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CANADIAN:
Trump threatens Canada with tariffs over wildfire smoke

President Donald J. Trump announced plans Friday to impose new financial penalties on Canada, holding the nation directly responsible for the dense wildfire smoke currently causing dangerous air quality across the U.S. Midwest and Northeast.
In a statement released following days of widespread air pollution, Trump criticized Canadian authorities for failing to maintain their forests, labeling the resulting smoke an invasion of American airspace.
“We are holding Canada responsible for the fact that they are not properly maintaining their Forests, and Brush therein, and the United States is being unnecessarily invaded by filthy, polluted, and unhealthy air, the quality of which is dangerous, and totally unacceptable!” Trump said. “I will call the Prime Minister during the day to find out what they are going to do about it.”
The president stated that the economic and environmental toll on the United States is “incalculable” and framed the ongoing fires as a recurring, preventable crisis.
“Canada has refused to engage in basic Forest Management and Debris Removal, knowing that such refusal will lead to exactly this result,” Trump said. “This is Willful Negligence, and becoming a yearly occurrence, costing the United States Billions of Dollars, which cost of this pollution must of necessity be added to the TARIFFS Canada is currently paying.”
The diplomatic friction comes as over 800 wildfires burn across Canada, with dozens out of control in western Ontario alone. “Many of these fires may have been started by lightning,” AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Brett Anderson noted earlier in the week.

Wildfire Smoke (File)
The resulting smoke has triggered official air quality alerts across Delaware, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. By Friday morning, major cities reported hazardous Air Quality Index (AQI) levels well above the dangerous threshold of 250. Chicago registered an AQI of 342, while Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit experienced similar conditions.
Health officials have warned that the current pollution poses immediate physiological risks. “When the AQI climbs into the 150+ range for a full day outside, that’s in the ballpark of [smoking] 7 to 9 cigarettes,” said Dr. Jonathan M. Tan, division chief of General Anesthesiology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Plume Labs reported that even brief exposure to the current air can cause breathing difficulties, headaches, and eye irritation, prompting experts to advise residents to remain indoors.
Meteorologists have compared the current event to the historic Canadian wildfire smoke outbreaks that impacted the U.S. three summers ago.
“In 2023, a major fire outbreak in Quebec caused days of unhealthy air quality in the northeastern U.S.,” said AccuWeather Vice President of Forecast Operations Dan DePodwin. “This event could cause similar levels of poor air quality in spots.”
While visibility showed slight improvements by Friday in areas like Niagara Falls—which had been blanketed by a dense orange-gray shroud earlier in the week—ground sensors confirm that the air quality remains highly unhealthy across the region as the political fallout begins.
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People with asthma, COPD and heart disease are among the most at risk in smoky conditions. “It’s like breathing through a straw,” said one person the Star spoke with. As wildfire smoke blankets Toronto, here’s what people with lung conditions are going through.
As well, we have the latest on the city’s air quality and the wildfires raging across the province. Follow our live updates.
Reporter Mark Ramzy brings us a glimpse from the ground in Thunder Bay as northwestern Ontario struggles with wildfires. The city has become a hub for people forced to leave their homes behind. Many are hoping the worst is behind them. Caitlin Nodin told the Star she started crying when rain on Friday offered some relief from the haze. “But we just want to go home.”
· Meanwhile: U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to increase trade tariffs on Canada over the wildfire smoke from Ontario.
· Zombie fires and ‘firenados’: When some blazes are so big they can create their own weather, new strategies are needed. Here’s how Ontario firefighters are tackling wildfires in the era of climate change.
Q&A: From mask effectiveness to long-term health risks, Star science reporter Kevin Jiang and family physician Dr. Samantha Green took on your wildfire smoke questions.
The Toronto STAR
From Oleg

TRUMP:
The Intelligence Community Withheld Election-System Vulnerabilities

In March 2025, President Trump issued an executive order that included a directive to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to review the security of electronic voting systems.
In an April 2025 White House Cabinet meeting, then-Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard indicated that voting machines are susceptible to hacking and capable of changing votes. “We have evidence of how these electronic voting systems have been vulnerable to hackers for a very long time, and vulnerable to exploitation to manipulate the results of the votes being cast.”
We’re on the case.
We forced the release of 8 pages of documents from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit that show that an ODNI task force stated that the Intelligence Community identified election-system vulnerabilities that could be exploited by U.S. adversaries and withheld information about those vulnerabilities from the American people.
