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SCOOP: SAVE America Act Could Be Voted on Every Day Before November
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SCOOP: SAVE America Act Could Be Voted on Every Day Before November

In a letter obtained by the Daily Signal, the chairman of the Republican Steering Committee outlined his priorities for the Wednesday lunch that will be attended by President Donald Trump, including a proposal to vote on legislation requiring voter ID and proof of citizenship every day before Election Day. “I hope everyone will be vocal as to what they think is the best path forward, but here is mine. Every day we are in session from now until the election, we should take a vote on the following,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., wrote in the letter. “Either the existing SAVE America Act or portions of it such as voter ID or requiring proof of citizenship before registering to vote. We need to make it clear Republicans want election security and Democrats want fraud.” Scott’s letter, which was addressed to his Republican Senate colleagues, comes as a call to action for conservatives who have failed to pass the SAVE America Act since it was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives three times. “We have to demonstrate what Republicans stand for and what Democrats stand for through action, not rhetoric,” Scott added. Despite holding the majority and having more than 50 votes to pass the law, Republicans are held hostage “to a 60-vote threshold rule, known as the filibuster, that was not in the Constitution or the Declaration of Independence, but instead made by some guys in the Senate in the 1970’s,” Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., told the Daily Signal. Trump has called for abolishing the filibuster numerous times in the past. “Republicans, Democrats, and Independents overwhelmingly want voter ID for elections and only Americans to be able to register for elections, the main components of the SAVE America Act,” Scott added in his letter. “Our country saw what happened to Spencer Pratt, where individuals on Skid Row were paid to vote for Karen Bass.” Pratt, a Republican, lost the Los Angeles mayor jungle primary race by a narrow margin after having a large lead election night over Nithya Raman. His lead disappeared as the vote tally dragged on for several days. “Colombia just had an election with only paper ballots, no mail-in ballots, voter ID, proof of citizenship. They counted the ballots in three hours. That sounds like what President Trump has been proposing,” Scott added. “President Trump has stated time and again the importance of election security. He thinks it is the most important issue that we need to tackle before the November elections,” Scott added. “We have less than six months until the midterms. Republicans are not united in eliminating the filibuster to pass Republican priorities.” Other conservative priorities outlined in the letter, which Scott believes should be championed by Senate Republicans ahead of the midterms if they want to hold the majority in the following Congress, include combating fraud, preventing another government shutdown, and reducing taxes. “[We need to focus on] a clean continuing resolution to fund the government at least until after the November election,” Scott wrote. “We need to make it clear to all Americans that Democrats want to shut down government and don’t care how it impacts federal workers or the economy and Republicans want to fund the government.” “Republicans want to fund the government, secure our borders, deport illegal criminals, secure our elections, reduce the size of government, eliminate fraud and waste, balance the budget, and reduce taxes,” the Florida senator wrote. “Democrats stand for open borders, illegal criminals, shutting down government, higher taxes, big government, fraud, waste, and inflation caused by massive government spending,” Scott continued, adding that Republicans “need to show voters that we are listening to them and will fight for their priorities whether any Democrats vote with us or not.”

