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Buttigieg Swatting Incident: MS NOW's 'The Weekend' Overcome by Emotion, Assumptions
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Buttigieg Swatting Incident: MS NOW's 'The Weekend' Overcome by Emotion, Assumptions

On Saturday morning's The Weekend on MS NOW, co-hosts Jonathan Capehart, Eugene Daniels, and Jackie Alemany reacted with visible emotion — Capehart especially overcome — to Pete Buttigieg’s Substack post detailing an anonymous false report to Child Protective Services that temporarily upended his family. The incident was undeniably serious: An unidentified caller alleged Buttigieg confessed to “unspeakable violent crimes” during a supposed meeting in Alabama. Police and CPS responded. Buttigieg was separated from his four-year-old twins for 24 hours pending interviews.  Authorities quickly found the claims unsubstantiated, with the officer reportedly deeming the call politically motivated. Buttigieg noted he has never been to the town in question. Capehart introduced the segment with visible distress: “This story is enraging on so many levels. As Secretary Buttigieg pointed out, this is Pride Month, LGBTQ Pride Month... I think leaders should step out there and say that as Secretary Pete points out in his piece, in politics, children are supposed to be sacrosanct. You’re supposed to leave them alone. These are four-year-olds, four-year-olds!” Daniels piled on with a racial angle, suggesting the police officer might have traumatized the children: “And I think something that’s not lost on me is that they are four-year-old little black kids. And so their first, probably, interaction with men in blue suits and jackets and with guns on their hips coming in, talking to them and interviewing them is based on a lie that they will find out about as they get older.” MS NOW's The Weekend's Emotional Overreach on Buttigieg CPS Incident pic.twitter.com/Ky6aRQUobS — Mark Finkelstein (@markfinkelstein) June 27, 2026 In fact, as Buttigieg noted: "The kids bounded into the house, looking curiously at the two guests. They were courteous and professional, inviting the kids to inspect the officer’s police car, which fascinated them of course, while the grownups talked in the driveway." Moreover, as the children of a former presidential candidate and cabinet secretary, it's unlikely this was their first exposure to law enforcement officers. Swatting-style hoaxes and false reports have plagued public figures across the spectrum, with conservatives like Marjorie Taylor Greene, Nikki Haley, and numerous Republican lawmakers and conservative media members targeted in recent years. That hasn't drawn much outrage on MS NOW before.  But this is one of theirs. Daniels added that attacks on the “queer community and public out people are coming fast and furious.” Alemany attacking "the homophobia of it all" and described the separation as “really absolutely terrifying” and discussed the risks of publicizing children on social media. Capehart closed by noting the timing near Chasten Buttigieg’s birthday: “So can you imagine just the terror that that family went through, and also on a day when they should be celebrating.” No one disputes the human toll on the Buttigieg family. Weaponizing CPS against anyone’s children is contemptible, full stop. Yet the segment rushed to frame the hoax as part of a broader right-wing assault during Pride Month, while Buttigieg himself stated plainly: “I don’t know who did this, or exactly what prompted them to try.”  The Weekend’s emotional outpouring and assumptions about the perpetrator’s politics, paired with limited acknowledgment of the broader context, constituted classic selective framing. The family’s ordeal deserves condemnation regardless of who made the call — not partisan point-scoring before the facts are fully known. Here's the transcript. MS NOW The Weekend 6/27/26 7:29 am EDT EUGENE DANIELS: Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg says he and his family were targeted in a "cruel, politically-motivated hoax." This was after an anonymous caller made what police characterize as a false report to Child Protective Services. According to Buttigieg, the caller said he spoke to