We filed the lawsuit after ODNI failed to respond to an April 2025 request concerning vulnerabilities in electronic voting systems (Judicial Watch Inc. v. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (No. 1:25-cv-03526)).
In an April 9, 2025, message containing proposed talking points, the press secretary for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence writes:
The DIG [Director’s Initiatives Group] has uncovered indications of bias and politicization within the intelligence community’s election security assessments. Specifically, the DIG has uncovered indications that intelligence community [redacted] had identified election system vulnerabilities that could be exploited by our adversaries and proceeded to withhold or [redacted] this information from the American people.
(The Director in the meeting yesterday asked for the ugly truth hard-hitting information)
The DIG is working overtime interviewing whistleblowers and reviewing documents necessary to declassify election related IC products.
An April 10, 2025, email chain, from a person whose name is redacted to the deputy chief of staff for ODNI states:
1. The DIG is conducting a broad review of all election related IC products, assessments, and reports for political bias and suppression of critical intelligence.
2. The DIG is conducting a fresh assessment of voting systems security leveraging cutting edge technology and cyber experts.
3. The DIG is supporting on-going DOJ investigations with a nexus to election security and interference.
***
The DIG is pursuing an inquiry into open-source information from the State Commission of Elections for Puerto Rico that Dominion voting machines produced hundreds of vote total discrepancies, machines reversed totals, under counted votes, and/or reported zero votes for some candidates. This appears to be the best real-world example of Dominion voting machines doing exactly what the company claimed was impossible to do from a reputable state entity.
***
The DIG met with US Attorney Muldrow and his team today … to coordinate DIG support to on-going DOJ investigations looking specifically into foreign influence, election interference, counterintelligence, corruption, money laundering, and drug trafficking.
The DIG inquiries … will continue to conduct a proper hand-off and/or criminal referral to DOJ via our FBI detailee.
***
It does not appear Dominion has a good excuse for what happened and we want to get our hands on the machines before potential evidence is erased. I feel this may be our best opportunity to document how election rigging “is” occurring and then use that signature to walk back through IC records to search for the same fingerprints.
We urge the Trump administration to release all documents under law about its findings on electronic voting machine vulnerabilities. Our democracy may be at stake.
We are a national leader in voting integrity and voting rights. As part of our work, we assembled a team of highly experienced election law attorneys who stopped discriminatory elections in Hawaii, and cleaned up voter rolls in California, Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, among other achievements.
The U.S. Department of Justice recently filed a motion to intervene in our federal lawsuit filed on behalf of a California political candidate and a state political party against the State of California due to its failure to maintain accurate voter rolls as required by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA).
In May 2026, we filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of a California political candidate and a state political party against the State of California due to its failure to maintain accurate voter rolls as required by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA).
Our lawsuits and legal actions have caused the removal of six million ineligible names from voter lists nationwide.
Earlier this year, we earned a victory at the Supreme Court upholding the right of candidates to challenge ballot counting rules that allowed the counting of late-arriving ballots. In a 7-2 decision, the court held that Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors had standing to challenge an Illinois law allowing ballots received up to 14 days after Election Day to be counted.
U.S. to Intervene in Lawsuit to Force California to Clean Up Voter Rolls
Here’s confirmation that we’re on the right track in California.
The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a motion to intervene in our federal lawsuit filed on behalf of a California political candidate and a state political party against the State of California due to its failure to maintain accurate voter rolls as required by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA).
The United States filed its motion and a proposed complaint in intervention in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in our May 2026 lawsuit (Don Wagner et al. v. Shirley N. Weber, in her official capacity as California Secretary of State (No. 8:26-cv-01263)).
The Justice Department is right to follow our lead. It is on target in calling California’s voting rolls ‘among the worst in the nation.’ Our lawsuits and legal action have already caused the removal of six million dirty voter names from the rolls. Another million or so must be cleaned.
The Justice Department’s proposed complaint in intervention names California Secretary of State Shirley Weber as a defendant and states the intervention was filed “to enforce provisions of the National Voter Registration and the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA).”
Federal law requires most inactive voter registrations to be removed after two general federal elections. Our lawsuit alleges, based on admissions in prior Judicial Watch litigation, that 873,092 California voter registrations have remained continuously inactive for at least three federal elections, and some for much longer. Of these registrations, 326,808 have remained continuously inactive through at least three consecutive federal general elections, while 151,202 have remained inactive through at least four consecutive federal general elections.
In addition, 33,922 voter registrations have remained continuously inactive through at least five consecutive federal general elections — dating back at least ten years, to before the November 5, 2016, presidential election.