Vance: Iran Deal Has ‘Successful Foundation’
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Vance: Iran Deal Has ‘Successful Foundation’

Vice President JD Vance spoke optimistically of peace talks between the United States and Iran on Monday, even as President Donald Trump has threatened to resume strikes if Iran doesn’t rein in regional allies, and congressional stakeholders have questioned whether America is getting a fair deal. On Monday morning, Vance departed from Switzerland after talks with Iran in which Qatar and Pakistan served as intermediaries. “The final deal is the house,” Vance said Monday morning. “We set the foundation. We haven’t built the house, but we’ve laid a successful foundation to get to a good place for the American people.” Vance suggested Iran had indicated its willingness to allow International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors into the country to inspect its nuclear programs, although Iran has not said as much publicly. He added “technical teams” would take over the negotiations that the memorandum of understanding has made possible. BREAKING: VP Vance announces major progress made by the United States and its negotiating team while finalizing a deal with Iran:“Yesterday was a very, very good day. We made a lot of good progress. We did exactly what we wanted to do… the Iranians have agreed to invite IAEA… pic.twitter.com/ExpYCS2KK2— Fox News (@FoxNews) June 22, 2026 The vice president also addressed the easing of sanctions, saying negotiators were considering unfreezing Iranian money so it could “go to buy American soy, American corn, and American wheat for the benefit of the Iranian people.”  Curt Mills, executive editor of the American Conservative, who has been critical of the administration’s military invention, said that the attempts to include pro-business provisions in the deal set these talks apart from those of the past. “There’s going to obviously be every effort to make this different and, frankly, sexier than the … Obama deal,” Mills told the Daily Signal, referring to President Barack Obama’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which attempted to curtail Iran’s ability to produce a nuclear weapon.   Trump was first elected president in 2016 as a harsh public critic of the deal, which, as a candidate, he called “the worst deal ever negotiated.”  Mills said talk of easing sanctions and a $300 billion fund for reconstruction in Iran is likely related to the fact American negotiators Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff are investors in the region and because “the Iranians need to rebuild their country.” Talk of freeing up money for the reconstruction in Iran has been controversial on Capitol Hill, including among Republicans.  Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, recently told reporters, “I don’t want to see us send a penny to the ayatollah.” Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, has similarly expressed concerns that Iran would “use the money that is being released to rebuild their ballistic missile arsenal and begin to enrich [uranium] again.” Texas Senator @tedcruz is not in total alignment with President Trump and Vice President JD Vance's agreement with Iran. He said, "unfortunately, the president is receiving some, really bad advice on this deal." @cbs11jack Eye on Politics: https://t.co/BQCaZUWX2u pic.twitter.com/BAA4vcalQ7— CBS News Texas (@CBSNewsTexas) June 21, 2026 The developing deal has had no cheerleaders among congressional Democrats. “Everyone that bought Trump’s book, ‘The Art of the Deal,’ ought to ask him for a refund,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the floor on Thursday amid reports of potential reconstruction aid for Iran. The U.S. Constitution says the president’s treaty power requires “the Advice and Consent of the Senate … provided two thirds of the Senators present concur.” However, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed by Obama without congressional approval, side-stepping the Constitution’s treaty clause. Congress then passed the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act in 2015, requiring the president to allow Congress to review future Iran nuclear deals. The vice president’s conciliatory tone is a far cry from Trump’s public angling and occasional threats of military strikes. On Sunday, the president urged Iran to rein-in proxies in Lebanon, threatening to “hit Iran very hard again” if they disobeyed. Israeli and Hezbollah forces have continued to exchange strikes during the current ceasefire. Israel and Lebanon are not signatories of the memorandum of understanding that laid the groundwork for the current negotiations. The same day, Trump said that if Iran shut off the Strait of Hormuz, then they “won’t have a country.” Vance told reporters that Iranian negotiators in Switzerland “did threaten to walk out” after the president’s remarks, which he defended as a response to Iranian “trash talk.” “What we told the Iranians yesterday is, when you guys engage in what us millennials might call ‘trash talk,’ you can’t expect the president of the