a woman who claimed she met him several years ago at a conference in Alabama, where she alleged Buttigieg told her he committed unspeakable violent crimes, and the caller believed his children were still at risk. Due to this claim, he wasn't allowed to be alone with his children until the interviews were conducted, which he calls the darkest hours of his life. The CPS worker assigned to the case and the police officer who interviewed him and his children separately didn't find anything to substantiate the allegation. Buttigieg wrote, he also says, he's never ever been to the town where the woman claims she met him, and said it's not lost on him that this happened during Pride Month. In a piece he wrote for Substack, Buttigieg says, quote, "To be clear, making a false report of this kind is a crime. I don't know how much we can do about it, but so help me God, if there is any way to press civil or criminal charges over this, we will. Not just for our sakes, but to draw a line that I thought everyone already recognized: do not mess with someone's kids." JONATHAN CAPEHART: This story is enraging on so many levels. As Secretary Buttigieg pointed out, this is Pride Month, LGBTQ Pride Month, where, you know, gosh!, 11 years ago yesterday was the Obergefell decision, where marriage equality was made the law of the land. Where couples like us, Eugene, we felt like we had a modicum, we had more security in this country for us and our families. And now in the moment that we're in, our families don't feel very secure in general, given what's happening in the country writ large, but in individual states, and now you have this happening. I mean, swatting and things like this are just egregious, but for a prominent, out, gay couple—with four-year-old children!—going through something like this, it is outrageous, and it is something that people really need to take seriously. I think leaders should step out there and say that as Secretary Pete points out in his piece, in politics, children are supposed to be sacrosanct. You're supposed to leave them alone. These are four-year-olds, four-year-olds! DANIELS: And I think something that's not lost on me is that they are four-year-old little black kids. CAPEHART: Yeah. DANIELS: And so their first, probably, interaction with men in blue suits and jackets and with guns on their hips coming in, talking to them and interviewing them is based on a lie that they will find out about as they get older. And I think what we continue to see in this country is the attacks on queer community and public out people are coming fast and furious in different ways. Like it used to be like one way, like you'd get attacked online and that just, that'd be it. But something like this is really ugly and concerning about what it portends for someone like him who's gonna continue running for office. CAPEHART: And Jackie, you're the only one here who has a child. I mean, when you read it, what Secretary Pete wrote, how did you feel? JACKIE ALEMANY: I can't imagine being separated from the most important thing in your life for 24 hours. It's really absolutely terrifying. I think outside of the homophobia of this all and the attacks that gay people in this country, queer people in this country, now have to deal with every single day. There's also, I think, another conversation that my husband and I have had a lot, talked a lot about, about publicizing your children on social media too. And this is why people don't wanna get into public life anymore as well. Putting yourself out there, you're an example for so many people, you're an inspiration for so many people. At the same time you are a target as well, and it's terrifying, and I think it scares good people from doing these kinds of jobs and being vulnerable with each other, and it's really a shame. CAPEHART: You know, one other point, as I was reading Secretary Pete's Substack, the thing that jumped into my head, you know what else was this week? And I don't know the timing of all this, it was Chasten's birthday, Secretary Pete's husband. So can you imagine just the terror that that family went through, and also on a day when they should be celebrating. So, you know, depending on the timing of all this. I just -- uh!