Under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA), states are required to make reasonable efforts to remove ineligible voters from the voter rolls, including those who have died or moved. The lawsuit also alleges, again citing admissions by California officials, that the state takes no effective action to require counties to comply with the NVRA. As a result, they do not comply.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Don Wagner, an elected member of the Orange County Board of Supervisors and candidate for California Secretary of State, and the American Independent Party of California.
We are assisted by the Benbrook Law Group of Sacramento, California.
We are a national leader in election integrity and voting rights litigation, with a record of successful lawsuits enforcing constitutional redistricting standards and cleaning voter rolls nationwide.
Our lawsuits and legal actions have caused the removal of six million ineligible names from voter lists nationwide.
Robert Popper, a Judicial Watch senior attorney, leads our election law program. Popper was previously in the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, where he managed voting rights investigations, litigations, consent decrees, and settlements in dozens of states.
In April 2026, we announced a settlement in our federal lawsuit against Oregon election officials, which confirms 800,000 ineligible voter names are slated for review and removal from voter registration lists.
Colorado recently removed 372,000 ineligible voter names thanks to a Judicial Watch lawsuit and settlement addressing the state’s compliance with federal voter list maintenance requirements.
In Kentucky, state election board officials reported that “roughly 735,000 ineligible voter registrations” have been removed from voter rolls, as part of a 2018 consent decree settling a Judicial Watch lawsuit.
As part of its 2022 settlement, New York City alone has removed 918,139 ineligible names from its rolls: data show 477,056 removals between March 2023 and February 2025, which is in addition to the 441,083 previously reported removals.
Our legal pressure also resulted in election roll clean-ups in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Ohio.
A federal court in Illinois has ruled that our lawsuit to force the cleaning of voter rolls may proceed in that state.
In January 2026, in a historic case we filed, the Supreme Court decided 7-2 in favor of Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors who were before the court to vindicate their standing to challenge an Illinois law allowing the counting of ballots received up to 14 days after Election Day.
Judicial Watch Sues for FBI Memorandum on FISA Targeting
We’re wading deeper into the Deep State swamp.
We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Justice for an interagency memorandum of understanding between the FBI and an agency the name of which is redacted regarding the targeting and minimization procedures referenced in a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court opinion (Judicial Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:26-cv-02407)).
We sued after the FBI failed to respond to a March 10, 2026, FOIA request for a copy of the memorandum that is cited in a footnote on page 87 of an opinion by Judge Rosemary Collyer filed on April 26, 2017.
The footnote we reference states:
The improper access granted to the [redacted] contractors was apparently in place [redacted] and seems to have been the result of deliberate decision-making. [Redacted] Compliance Report at 92-93 ([redacted] access to FBI systems was the subject of an interagency memorandum of understanding entered into [redacted]). Despite the existence of an interagency memorandum of understanding (presumably prepared or reviewed by FBI lawyers), no notice of this practice was given to the FISC until 2016. Of course, such a memorandum of understanding could not override the restrictions of Section 702 minimization procedures.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence explains that Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Section 702 is a U.S. intelligence provision that “only permits the targeting of non-United States persons who are reasonably believed to be located outside the United States. United States persons and anyone in the United States may not be targeted.” Further, “all Section 702 targets must be non-United States persons reasonably believed to be located outside the United States … such targets may send an email or have a phone call with a United States person. For this reason, Section 702 requires specific procedures to minimize the acquisition, retention, and sharing of any information concerning United States persons.”
The Obama FBI had officially opened its investigation, code-named “Crossfire Hurricane,” into the campaign of then-presidential candidate Donald Trump on July 31, 2016. The court’s 99-page opinion documents significant compliance failures involving FISA surveillance during the same period, raising concerns about the handling of raw intelligence information and compliance with court-ordered minimization procedures.
This undisclosed FBI agreement was in effect during one of the most controversial periods in U.S. history, when Crossfire Hurricane and other FISA-related activities were under way. The American people should not have to wait one more day for transparency.
We have led efforts to uncover much of what the public knows about Crossfire Hurricane/Russiagate, which involved a long list of Democratic political figures, lawyers, and staffers who shaped the narrative around the Trump-Russia hoax.
In January 2026, we sued the Justice Department for fully unredacted records and previously withheld or missing portions of former Special Counsel John Durham’s investigation into the origins of the Crossfire Hurricane/Russiagate investigation.