United States not to respond and not to correct the record,” Vance said. “So, yes, there was a little bit of threatening, there was a little bit of whining,” he added. “But at the end of the day, the talks continued and we made great progress.” Related PostsUS and Iran Beginning Discussions on a Final Deal—Here’s What We KnowPresident Donald Trump announced that the United States and Iran are beginning discussions on a final deal. Trump signed a memorandum of understanding with Iran on Thursday, opening a round of negotiations to reach a final peace agreement in 60 days. The memorandum of understanding, first reached over the weekend with Iran, involves the U.S….JD Vance Survives the Women of ‘The View’Fresh off negotiating a peace deal with the mullahs and extremists of Iran, Vice President JD Vance waded into the much more turbulent waters of ABC’s “The View” Tuesday. After receiving warm, respectful applause from most of the audience, Vance endured a hostile interrogation not from the usual four rotating co-hosts of the show, but…Trump’s Iran GambleEditor’s note: This is a lightly edited transcript of today’s edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words” from Daily Signal Senior Contributor Victor Davis Hanson. Subscribe to Victor Davis Hanson’s own YouTube channel to watch past episodes. Sami Winc: Victor, let’s go ahead and get to the memorandum of understanding. It was a very short two-page document, easy to read through,…

For the Love of DEI, Virginia Democrats Seek Anti-White Tourism
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For the Love of DEI, Virginia Democrats Seek Anti-White Tourism

The Virginia House of Delegates just released its final draft of the 2026 budget. Buried in a civil war on data centers, lifting marijuana restrictions, and giving themselves a 150% pay raise, Democrats are also seeking to spend millions on DEI tourism. Virginia legislators are busy working out the 2026 budget. After months of back and forth with the state Senate and the governor, the Democrat-controlled Legislature released its budget proposal Friday evening, 100 days late. Buried in the 600-page proposal, which cost taxpayers $50,000 to craft, is a marketing provision that seeks to promote anti-white travelers to visit Virginia. Data Centers have "worn out their welcome" in Virginia @GlenSturtevant tells @DailySignal. House Democrats and Gov. Spanberger want to cut big tech/AI firms a $20 billion check this fiscal year. Sturtevant says it is Virginians who will pay the ultimate price. pic.twitter.com/rRBsZM0jPT— Virginia Grace McKinnon (@virginiagmck) June 15, 2026 The item, titled “Establish a Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic Communities Marketing Campaign,” aims to spend $4 million to develop a marketing campaign to attract out-of-state visitors from those minority communities. It directs $2 million in fiscal year 2026–2027 and another $2 million in fiscal year 2027–2028. If passed, the money will come from the general fund of the Virginia Tourism Authority. The agency will launch a media campaign to bring travelers from Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic communities to the state. “I’m disappointed and concerned about the emphasis on spending for demographic-specific ads,” Del. Anne Ferrell Tata, a Republican representing Virginia Beach, told the Daily Signal. “Virginia Beach should be open to everyone, and a campaign that invites all potential visitors could be more effective,” she continued. BE WARNED: New Virginia law permits artificial intelligence cameras at stop signs & crosswalks for enforcement.The law takes effect July 1. You can find a summary of the law here:https://t.co/TzISldB55fWAVY TV 10's Karina Garcia has more details: pic.twitter.com/vEaYFm707v— Virginia News Vanguard (@VaNewsVanguard) June 22, 2026 In an earlier version of this proposal, lawmakers proposed $1.5 million each year. Instead of rethinking the fairness of the campaign, Democrats doubled the spending. A spending increase is a trend in this two-year, $214.1 billion budget—and an increase of $26 billion from when Republicans controlled the state from 2024 to 2026. Virginia’s official tourism campaign is branded as “Virginia is for Lovers.” This isn’t the only DEI tourism push Democrats proposed in the two-year budget. They also aim to give $1 million to an event company that is planning to open a nonprofit museum dedicated to Black women. The Museum of Black Women Innovators is a few months behind on its opening but, according to its website, plans to open soon while continuing to “raise funds.” The explanation in the budget reads, “this amendment provides $1,000,000 in fiscal year 2027 from the general fund to support the Museum of Black Women Innovators.” So NO tax relief for Virginians despite @GlennYoungkin leaving @SpanbergerForVA a billion plus surplus, yet $ to TRIPLE the salaries of politicians in Richmond. I get it, “affordability” was for themselves not Virginians! https://t.co/1WpOSGURrm— Jason Miyares (@JasonMiyaresVA) June 20, 2026

Why the Media Called Trump a Warmonger…Then an Appeaser
