government to provide more services and entitlements to their people. And none of them are looking at hiking taxes to punish businesses and corporations to serve some poorly-defined common good. But there is a change in rhetoric when Republicans have to defend this policy. DeSantis adopted Mamdani language when confronted with questions on how the state of Florida will make up for the lost revenue. “In places like Miami, you have some of the wealthiest people in the history of humanity buying homes here,” DeSantis told reporters. “They’re paying tax. Why not give your middle class residents a break on their property tax?” He also argued: “Tax someone rich. If some billionaire from Brazil is buying, tax them. Good, that’s fine with me…. I’m looking out for the Floridians here.” Those statements inspired a number of headlines in Florida that the governor is now embracing a “tax-the-rich” policy. Democrats in the state legislature even claimed DeSantis now sounds awfully like Mamdani and drew up legislation to tax the wealthiest Floridians. But DeSantis isn’t actually embracing the progressive idea. It was just a rhetorical flourish on the bill to significantly cut property taxes. Under the measure, those who buy a second home and out-of-state residents would still have to pay the tax. Primary residences would be the recipients of property tax relief. DeSantis just imagines wealthy foreign billionaires will make up the difference with the properties they own. He’s not calling for any specific tax on them besides what’s stated in the bill. It’s hardly a progressive proposal. DeSantis proves that Pence’s worries are grossly exaggerated. A Republican here and there may suggest some progressive proposal to further regulate the market or ponder taxing the rich more. But when it comes to policymaking, they’re just as committed to cutting taxes and regulations. One could argue that they’re more reckless in this pursuit than ever before. The enthusiasm for banning property taxes could strip rural counties of their public services and require new, more onerous taxes to make up for the cost. But the popularity of the proposal is enough to justify it. Pence is right to be worried that his brand of conservatism is no longer in style. Republican voters no longer want a party that worships immigrants and free trade, and insists the solution to every problem is limited government and more wars. But he’s wrong about how far to the “left” it’s moved on economics. A party setting out to wipe out property taxes and regulations is not a party interested in socialist economics.  Trumpism is “big government Republicanism” of an altogether different stripe. The post Mike Pence’s ‘Progressive GOP’ Delusion appeared first on The American Conservative.