PBS on Vance Revisits Nixon: Capehart, Brooks Agree Trump Has No SHAME, Like Resign Now!
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PBS on Vance Revisits Nixon: Capehart, Brooks Agree Trump Has No SHAME, Like Resign Now!

The Friday night News Hour pundit panel concluded on a historic PBS topic: Watergate. In its earliest years, PBS found it delightful to contribute to President Nixon's political demise, running the Watergate hearings live during the day and repeating them at night. PBS anchor Jim Lehrer was elated: "as justice, it was pure delicious!" Vice President Vance this week claimed Nixon is undergoing a historical "renaissance" and "if Watergate happened tomorrow, it would be like a 12-hour news story. The idea that it would have taken down a presidency is crazy."  That's not entirely true. The Democrats tried to repeat this impeach-or-resign move with "independent counsels" with  Reagan over Iran-Contra, and with Trump and Russian "collusion" in his first term. It's never a "12-hour news story" with a leftist media that delights in ruining Republican reputations for all time. Nevertheless, Capehart expressed a typical disgust:  J.D. Vance said this week Nixon was undergoing a historical "renaissance" and today Watergate would be a "12-hour news story." Nah. But it upset Capehart and Brooks on PBS @NewsHour, who said at least Nixon had a "sense of shame," unlike Trump. In its early years, PBS LOVED… pic.twitter.com/zEUUAcrrX4 — Tim Graham (@TimJGraham) June 27, 2026 CAPEHART: Nixon did not fall because of the deep state, which is what he said in another part of that answer. His presidency fell because he had the one thing that Donald Trump has never had, and that's a sense of shame. When fellow Republicans went to President Nixon and said, because of all the stuff you did, bugging the DNC and all these criminal acts, we are going to impeach you, and rather than President Nixon suffering the shame of being at the time what would have been the first president impeached in a very long time, he decided to resign. That's not what we're dealing with here with President Trump. And certainly Vice President Vance wrapping his arms around Nixon is a very curious thing to do. Brooks wanted to underline how successful the prosecutors were in getting convictions, but that was then, apparently:  BROOKS: More than a dozen people went to jail. It was a criminal enterprise. But having said that, J.D. Vance is absolutely right. It would be a one-day story today, because you define deviancy down. The standards of the entire country have been deteriorating because of what we have had lived through over the last decade. And for that reason, the Republicans would not do what Republicans did in 1974, which was to tell him you got to go. And so it would -- he is right. It would be an absolute one-day story, and we would all move on. [Laughter] Earlier, Brooks did effectively identify what's going on with the Democratic Socialist faction (in an academic way, without objecting to it):  On PBS, David Brooks effectively identified what's going on with the Democratic Socialist wing of the Democrats (in an academic way, without objecting to it): the party's energy has shifted from the unions to the universities. pic.twitter.com/HHPJBAgK8J — Tim Graham (@TimJGraham) June 27, 2026 BROOKS: Yes, I think there's somewhat of a realignment going on. The Democratic Party's heart and soul used to be the labor movement. It used to be the unions. It's not anymore. The heart and soul of the Democratic Party is the universities and especially the elite universities. And so the candidate who won in New York 13, Darializa Avila Chevalier, went to Columbia, was an activist in the Gaza protests. She is a sociology Ph.D., or I think she's trying to get her Ph.D. And she grows out of that place. And if you look at all the candidates that -- the DSA candidates, where they did well, they did very well in the more affluent, the whiter and the better educated parts of New York City. And the traditional candidates did well in the poorer and more multiracial parts of New York City. And so the faculty lounge has become a strong part of the Democratic Party and faculty lounge politics have become a strong part of the Democratic Party. And that I think extends somewhat beyond New York City. You have Democratic socialist candidates in Washington, D.C., mayoral race, around the country. You have other DSA candidates. I don't think it's going to totally realign the party. There just aren't that many people with sociology doctorates and people who respond to this faculty lounge politics. But there are enough. And I think one of the things that will shift within the Democratic Party as a whole is I think Israel will become a flash point for whoever wants to be the nominee in 2028. I think the Democratic Party is really shifting strongly on that one, I think on some of the economic issues. Where I'm curious to see, if we go back to no fund of police. Avila Chevalier is a prison abolitionist, and she's been asked repeatedly, do you think murderers should serve time in jail? And she refuses to answer that question. Democrats did very poorly a couple of years ago because of the defund the police. That just seemed out of touch to a lot of people, including a lot of Democrats. And will the party make that mistake again because the -- where the energy is in the party is in the DSA wing? But hope for the long-term elections is the traditional parts of the party somehow getting some mojo and some energy to match what they're up against. Capehart, like his fellow MS NOW hosts, tried to claim this DSA thing might be a New York City phenomenon, not a national trend. But it's happened in deep-blue cities all over. 

MS NOW’s O’Donnell Admits He Wants Guests to UNLOAD Personal Trump Grievances
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MS NOW’s O’Donnell Admits He Wants Guests to UNLOAD Personal Trump Grievances