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Why the Media Called Trump a Warmonger…Then an Appeaser

Editor’s note: This is a lightly edited transcript of today’s video from Daily Signal Senior Contributor Victor Davis Hanson. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to see more of his videos. Hello, this is Victor Davis Hanson for the Daily Signal.   The so-called Iranian memorandum of understanding involving a 60-day period of negotiations that may or may not lead to an armistice was published just recently, and it’s gotten a lot of storm of criticism.   It’s kind of ironic. All last month and up until the memorandum was published, the Left said that Donald Trump was a warmonger. Now they’re calling him Neville Chamberlain and an abject appeaser.   Some on the Right were saying he was the bravest of the last eight presidents, the first to take seriously the Iranian threat. In a sense, he didn’t just talk about it. He tried and did end it, I think. And now they are saying he was had. He’s a fool.  So what’s going on with this memorandum of understanding?  I think everybody is confusing, first of all, military victory versus strategic victory. In a tactical sense, we have had an overwhelmingly historic victory over the Iranian military. There are no air defenses. The airspace is open to anybody who wants it. The Iranians cannot stop the Americans, the Gulf states, or Israel from entering its airspace. That’s new.  Second, they don’t really have a navy. They have some mosquito boats, but now we’ve learned they have very few of those left. We’ve been attriting them in the evening, and there are about 160 ships we sank.   Their missiles have been 90% destroyed, but we don’t know the denominator. We don’t know how many there were. But even then, we are still aware of where they’re stored, and if there is another war, we could pretty quickly dispense with them.  I could go on. Eighty percent of their leadership—80 of their key leaders—have been taken out, including the supreme leader. So that’s a military victory, but that is different from a strategic victory.  Strategic victory means an unconditional surrender, and you dictate terms unconditionally to the defeated. We did that in World War II. We did that in the Civil War. We sort of, kind of, maybe did it in World War I with the Versailles Treaty that followed the Armistice of 1918.   And we did it with Saddam Hussein, and we initially did it with the Taliban.  But here’s the catch: You usually need ground troops to enter the foreign country, and then you remove the regime that you were fighting and install a new one.   We did that with the Confederacy. We did that with Germany, Italy, and Japan. We did that with the Taliban. We did that with Saddam Hussein.  But the key is, you have to have ground troops. To do that required 7,000 American deaths, 53,000 wounded, $2 trillion, and a combined chronological frame of 30 years—10 in Iraq and 20 in Afghanistan.   And then the regimes we installed completely flipped or were replaced. The Taliban came back to power, and now there’s a consensual government in Iraq, but it’s heavily dominated by our enemies, radical Shia.  Do we really want to do that in Iran? It’s 93 million people. It’s one and a half times the size of Texas. If you want to go in there and remove the regime, then of course you can say, “You are not going to have missiles. You are not going to give subsidies to terrorists. You’re not going to send agents throughout Europe and the United States.” But that would require a strategic victory.  Right now, the American people poll overwhelmingly that they do not want any more ground troops in the Middle East. They feel like [Otto von] Bismarck did about the Balkans when he said it’s not worth the bones of one German grenadier, meaning the Middle East isn’t worth that type of expense.  So we’re not a colonial power, and Iran is not a protectorate that we’re going to micromanage.  That said, our ability to go in at any time and severely damage it means that we can get the objectives that we talked about, specifically the Strait of Hormuz open and no more nuclear weapons. That would be a fantastic achievement.  So far, we’ve tragically lost 13 soldiers. That’s about the accident rate every two weeks in the military. So it hasn’t cost a lot of blood and treasure yet.  So what can we do if they violate the memorandum of understanding, if they send missiles into Kuwait or they try to shut down the Strait? We can go to the next level of bombing.  You won’t believe it, but Donald Trump hasn’t bombed like [Barack] Obama did in Libya in 2011. He has not bombed like we did in Vietnam. He has not bombed like Bill Clinton did in Serbia.   All of these Democrats, whether they’re [Lyndon] Johnson, or Clinton, or Obama, hit dual-use targets: docks, TV stations in Libya, schools, hospitals.   Not that we’d ever do that, but we accidentally hit them, including the Chinese embassy. But we did take out the bridges and the electrical grid in Serbia. In Vietnam, we tried to destroy everything that could be used by the military and civilians.  