Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed

Daily Wire Feed

@dailywirefeed

Trump Slams ‘Disloyal Disaster’ Bill Cassidy As Louisiana Voters Head To The Polls
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Trump Slams ‘Disloyal Disaster’ Bill Cassidy As Louisiana Voters Head To The Polls

President Donald Trump took one last shot at Senator Bill Cassidy as Louisiana headed to the polls on Saturday, urging voters to throw their support behind the incumbent Republican’s primary challenger. “Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana is a disloyal disaster,” the president wrote on Truth Social, noting that the two-term senator voted to impeach him after the January 6, 2021, Capitol riots. “Bill Cassidy is a sleazebag, a terrible guy, who is BAD FOR LOUISIANA. Now he’s going to get CLOBBERED, hopefully, in today’s BIG election, by two great people!!!” One of those people, Rep. Julia Letlow (R-LA), earned Trump’s endorsement shortly after entering the race in January. Letlow, who took office in April 2021 following the death of her husband, Congressman-elect Luke Letlow, has positioned herself as an America First lawmaker and attacked Cassidy from the right. “In a state as conservative as ours, we shouldn’t have to wonder how our senator will vote when the pressure’s on,” Letlow wrote at the launch of her campaign. “Louisiana deserves conservative champions, leaders who will not flinch.” Letlow has since endorsed President Trump’s call for the Senate to eliminate the filibuster in order to pass the SAVE America Act, election integrity legislation that has stalled in the upper chamber. Letlow also emerged as a supporter of Casey Means, a leading figure in the Make America Healthy Again movement and Trump’s nominee for surgeon general. Letlow slammed Cassidy for holding up Means’s nomination, calling on him to “stop dragging his feet, do his job, and help advance President Trump’s agenda.” Cassidy, a physician, opposed Means’s nomination given what he called her “promotion of vaccine skepticism.” Cassidy questioned Robert F. Kennedy Jr. along those lines during the latter’s Senate hearing, before ultimately voting to confirm him as Secretary of Health and Human Services. He did not relent on Means, however, and Trump late last month pulled her nomination, steering more MAHA ire toward Cassidy. Louisiana is not the only state where Trump has gotten involved in Republican primaries. The president threw his support behind Ed Gallerin, a retired Navy SEAL challenging Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY). Massie’s criticism of the war in Iran and the Trump administration’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files put him firmly in the president’s crosshairs. “The incredible people of Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District, who want desperately to get rid of Thomas Massie, the Worst ‘Republican’ Congressman we have had in many years,” Trump wrote on Truth Social this month. Trump’s involvement raised the stakes considerably in the Kentucky race, which has now become the most expensive House primary in American history. Kentucky voters head to the polls on Tuesday. Letlow has maintained a consistent lead in the polls. On primary day, the RealClearPolitics polling average had her 13 points ahead of Cassidy. Louisiana State Treasurer John Fleming trails Letlow by 8 points, but leads Cassidy by 3. A candidate must secure more than 50% of the vote in order to clinch the party’s nomination. If no candidate crosses that threshold, the top two candidates will head for a June 27 runoff. The winner of Saturday’s primary will enter the general election with a heavy advantage over whichever candidate clinches the Democrat nomination, given Louisiana’s solid Republican tilt. Polls close at 8:00 p.m. ET.

Thousands Stranded As Union Strike Shuts Down Nation’s Busiest Railroad
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Thousands Stranded As Union Strike Shuts Down Nation’s Busiest Railroad

Thousands of Long Island Rail Road workers walked off the job Saturday morning, marking the end to failed negotiations and the start of a strike that could derail the nation’s busiest commuter rail system. Five unions representing half the LIRR’s workforce — about 3,500 people in all — began the strike at midnight, the first in 32 years. The walkout comes after three years of failed negotiations with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the state agency that controls commuter rail lines and the New York City subway system. As of Saturday morning, the LIRR — which serves around 300,000 passengers a day — is shut down. The MTA’s website encourages riders to work from home, noting that the strike “will cause severe congestion and delays” and “have a devastating impact” on riders, many of whom use the railroad to commute to work in Manhattan. Unions and the MTA failed to come to an agreement on annual raises and healthcare premiums for workers. The unions requested a retroactive 9.5% pay increase to cover the past three years, on top of a 5% increase for 2026. MTA chief Janno Lieber told the New York Times that the agency was willing to increase pay for LIRR workers, but that union leaders refused its offer, pushing instead for concessions Lieber says would “implode” the agency’s budget. Union leaders say that LIRR workers have not received a raise since 2022 and are grossly underpaid. But these union members made $136,000 on average in 2025, making them some of the highest-paid rail workers in the country. Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images The Trump administration reportedly attempted to broker an 11th-hour compromise, to no avail. The Department of Labor has been without a leader for around a month following scandal-ridden Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s departure. The Labor Department has yet to comment on the strike. Union leaders, meanwhile, are trumpeting the strike with characteristic bravado. “The LIRR owns this strike,” Teamsters President Sean O’Brien said in a statement. “Union workers have sacrificed so much for the railroad for years while consistently bargaining in good faith for a fair contract.” “Hundreds of thousands of commuters rely on our members’ labor every day,” O’Brien added. “The LIRR is stranding passengers while denying wages, benefits, and respect to … hardworking union members.” “This strike would not have happened if the MTA and LIRR offered our members the reasonable terms the government recommended multiple times. But management refused,” Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen President Mark Wallace said Saturday. “We hope LIRR gets serious soon to avoid further unnecessary disruptions for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers. They know where to find us when they’re ready: on the streets.” “The L.I.R.R. is more stable now than it has been for generations,” New York Governor Kathy Hochul said in a statement. “The decision by some unions to strike over demands that would threaten that progress is reckless.” Hochul’s bête noire, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, posted on X late Friday that he was “continuing to closely monitor the ongoing contract negotiations involving the LIRR.” The MTA will begin operating free shuttle buses to make up for the strike on Monday, though the agency warns that the buses are not enough to make up for the railroad. The New York Yankees are set to face the New York Mets at Citi Field on Saturday, an event that would ordinarily generate heavy railroad traffic. On Friday, the New York State Comptroller’s Office said that the shutdown could cost the New York metro area $61 million a day in lost economic activity. That number could increase if the strike stretches into Memorial Day weekend.