We all know that the leftist media hasn’t been objective for a long time now. Even so, it’s still a bit shocking to hear them admit their agenda out loud. That is what MS NOW’s Lawrence O’Donnell did on Thursday’s episode of The Last Word, in which he flat-out admitted to baiting his guests into airing their personal grievances against President Trump. At the same time, he blamed Trump for making politics personal.  O’Donnell hosted former Secretary of State John Kerry, who served in the Obama administration and negotiated the JCPOA deal with Iran, onto his show Wednesday to discuss the new U.S.-Iran MOU that had recently been signed by Trump’s administration. During that interview, O’Donnell, in his own words, “invited [Kerry] to get personal about Donald Trump,” though Kerry refused to take the bait: I think that what really needs to be focused on here is not bad or any kind of personal pieces here, in my judgment. I mean, there's no place for the personal here.      It’s hard to imagine the political world without the personal animus held between members of government, and also between the people and those they view as ‘opposition.’ But the biggest reason for the increasing polarization between political parties and viewpoints has no doubt been the media. The media -- especially on cable TV -- thrives on riling people up against others. And the leftist networks have gotten that down to a science by this point. You can look at the several assassination attempts against Trump, violence against ICE, the murder of Charlie Kirk, or any number of politically motivated attacks for evidence. Left-wing domestic terrorism and violence has been prevalent around the globe since the French Revolution. And yet, despite claiming to denounce the recent spike in political violence, CNN, MS NOW, ABC, and other liberal media have stoked the use of violent rhetoric against Republicans. But if you ask O’Donnell, he has a simple answer for why our political rhetoric is so fraught nowadays: The United States Senate used to be mostly filled with people like John Kerry, who would never publicly indulge their personal feelings when discussing or voting on what they thought was best for America. And then came Donald Trump, who can walk into a closed room with Republican Senators, call Lisa Murkowski 'a horrible person.' And they all sit there in pathetic, cowardly silence. . . Because for Donald Trump, there is nothing but the personal.  As Michael Jackson once put it, O’Donnell really should look at “the man in the mirror.” He denounced “personal” politics while doing the exact opposite on his show. He admitted that John Kerry was “a bigger person” than he was, because O’Donnell can’t help but make everything personal. And he wants the guests who come on his show to do the same thing.  The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read: MS NOW's The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell 6/25/26 10:12:52 p.m. Eastern (...) LAWRENCE O'DONNELL: And last night, I invited John Kerry on this program when he was a guest here to say, 'I told you so.' And he proved himself, once again, to be a bigger person than I am.  [Cut to interview] O'DONNELL: What is it like for you now when you see Donald Trump desperately trying to negotiate the deal that you negotiated, desperately trying to claw back to get to the point that you got to.  You're not the 'I told you so' type, that's not the kind of phrase you would use, but that's certainly the posture we all think you have a right to be sitting in tonight. JOHN KERRY: Well, Lawrence, let me just say to you that I think that what really needs to be focused on here is not bad or any kind of personal pieces here, in my judgment. I mean, there's no place for the personal here.  This is really a matter of what's good diplomacy, what's good for the United States, what's good outcome. [Cut back to live] O'DONNELL: There's a lion of the Senate. John Kerry served 28 years in the United States Senate.  That's the way it used to be. You don't make it personal. That is what decency looks like. That is what honor sounds like.  'There's no place for the personal here.' That's what John Kerry said when I invited him to get personal about Donald Trump lying about him for years and what he accomplished as Secretary of State in his nuclear agreement with Iran. 'There's no place for the personal.' That's what he told me.  Washington used to be filled with people like John Kerry. The United States Senate used to be mostly filled with people like John Kerry, who would never publicly indulge their personal feelings when discussing or voting on what they thought was best for America.  And then came Donald Trump, who can walk into a closed room with Republican Senators, call Lisa Murkowski 'a horrible person.' And they all, they all sit there in pathetic, cowardly silence, with one of them going out later and telling the press that Donald Trump was completely justified in being so angry at them. Because for Donald Trump, there is nothing but the personal. And for the Republicans who have put the United States Senate in Donald Trump's service, there is nothing but living the rest of their lives in disgrace.  (...)

The Godfather Returns: George Soros Is Top Midterm Donor with $102M Cash Dump So Far
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The Godfather Returns: George Soros Is Top Midterm Donor with $102M Cash Dump So Far

If you thought Elon Musk would take the top spot as the 2026 midterm donor, think again. The Godfather of the Left, George Soros, is back to his old bag of tricks with another major cash dump to swing the pendulum of legislative power back to the left. The Washington Post reported June 25 that Soros had taken the title as the 2026 midterms' largest donor, with a whopping $102 million poured so far into his political cash cow — Democracy PAC — ahead of the November election. The news comes after it was reported in April that Soros kicked off his 2026 spending with $50 million. The level of Soros' expenditures signals that the 95-year-old leftist billionaire isn’t exactly riding off into the sunset for retirement despite formally handing control over his multibillion-dollar philanthropic empire to his more radical son Alex. In fact, the elder Soros has proven beyond any doubt that he has no intention of ceasing his attempts to buy political outcomes that comport with his utopian ideals. Ironically, it was The Post itself that stipulated in 2018 that “[R]ather than recede from public life in his twilight years, Soros has decided to push even harder for his agenda.” That’s as true now as it was then. During the 2022 midterms, Soros also took the mantle as top dog in the political donor class by pouring over $178 million into blunting the GOP’s push to retake control of Congress with an electoral mandate. It appears he’s not keen on letting anyone else be the midterm spending king this time around, even with an opponent like Musk in the picture. But Soros’ political campaign spending is only a microcosm of the plethora of leftist agenda items that Soros has fueled with his cash.  From a holistic perspective, Soros has pumped billions of his wealth into an obsessive vendetta undergirded by global governance, open borders, financing pro-terror causes, electing and controlling soft-on-crime prosecutors, gaining extraordinary influence within the information media ecosystem, and backing extremist political groups dedicated to crushing American exceptionalism and capitalism. Though Alex is the designated crown prince of his empire, the elder Soros is not going away anytime soon. He will continue to bend “the arc of history” as long as he's able to do so.

Will the Media Track Elected Socialists on Their Governing Results?
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Will the Media Track Elected Socialists on Their Governing Results?