So we can do that. If they violate the terms of the agreement, we can say, “OK, you violate it. We’re going to respond disproportionately and take out 10 bridges for every missile.” And I think that would have an enormous effect on them.  But why did Donald Trump and the administration even have a memorandum? Because polls said that the people wanted it over with, because the price of gas had gone up to over $5 a gallon from $3.12 on average, or $3, and because the world was pressuring him to avoid a global recession, and the midterms were coming up.  So Donald Trump wanted a space in which he could get some of the objectives. He could get the enrichment—it’s under a buried mountain—and he’s got the Strait opened, and then the others will be discussed.  In the meantime, the stock market has soared. The price of gas is falling precipitously. And in a generic poll, do you support or reject the negotiations with Iran, the majority support it.  Everybody says he can’t win the midterms. If he were to lose them, he will be impeached. His whole family and associates will be subject to lawfare investigations for two years. So it’s paramount that he bulk up and break from historical precedent that says he’s going to lose.  Redistricting, whether it’s racial gerrymandering or blue-state gerrymandering, will result in a loss, due to red-state gerrymandering, of probably five to 10 seats.  The Democratic agenda is very unpopular when people hear about it, whether it’s the trans issue, or open borders, or Green New Deal, or DEI, etc.  And, of course, the economy, for all the bad news about the war—record Wall Street highs, good employment, enormous foreign investment, tax cuts, deregulation kicking in—we could have the inflation back to where it was well before the war by November. People have also mischaracterized the deal itself. This is not the end of the negotiations or the war. This is the very beginning of the problems for Iran.  Once the kinetic part of the war stops, they have to face the people, and the people are angry. We have taken out much of their leadership. The next second- or third-tier are mostly incompetent, and the people are going to say not one dime of reconstruction goes to Arab terrorists—the Houthis, Hamas, Hezbollah.   Not one dime goes to these crazy nuclear programs. Not one dime to your missile fleet.   You lost them all. You were humiliated. You lost half a trillion dollars and a half century of investment. No more.  So they’re going to have a problem with internal dissension that is rising. We can always, at any time, encourage that. We can even arm it.  More important, time is on Trump’s side. Not only can he react with dual-use targeting any time during the memorandum if they break it, but he can also explain to our allies and our friends that the Strait itself will be irrelevant in some sense in two years, maybe one year.  Right now as we speak, the Saudis, Oman, Qatar, the UAE, Kuwait—all of the Gulf Councils—are saying expand the pipeline to the Arabian Sea outside the Strait of Hormuz, and we can export oil without even getting near it. Expand the pipeline to the Red Sea without even getting near the Gulf.   Expand pipelines or build them, whether with Turkish plans or with the Israelis, to the Mediterranean.  The result of all that is that you may be able to export 10, 12 million barrels without ever going into the Strait, which would flip the entire geostrategic reality.  Iran would be vulnerable. We could shut the Strait any time we wanted and shut down all of their oil exports and imports. But if they tried to shut down the Strait, it would not affect, within two years from now, the vast majority of oil exports to the West, to Asia, to Africa. And the same thing is true of imports.  Finally, geostrategic, I’ve talked about this before, Russia has lost its clients in the Middle East—Syria and Iran. China has lost its clients—Venezuela and Iran.   They both have enormous problems. Both have very low fertility. China has to import 10 to 11 million barrels. They’re big losers in this war.  They are not winners when Elizabeth Warren says everything was going well until the war, and now Iran is much stronger than it was before the war. She should ask 80 or so of their leaders who are now burning in an inferno if they would prefer the present to the past under Obama when they were ascendant.  She should ask the Air Force generals, the head of missile defense, the Iranian admirals: Would you prefer right now having no military, or would you like to go back to the hey days when you were calling the shots under Obama?  The Strait, Senator Warren, was closed sometimes, sometimes it was open, because we decided for the first time to disarm them nuclearly. Every other president, all seven of them, said they cannot have a bomb, and then people said, but they might close the Strait. Okay, we don’t want to get near that.  They closed the Strait because we took away their nuclear option. When you don’t take their nuclear option away and you appease them, the Strait is open. It’s that simple.  We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of the Daily Signal.