In October 2020, we uncovered heavily redacted email communications among top-level State Department officials and a U.S. ambassador expressing skepticism about reports by Christopher Steele’s London-based private intelligence firm Orbis Business Intelligence. (Steele was the author of the Clinton-funded, anti-Trump dossier.) The emails show one assistant secretary of state saying some of Steele’s reports sound “extreme” and others “do not ring true,” while the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine called some of the Steele reports “flaky.”
In May 2020, we forced the declassification and release of the “electronic communication” used to launch Crossfire Hurricane, written by former FBI official Peter Strzok.
In April 2020, we obtained emails between former FBI official Peter Strzok and former FBI attorney Lisa Page, including an email dated January 10, 2017, in which Strzok said that the version of the Steele dossier published by BuzzFeed was “identical” to the version given to the FBI by McCain and had “differences” from the dossier provided to the FBI by Fusion GPS co-founder Glenn Simpson and Mother Jones reporter David Corn. January 10, 2017, is the same day BuzzFeed published the anti-Trump dossier by former British spy Christopher Steele.
The emails also show Strzok and other FBI agents mocking President Trump a few weeks before he was inaugurated. In addition, the emails revealed that Strzok communicated with then-Deputy Director Andrew McCabe about the “leak investigation” tied to the Clinton Foundation (the very leak in which McCabe was later implicated).
In September 2019, we released State Department records revealing that Steele had an extensive and close working relationship dating back to May of 2014 with high-ranking Obama State Department officials including Jonathan Winer and Victoria Nuland.
In August 2019, we obtained “302” report material from 2016 FBI interviews of Associate Deputy U.S. Attorney Bruce Ohr, who was removed from his position in December 2017. (A Form 302 is used by FBI agents to memorialize interviews they undertake during an investigation.) In a November 22, 2016, interview, Ohr said that “reporting on Trump’s ties to Russia were going to the Clinton Campaign, Jon Winer at the U.S. State Department and the FBI.”
In a late September 2016 interview, Ohr described a person (likely Christopher Steele) as “desperate that Donald Trump not get elected and was passionate about him not being the U.S. President.” A report states that “Ohr knew that [Fusion GPS’s] Glen Simpson and others were talking to Victoria Nuland at the U.S. State Department.”
In July 2019, we obtained records revealing a September 2016 email exchange between then-Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and Special Coordinator for Libya Jonathan Winer, a close associate of dossier author Christopher Steele, discussing a “face-to-face” meeting on a “Russian matter.”
In August 2018, the Justice Department admitted in a court filing that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court held no hearings on the FISA spy warrant applications targeting Carter Page, a former Trump campaign part-time advisor who was the subject of four controversial FISA warrants.
In July 2018, we released records about FISA warrants targeting Page, which appeared to confirm that the FBI and DOJ misled the FISA court by withholding material information showing that Hillary Clinton’s campaign and the DNC were behind the “intelligence” used to persuade the court to approve the FISA warrants targeting the Trump team.
Taxpayer-Funded NIH Grant Backed Gender-Affirming Care for Youth
Despite President Trump’s executive order prohibiting federal funds from promoting gender ideology, a National Institutes of Health grant that began under the Biden administration continued to provide funding for research into gender-affirming care for youth living in rural communities. Our Corruption Chronicles blog exposes the details.
Charged with making important discoveries that improve health and save lives, the nation’s medical research agency gave a pediatrician and professor at a public university nearly half a million dollars to research gender-affirming care for youth in rural communities who identify as black, indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC). The National Institutes of Health (NIH), which annually disburses tens of billions of dollars in research grants, initiated the award during the Biden administration but some of the money flowed under Trump, even after the president banned taxpayer dollars for such initiatives advanced by the left. “Federal funds shall not be used to promote gender ideology,” reads an order issued by Trump on the day of his 2025 inauguration. “Each agency shall assess grant conditions and grantee preferences and ensure grant funds do not promote gender ideology.”
In this case the NIH, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), awarded a Seattle doctor and professor at the University of Washington $428,296 to “advance health equity by increasing health services research involving transgender and gender diverse youth, youth who identify as black, indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC), and youth living in rural communities,” according to the grant announcement.
The government spending data reveals that the agency disbursed $143,000 in fiscal year 2025, even though the president banned public financing for projects like this that clearly promote gender ideology. “Gender diverse youth (GDY) who identify as BIPOC, as well as those living in rural communities, are more likely to experience depression and anxiety than their peers,” the NIH grant states. “Additionally, BIPOC and rural GDY are disproportionately underrepresented in pediatric gender clinics, limiting their access to pediatric gender-affirming care, which has been shown to improve mental health outcomes.”