This week, it looks like socialism is on the march. Suddenly, the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) are "rocking" the Democratic Party. The Manchin moderates are missing. To the headlines: From Fox News: Winners and losers emerge after socialist earthquake rocks NYC primaries  All three Mamdani-endorsed candidates defeated establishment opponents and are expected to win in November From USA Today:    First NYC. Now DC. Can Mamdani’s win keep powering progressives?  From the aptly named Jacobin: Socialists Won City Elections Across the Country This Week   From NewsNation:  Democratic socialists’ primary wins are a ‘real test’ for the progressive left, says Chuck Todd  From the Los Angeles Times:  In L.A., as in other U.S. cities, democratic socialists are poised to expand power at City Hall  And on and on…and on and on….go similar headlines from the media. All touting the socialist sweeps in New York, the District of Columbia and elsewhere around the country. Now comes the hard part. Soon enough all these socialist winners will be sworn into the offices they have so furiously sought.  And results will have to be produced. Already there have been some anti-Mamdani rumbles. In recent days was this sample headline, starting with a slam on the Mayor’s “Office of Mass Engagement.”  From the New York Post:  Mamdani’s $54M mass engagement office did little to get out the vote with questionable campaign But in fact, the Mamdani coverage thus far has been on the positive side. Here’s, of course, the lefty New York Times proclaiming through science writer David Wallace-Wells:  For Zohran Mamdani, it has been a pretty sunny start. A Siena poll in late January found that the mayor had the approval of 68 percent of New York City — almost 18 percentage points more than he got in the November election and good enough for a net approval of plus 48. This put him in rarefied air alongside San Francisco’s Daniel Lurie, who more than a year into his mayoralty has been given credit for a profound turnaround in the city and who looks perhaps like the country’s most popular elected official. In February, after some frustrating snow, Mamdani’s approval dipped slightly, to 63 percent. His net approval was still higher than anything Eric Adams notched during the giddy period when he was being celebrated as a future face of the national Democratic Party. It’s better than Michael Bloomberg ever managed, according to Marist, and in a political era widely seen to be drowning in negativity. ….But whatever the future holds, the mayoralty has begun with a very high base line of support. Mamdani’s thumping win in November has given way to what looks less like a liberal crackup and more like the city coming together behind an incredibly popular new mayor.” In fact, results will be produced. They will be good, bad or indifferent. The question now is will the media follow those results? Not just follow them if they’re seen to be good. But follow them if, in fact, as conservatives expect, they turn out to be not so good. Or worse. Example?  Back there in the ancient long ago of 1965, the media of the day was agog, filled with excitement at the news a handsome, young liberal Republican Congressman from New York - John Lindsay by name - was running for Mayor of New York. Two years earlier, the young, dashing President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated in what was, in fact, a horrific tragedy.  The media (and in fact much of the country) was yearning for, as it were, a new JFK. And young, handsome, liberal Congressman Lindsay was seen as making that media dream come true. Lindsay won. And then? And then the new, dashing young Mayor was learning that being the Mayor of New York was no day at the beach. He had to deal with municipal strikes, ruthless union bosses, a soaring crime rate and more. Slowly, ever so agonizingly, the supposed heir of a new Camelot was watching his once promising career go up in political flames. He barely won re-election and felt compelled to switch parties. Eventually he sought the Democratic nomination for president, getting nowhere. And that, as the saying goes, was that. If nothing else, what happened to Lindsay was a lesson in politics that one does indeed have to be careful of what one wishes for. Which brings us back to all these headlines about triumphant socialists winning elections in one blue city after another. The hard fact is that once in office, the socialist -inclined Mamdanis of the political world will have to start producing results.  And the question then? Will a once-adoring left-leaning media buckle-up and do their job of truthfully reporting the results they are producing? Or, as conservatives suspect, not producing? The hard fact is that being the Mayor of any American city is a tough job. That is doubly so if the job in question is being Mayor of New York - as the late Mayor Lindsay quickly found out. So. The question for the media. Will the media in both New York City and around the country take on the inescapable task of covering all the ups and downs of the socialist Mamdani mayoralty? Will Mayor Mamdani prove to be such a decided success that the move among Democrats will be to elect him as the socialist Governor of New York? And, down the road, the socialist President of the United States? Or will the media coverage of the socialist Mamdani mayoralty be so blistering that the New York mayor’s job will turn out to be his first -- and last -- time in public office? Only time will tell, of course. But the hard fact is that the next four years of the Mamdani mayoralty will be a serious testing of not just the new Mayor himself and the results his socialist mayoralty produces but of the media - both in New York and nationally - as it covers his out-front socialist mayoralty. Decades ago, the media of the day lavished favorable coverage on the then-new Soviet Union. And it stuck with that kind of coverage as time moved on, even as the reality of life in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics proved to be considerably less than good. Will the media history of covering socialists and socialism in power change? Stay tuned.