Probation-Maxxing: Clavicular Avoids Brutal Sentencemogging From Florida Judge
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Probation-Maxxing: Clavicular Avoids Brutal Sentencemogging From Florida Judge

Controversial internet celebrity and “looksmaxxer” Clavicular avoided jail time after allegedly shooting an alligator in Florida earlier this year. The 20-year-old livestreamer, whose real name is Braden Peters, was taken into custody on February 7 in Scottsdale, Arizona. Peters was later charged with multiple offenses, including two felony counts, according to court records reviewed online. Clavicular faced nearly eight years in prison for the offenses, which included allegations that he shot an already-dead alligator in the Florida Everglades. But Clav will live to mog another day, thanks to a plea deal he struck late Friday. A judge agreed to sentence Clavicular to six months’ probation, during which time he must perform 30 hours of community service and complete a firearm safety course. If he serves his sentence without issue, his charges will be stricken from the record, according to the New York Times. Clavicular rose to fame thanks to his near-constant livestreams, which broadcast every aspect of his life to the internet. Much of his content centers around “looksmaxxing,” a niche internet trend popular among young men who will go to great lengths to improve their physical appearance. “Looksmaxxers” have captivated the internet with their unique argot, a lexicon of extremely-online slang and portmanteaus of ordinary words with suffixes like “mogged” and “maxxing,” which signify embarrassment and commitment to a practice, respectively. Clavicular has admitted to using methamphetamine to stay skinny and “bonesmashing,” a practice in which an individual lightly fractures his jaw bones, in the hope that they will heal more defined. During an interview with Daily Wire host Michael Knowles, Peters said, “I do meth, yeah. Meth is very similar to … Adderall, but it’s got a little bit better psychoactive benefits … stimulants cause appetite suppression.” When pressed on why he was doing meth despite its negative effects, he replied, “I have enough willpower to be able to taper off of meth.”

I Was Raised By Cuban Exiles. Here’s What They Taught Me About America.
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

I Was Raised By Cuban Exiles. Here’s What They Taught Me About America.