The doctor and professor of pediatrics, Gina Sequeira, who is conducting the study is the co-director of the Seattle Children’s Gender Clinic and specializes in gender-affirming care for children. She was the focus of a lengthy 2022 article in a national news magazine that claimed pediatricians who serve trans youth face increasing harassment.
“Lifesaving care could be on the line,” the story proclaimed, adding that only a small group of pediatricians provide gender affirming care in the United States. Sequeira is well-known for conducting research that identifies barriers to gender-affirming care for transgender adolescents and believes pediatricians should “open a door to have a conversation with young people about how they see their gender” during routine well-visits. “My hope is one day we get to a place where every clinician, regardless of their specialty, has the basic knowledge and skills to be able to conduct a visit with a transgender patient without hesitation and without the patient being made to feel uncomfortable or disrespected because of their identity,” Sequeira says.
Her recent NIH-funded study is supposed to examine how gender specialists who practice in large academic medical centers can connect with underage trans patients throughout the country. Sequeira will build on her existing research with transgender youth and their families to identify existing barriers preventing trans and BIPOC youth in rural communities from receiving gender-affirming care and design as well as implement access to care via telehealth.
She is also charged with developing a technology-based enhanced gender support platform to facilitate a comprehensive gender-affirming care provision in the community pediatric setting. “Given few providers have received training in this area and most lack opportunities to consult with transgender specialists, telehealth modalities like telemedicine and electronic consultation show great potential in facilitating the provision of community-based gender-affirming care,” the NIH grant announcement states.
It is highly unlikely that American taxpayers will fund this type of research for the remainder of the Trump administration considering that earlier this year the White House officially ended the “Transgender for Everybody” insanity created by Democrats. Under the new policy the president declared it the official practice of the U.S. government that there are only two immutable sexes: male and female. “President Trump banned federal funding, sponsorship, or promotion of the chemical and surgical mutilation of minors—protecting children from irreversible harm and directing agencies to defund institutions engaged in these practices,” according to the White House press release outlining the policy in late March.
The JUDICIAL WATCH
GLOBAL:
Democrats get deja vu on ICE
èDEMs
Good Saturday morning. This is Ali Bianco, in the driver’s seat today. I’m counting the hours until the FIFA World Cup final tomorrow at 3 p.m. EST — where I’ll be locked in for Argentina and Lionel Messi to get la cuarta estrella and become back-to-back champions (an unpopular opinion, I’ve learned …). Get in touch with your final predictions.
DRIVING THE DAY

The explosion of anger following the wave of ICE enforcement actions that turned deadly this month is engulfing lawmakers across the country’s biggest Senate races. | Charles Krupa/AP
After yet another immigration crisis rocked Maine on Monday, Republican Sen. Susan Collins said she spoke with DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin multiple times, pushing him to put an end to the ICE vehicle stops that had — in the span of a week — taken two lives.
She “strongly advocated for a pause in vehicle stops” pending investigations and until “very serious questions are answered” about the death of Johan Sebastián Guerrero, Collins told your author. By Tuesday, DHS halted the policy.
“DHS was agreeable to that,” Collins said. “But unfortunately, the president reversed that decision.”
By Thursday, Democrats in the double-digit primary contest to take on Collins for her Senate seat had already dug their heels in on her vote to fund the administration’s immigration enforcement agencies for the next three years. The race, now a week out from the state’s Democratic convention to pick their next nominee, looks increasingly defined by defiance on ICE.
“Susan Collins must be held accountable for funding this terror,” Democratic hopeful Troy Jackson wrote on X.
The explosion of anger following the wave of ICE enforcement actions that turned deadly this month is engulfing lawmakers across the country’s biggest Senate races — with all eyes trained once again toward the agency Mullin vowed would stay out of the headlines.
Guerrero’s death follows that of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Texas, which reignited rage among the Democratic base against President Donald Trump’s enforcement agenda. Calls for justice have captured Latino communities cross-country and catapulted immigration back to the forefront of voters’ minds, with just over 100 days until Election Day.
Democrats are looking to pounce on that momentum.
“The rot has gone to the core,” Senate candidate Nirav Shah said during Maine’s Democratic debate Thursday. “And that’s why we must abolish it.”
Even after the deaths early this year in Minnesota, Democratic lawmakers largely turned towards reforms (which never materialized) as the path forward. But Maine Democrats were unequivocal during the debate on a stance that’s not fully embraced by the greater party, wholly echoing Shah’s call to abolish ICE.