Trump Admin Prosecutions Reveal the True Nature, and Threat, of Antifa
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Trump Admin Prosecutions Reveal the True Nature, and Threat, of Antifa

This month, the Southern Poverty Law Center‘s interim CEO Bryan Fair testified that Antifa is an “ideology,” not a “group,” but the Justice Department’s prosecutions of Antifa agitators under President Donald Trump should dispel this notion once and for all. Not only do self-described anti-fascists exist, but they have organized in groups that feature in indictments and guilty verdicts. While these Antifa groups may be loosely organized and often rely on mutual aid networks, the notion that they are not organized and therefore cannot be monitored in the same way that groups like the SPLC claim to monitor white nationalists is a farce. At least two high-profile cases illustrate the nature of Antifa agitation groups and how they support and inspire violence. ANTIFA AN 'IDEA'SPLC CEO Brian Fair tells @RepMcClintock at @JudiciaryGOP that his group doesn't put Antifa on the "hate map" because the FBI previously Antifa is an "idea," not a group. That's interesting because SPLC has carried water for Antifa.https://t.co/eu1GyG9Wge pic.twitter.com/36Hhb0oBJ6— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 9, 2026 Direct Action Minnesota Last week, a federal grand jury indicted 15 members and associates of Direct Action Minnesota, charging them with conspiracy to impede a federal officer, multiple counts of interstate stalking, interstate threats, solicitation to commit a crime of violence, counts of assault on a federal officer, and destruction of government property. Kyle Wagner, named in the Direct Action Minnesota indictment, faces charges of conspiracy to impede or injure a federal officer and solicitation to commit a crime of violence. According to the indictment, he allegedly identified himself as “Antifa,” and wore a sweatshirt with the text “I’m Antifa.” The indictment describes groups such as the Black Cat Worker’s Collective as an “Antifa affinity group.” At a Feb. 7 rally hosted by the collective, attendees wore “Antifa”-branded sweatshirts. The indictment states that Direct Action Minnesota “worked closely with other direct action groups, Antifa affinity groups, [rapid response networks], and other organizations to plan for an execute direct actions. DAMN infiltrated and exploited lawful protests to more efficiently carry out its direct actions targeting operations involving ICE as well as supporting federal and state law enforcement.” “DAMN relied upon otherwise lawful protesters and ‘strength in numbers’ to distract law enforcement and enable DAMN members to carry out its direct action operations,” the indictment claims. The indictment quotes Wagner comparing federal immigration forces to Nazis and urging violence against them. “Sorry, but welcome to America 2026, where the Second Amendment is the only thing that’s going to keep you f—ing protected from literal f—ing Nazi gun men that are killing innocent people in the street with impunity.” He later allegedly added, “Get your f—ing guns and stop these f—ing people.” Wagner and other defendants allegedly trained other Antifa affinity groups at “Anarchist Speaking Tour” events in Chicago, Ann Arbor, and Seattle in April 2026. Authorities had already arrested Wagner on federal threat and cyberstalking charges, accusing him of calling for the murder of ICE officers. Prairieland Facility Attack In March, a jury convicted eight alleged members of an Antifa cell for providing material support to terrorists. The jury convicted eight people of riot, providing material support to terrorists, and other charges related to a July 4, 2025, riot outside the Prairieland Detention Facility operated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Rioters set off fireworks, and when police arrived at the scene, one of the rioters opened fire, wounding an officer in the shoulder. Before trial, seven other defendants pleaded guilty to providing material support to terrorists. The agitators organized via the app Signal and had Antifa magazines and other materials showing leftist ideology and anti-government intentions, the government argued at trial. Ryan Raybould, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Texas, told the Daily Signal that the verdicts will help advance Trump’s National Security Presidential Memorandum-7, which directs federal agencies to combat organized political violence, especially in the wake of the Charlie Kirk assassination in September. “Antifa was found to be a domestic terrorist organization and that these defendants were found to provide material support, I think, is very consistent with NSPM-7 and the priority of this administration to try to stop political violence by domestic terrorist groups,” Raybould said. “This case shows a road map for charging individuals that commit violent acts that are coordinating through their Antifa affiliation,” he explained. Raybould noted that “the Antifa membership, which was demonstrated through Signal chats, through pamphlets and flyers and their messages back and forth, really showed that there was hostility towards ICE agents and this government installation and that it was coordinated—they weren’t just peaceful protesters.” Antifa Is Real These cases give the lie to the old canard that Antifa isn’t an organization, but an ideology. Yes, Antifa networks are often loosely connected, but that does not mean they do not exist. If organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center truly wish to monitor extremism and potential violent threats, they must track Antifa. The SPLC’s explicit and repeated refusal to do so speaks volumes.