January 20, 2009. That was the day Barack Obama was sworn into office as the 44th President of the United States. When I got home from school, my family was gathered in the living room, and like millions of other homes across the country, our television was turned up to its highest volume. I was defeated, having lost every Facebook argument in defense of John McCain, but in reality, I didn’t care. What could go wrong anyway? We’re in America, for crying out loud — this is the greatest country on earth. We had just elected the first black president in the country’s history, and it seemed to make most of my friends happy. My grandparents, far smarter than I, watched in anguish. My Abuelo Ernesto was tapping his foot uncontrollably, and my Abuela Norma had one tear lightly streaming down her face. Then she leaned over to me and said something I will never forget: “That sounds exactly like Fidel Castro.” I thought she was absolutely insane. To me, the comparison was absurd. I assumed their experiences had made them overly sensitive to anything that even remotely resembled the rhetoric they had once heard in La Havana. This was America. America had institutions. America had a Constitution. America had safeguards that made something like Castro’s revolution impossible. I would eventually realize just how right they were. But to understand why my grandparents reacted the way they did, we need to backtrack. Both sides of my family escaped Cuba in the 1960s as Castro consolidated power and transformed the island into the Western Hemisphere’s first communist regime. They left before the system fully tightened its grip, but not before they saw the warning signs. For them, it happened all at once. One day, nearly every newspaper and radio station parroted the same narrative. Russian influence began appearing all over the island — even on television — where the Soviets were suddenly portrayed as heroes rather than adversaries. Oh, and the Americans — their northern neighbors just 90 miles off the coast of Florida, who were, until Castro’s rise, Cuba’s dominant trading partner? Evil, greedy, capitalist pigs. At school, children were encouraged to report their parents if they owned a gun or spoke critically of the government. Friends and families were torn apart over political differences, private farmland was ripped from their owners, and the universities were completely taken over by Marxism as propaganda ran rampant through the island. Meanwhile, Castro denied that his revolution had anything to do with Marxism. Instead, he warned Cubans that the real threat was capitalism — that the real threat was America. Obviously, history has proven otherwise. According to the Pew Research Center, a quarter of a million Cubans arrived in the United States in the 1960s following the revolution, with another quarter million arriving in the 1970s. As of 2024, there were 2.9 million people of Cuban origin in the U.S. — 23% more than in 2019, a reality that cuts through any romanticized narrative. People don’t fling themselves on rafts in the middle of the night, leaving their families and lives behind, to escape a purportedly prosperous and egalitarian society. My Abuela Norma arrived in Miami with just $2 in her pocket and a small box of cigars, leaving her husband and eight-month-old baby on the island. She sold the cigars so she could afford a bus ticket to apply for a job. My Abuelo Ernesto had been an accountant in Cuba. In the United States, he started over by cleaning toilets and bussing tables as a janitor. My Abuelo Hernan escaped to Spain to follow his dreams of becoming a doctor, with Abuela Zoraida by his side, hauling their children and leaving everything behind. When I heard these stories as a little girl, they were never imparted to me with bitterness — they were told and retold with gratitude. My upbringing in Miami filled me with stories of sacrifice, faith, and resilience. In my house, America was never something to apologize for. It was the country that gave my family the opportunity to rebuild everything they had lost. That perspective stayed with me even after I left Miami. Many Americans travel to Cuba today and see it as a kind of frozen museum: vintage cars, crumbling buildings, and colorful streets perfect for an Instagram feed. What they often don’t realize is that Cuba once looked very different. Before Castro, it was one of the most advanced societies in Latin America. It was the first country in Latin America to implement a railroad system, broadcast television in color, and have centralized air conditioning in a hotel. Now, in America, I turn on the news and hear the same slogans that I was raised to fear. I hear politicians speak about “equity” in ways that sound less like opportunity and more like coercion. I hear capitalism blamed as the root of all injustice, as though the very system that lifted millions out of poverty is something to be dismantled rather than improved. I hear America described not as a force for good, but as something inherently oppressive — something to be apologized for, rewritten, even torn down. And I think back to my grandparents, sitting on that couch in 2009, recognizing something I could not. At the time, I dismissed their reaction as fear rooted in trauma. But history has a way of repeating itself — not always in identical form, but in familiar patterns. Revolutions rarely announce themselves as such. They don’t begin with declarations of tyranny. They begin with promises: fairness, justice, equality. They begin by identifying a villain — usually wealth, success, or an entire economic system — and convincing people that their suffering can be traced back to it. Fidel Castro didn’t seize power by openly declaring, “I will install a communist regime.” He spoke of helping the poor. He spoke of justice. He spoke of dignity. Today, in cities like New York, we hear voices like Zohran Mamdani echo similar themes — framing capitalism as exploitation, portraying America as fundamentally unjust, and offering sweeping government control as the solution. The language is modernized, the tone more polished, but the underlying premise is strikingly familiar: that the system itself must be torn down in order to achieve fairness. Ideas do not always need a violent revolution to take hold. There’s a reason why The Daily Wire fights so hard against both big government censorship and the onslaught of Leftist propaganda in our culture. I take great pride in being able to contribute to that fight each day. But as Daily Wire founder Ben Shapiro recently pointed out in a speech at the University of Austin, there’s a reason why young people are taught to see their country primarily through the lens of its flaws — when success is reframed as oppression and economic freedom is recast as evil, the foundations of our country begin to shift. In Cuba, my grandparents watched as universities became centers of Marxist thought and as dissent became dangerous. It didn’t happen overnight. It happened step by step, justified at every stage by appeals to fairness and progress. That is why their reaction in 2009 was not irrational — it was informed. They had seen how language can be used to reframe reality, how patriotism can be turned into suspicion, and how economic systems can be dismantled under the guise of compassion. And they had lived the consequences. I’m not saying America is on the brink of becoming Cuba. But no nation is immune to the influence of ideas — especially when those ideas are presented in ways that sound virtuous on the surface. Socialism does not arrive all at once. It seeps in through rhetoric that reshapes how people think about success, fairness, and their own country. It gains ground when people forget history, or worse, when they are never taught it at all. In 2009, my grandparents did not have the luxury of ignoring those warning signs. They recognized them because they had lived them. As I listen to the conversations happening in America today, I find myself hearing the echoes I had once dismissed. And this time, I’m the one sounding the alarm. *** Savy Dominguez Morris is senior producer of The Ben Shapiro Show.

Trump Reveals Strike On ‘The Most Active Terrorist In The World’
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Trump Reveals Strike On ‘The Most Active Terrorist In The World’

President Donald Trump announced early Saturday morning that American forces had eliminated a top ISIS official in Africa, a major blow to the radical Islamic terror group. “Tonight, at my direction, brave American forces and the Armed Forces of Nigeria flawlessly executed a meticulously planned and very complex mission to eliminate the most active terrorist in the world from the battlefield,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, second in command of ISIS globally, thought he could hide in Africa, but little did he know we had sources who kept us informed on what he was doing.” pic.twitter.com/qco7EDL923 — Department of War