Collins has disavowed those calls and backed body cameras for ICE officers — an issue many Republicans have come to embrace. “Eliminating ICE would make our country less safe and endanger the lives and welfare of countless individuals,”
Collins wrote on X earlier this week.
The White House, asked for comment on Democrats’ messaging push against ICE, was more aggressive, pointing to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s role in a panel that pardoned a convicted child sex offender who was poised to be deported. “Democrats continue putting criminal illegal aliens over law-abiding Americans — and the American people see that,” WH spokesperson Abigail Jackson said.
Over in Texas, the uproar after video went viral of Salgado Araujo’s death collided headfirst with State Rep. James Talarico and State AG Ken Paxton’s race for John Cornyn’s Senate seat, as both candidates took to the Rio Grande Valley to rally Latino voters. Recent polling published by POLITICO showed one in five Hispanic business owners in Texas has been impacted by deportations, with some now flipping for Talarico — and that was before this week.
“I think that [Republicans are] going to pay for it at the ballot box,” Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas) told Playbook. “As you saw in my district, especially in the southernmost Latino portion of my district, voters in the primary came out two to one in primary turnout.”
Paxton said conflicts involving ICE are “always complicated” during a gaggle with reporters in McAllen, throwing his support behind law enforcement, per the Texas Tribune. “That doesn’t mean that they can’t do no wrong. We always need to verify,” he said.
Talarico took a more spiritual route. “He wasn’t [ICE’s] intended target, but he looked like their intended target,” he said at a rally earlier this week. “Lorenzo was a child of God … His life was invaluable. His death was senseless. Our neighbor, our fellow Texan, deserves justice.”
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The renewed criticism of ICE is especially notable in a Senate race in Texas — where border patrol and immigration are interwoven in the fabric of the state — considering how much ground on the issue Democrats ceded to Trump in 2024.
“Ever since Donald Trump won this election, there were people in the consulting class who said Democrats shouldn't talk about immigration — in fact, the matter is we need to be on offense on the issue,” Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas), who heads the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told Playbook. “We have to lean in and ask for accountability and justice and fairness for the people that have been wrongfully killed … it’s just horrifying.”
Casar said outrage over ICE is “already moving the dial for Talarico.”
But perhaps nowhere is the fury over immigration enforcement more salient than in Minnesota, where the crisis began in January and where a heated Democratic primary between Rep. Angie Craig and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan for Senate will come to a head next month.
This week echoed the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, which electrified the Democratic Party and has come to define much of its political, legislative and messaging battles this year. “This remains, I think, one of the most important issues of this campaign,” Flanagan told Playbook.
In a state Democrats need to defend to have any hope of claiming the Senate majority, Flanagan’s camp has repeatedly painted the more centrist Craig as too friendly with ICE — going all the way back to her vote in favor of the Laken Riley Act when Trump took office in 2025. Craig has walked back her support for the legislation.
Flanagan, meanwhile, has been slammed for accepting donations from ICE contractors while head of the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association — which she says she urged DLGA to return. The DLGA’s most recent $2 million ad buy against Craig criticizes her for “giving ICE more power,” per ad tracking firm AdImpact.
“What [Minnesotans] want is someone who has a track record of walking the walk, not just talking the talk,” Craig said in a statement to Playbook. “I’ve taken on Trump and former DHS Secretary Noem, conducted oversight, fought for my constituents’ release from ICE custody and thwarted efforts to open new ICE facilities in Minnesota.”
Yet in this Senate race, the recent ICE deaths all feel a bit like deja vu — which Democrats consider a risk all its own.
“I do not want Americans to become desensitized to ICE killing people in the same way that people have become desensitized to school shootings. That is the danger here,” Flanagan said. “The news cycle may have moved on. We have not.”
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The reaction: Outgoing Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) was not a fan, and ripped into Trump’s continued push to talk about the 2020 election at the yearly Aspen Security Forum yesterday. Speaking with POLITICO’s Jonathan Martin, Cornyn said, “I’m concerned about it. So, we ought to be talking about things looking forward that our constituents are most concerned about.” And echoing that statement was Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), another Republican on his way out, who told JMart that “my concern is that it’s setting up a Democratic wave election.”
2. FUNDING SHOWDOWN: House GOP leadership released the text of a bill yesterday to fund the government from the start of the fiscal year on Oct. 1 until after the midterm elections in a push to bypass the already-tense bipartisan appropriations process and avoid another shutdown, POLITICO’s Katherine Tully-McManus and Meredith Lee Hill report. The text doesn’t include Trump’s SAVE America Act, as components of that bill are bound for other bills the GOP is taking up next week. Some Democrats will likely push back on the “clean” funding bill over its lack of guardrails on ICE.
3. DEAL OR NO DEAL: “Nuclear deal that would permit uranium enrichment by Saudi Arabia in limbo awaiting Trump admin sign off,” by CNN’s Davis Winkie and Zachary Cohen: “The Trump administration has tentatively agreed to allow Saudi Arabia to enrich uranium without enacting international safeguards intended to prevent nuclear weapons development … The draft nuclear accord that outlines US support for Riyadh’s civilian nuclear program is awaiting President Donald Trump’s signature … . Some on Capitol Hill also believe the Trump administration is delaying sign-off because it could face a bipartisan disapproval resolution blocking the deals from going into effect.”
4. IMMIGRATION FILES: “We Went to a Yacht Party for the Most Pro-Deportation People in DC,” by POLITICO’s Sam Benson for the Magazine: “The organizers of the event wanted to call it the U.S.S. Deportation, but no such boat was available, so they had to settle for renting out the Potomac Spirit … The boozy gala attracted conservatives who have served in Congress, the Justice Department and ICE — all of whom share a goal of deporting an unprecedented 1 million-plus people a year. … Jeffrey Clark, the former acting assistant attorney general, mingled with an entourage, some of them wearing multicolored leis and flipping through printed-out policy playbooks from the Mass Deportation Coalition, as the group calls itself.”
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5. TRAIL MIX: Trump yesterday threw his endorsement behind now-Sen. Darline Graham (R-S.C.) to run for a full term to represent the Senate seat held by the late Lindsey Graham, per POLITICO’s Ben Johansen. … Democratic Senate candidate Cindy Burbank has submitted a request to be taken off the ballot, potentially clearing the field for independent candidate Dan Osborn to take on incumbent GOP Sen. Pete Ricketts, per NOTUS’ Torrie Herrington. … AIPAC is dropping donations to the House Democrats who voted to cut off Israel aid this week, including House Democrats’ No.2, Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), per POLITICO’s Riley Rogerson. … Trump’s pick for Minnesota governor, Mike Lindell, is not actively registered to vote in Minnesota, per the Minnesota Star Tribune.
6. WISCONSIN WOES: POLITICO’s Tyler Katzenberger and colleagues capture the collapse of a top Democratic candidate’s campaign for Wisconsin governor, with fears that the decline and ultimate end of Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez’s bid will create an opening for socialist candidate state Rep. Francesca Hong. “This race is now in chaos,” Rodriguez campaign staffer Mitchell Stough told our colleagues.
Filling the vacuum?: David Crowley is rejoining the Wisconsin governor’s race after Rodriguez’s exit, less than 10 days after he suspended his campaign. “Now that the candidate that I endorsed, who always had the best pathway, is no longer there, I think it’s extremely important to answer the call,” Crowley told POLITICO’s Will Steakin. “I know what it means to step up during one of the toughest times—and some people would say all of this is a shit show.”
The White House’s favorite: “The Cabinet’s favorite congressional district,” by POLITICO’s Sophia Cai and colleagues: “Specifically, Rep. Derrick Van Orden’s district, which has become the Trump administration’s No. 1 domestic stop for Cabinet officials … That distinction underscores both the district’s political importance and Republicans’ determination to protect one of their most vulnerable incumbents. There have been 10 – count them – administration officials who have visited this year.”
7. DRIVE MY CARR: Trump’s threats to revoke broadcast television licenses could become very real threats under Brendan Carr’s FCC, POLITICO’s John Hendel reports. NBC and ABC became the latest to draw the president’s ire when they did not air his full primetime speech. Carr has opened probes and inquiries before into the networks, and some experts worry that means the FCC could act and set up a bigger fight in the courts.
How it’s playing: Old-school conservatives who have dreamed of axing the agency are suddenly finding more momentum over what they see as the FCC’s overreach under Carr, John writes in a bigger step-back. Calls to cut it have grown recently among conservative law veterans, libertarians at groups such as the American Enterprise Institute and some former Trump administration officials.
8. SPORTS BLINK: With Spanish PM Pedro Sanchez set to attend tomorrow’s World Cup final in New York amid strained relations with Trump, that’s not the only possible awkward moment. Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum and Canada’s Mark Carney will also attend the match on Trump’s invitation, Bloomberg’s Jose Orozco and Valentine Hilaire report. But where there’s smoke, there’s fire for the Trump-Carney relationship after Trump yesterday threatened Carney over the Canadian wildfires that have sent smog throughout the upper U.S, blaming the country’s forestry practices, POLITICO’s Jean Chemnick and colleagues report. The FIFA final match is expected to proceed as planned.
A message from Anthropic:
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CLICKER — “The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics,” edited by Matt Wuerker — 16 funnies

MSM - Still going after the president!
— Donald Trump’s sons have collected a portfolio of defense startups that may be getting a leg up from Pentagon spending, further intertwining the first family’s business ventures with U.S. interests, WaPo’s Elizabeth Dwoskin and colleagues report.
Funds linked to Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. have invested in over a dozen companies that are also seeking business from the government.
— Gretchen Carlson decided to sue then-Fox Chair Roger Ailes 10 years ago, and the dominos of assault allegations against him cascaded and helped fuel the #MeToo movement. Ailes, who died in 2017, at the time called the allegations “defamatory.” Now Carlson is out with an op-ed in the NYT reflecting on the evolution of that movement, and why she believes its legacy will be the “recasting of the legal landscape.”
— NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani is riding high on vibes and intends to keep flexing his political prowess as we near the midterms. He sat down with NYT’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro for the latest edition of “The Interview,” where he spoke on his vision for the party, on the pro-Israel lobby and on the possible 2028 ambitions of one of his biggest fellow Democratic socialists, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
— Democrats have an opening to grab this political moment with Latinos by putting legalization front and center in the campaign platforms, immigration lawyer Andrea Flores argues in an op-ed for the NYT. “Latinos in America are in a crisis,” she writes. “Democrats seem to be squandering the opportunity, even as Latinos are facing violence in their communities at the hands of federal agents.”
— “The kids are ‘Nixonmaxxing,’” WSJ’s Philip Wegmann and Vera Bergengruen write in a must-read piece on why the young right is adopting the aesthetic and attitude of former President Richard Nixon. “Nixon is being recast as a forerunner of ‘America First’ by a new generation of conservatives: a combative president loathed by the press and besieged by investigators who was brought down by the same establishment they believe targeted President Trump.”
TALK OF THE TOWN
OUT AND ABOUT — Golf Channel, a Versant company, and the British Embassy hosted a watch party for The Open at Royal Birkdale last night at NCTA headquarters, where guests sipped Pimm's, snacked on biscuits and jam, tried out putting greens and caught a conversation between Golf Channel's Damon Hack and Gary Williams.
SPOTTED: Cory Gardner, Lucy Ferguson, Rob Placek, Cate Dillon, Jacques Petit, Casey Contres, JT Jezierski, James Fleming, James Klein, Charlie Hobbs, Katey McCutcheon, Matt Gorman, Jared Sutton, Sherry Kuntz, James Walker and Jonathan Kott.
— SPOTTED at the Wicked Game concert at Marx Cafe last night: Kate Goodall, Joywind Ronen, Christina Sevilla, Steve Rochlin, Marisela Ramirez, Lorenzo Riboni, Jack Doll, Peter Cherukuri, Danielle Most, Philippa Hughes, Cristobal Vasquez, Jan Dams, Nii Simmonds, Neil Barrett, Tedd Evers and Ingrid Zimmer.
TRANSITION — Alexandra Seymour is now senior director for government affairs at deep tech VC firm Playground Global. She previously worked in the White House Office of the National Cyber Director.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Del. James Moylan (R-Guam) … Kate Balcerzak … Olivier Knox of U.S. News and World Report … Pepper Natonski … Coinbase’s Julia Krieger … Teddy Tanzer … Daniel Cusick … Carol Ross Joynt … NBC’s Gadi Schwartz … Chris Marroletti … John Sobel of Telegraph Advisors … Billy McBeath … Evan Ross of This January … former Reps. T.J. Cox (D-Calif.) and Harry Mitchell (D-Ariz.) … Suzanne Ruecker … former Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) … Matt Hite of the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers … David Vandivier … Lizzie Ivry Cooper … Fox Business Network’s Jackie DeAngelis … David Kamin … Nathan Mick of the American Association of Orthodontists … State Department’s Alexander Knorr … Steve Forbes
THE SHOWS (Full Sunday show listings here):
CBS “Face the Nation”: Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) … New York Gov. Kathy Hochul … WH Border Czar Tom Homan … Brian Moynihan … Chris Krebs … David Becker.
CNN “State of the Union”: Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) … Abdul El-Sayed. Panel: Rep. Robin Kelly (D-Ill.), Kristen Soltis Anderson, Corbin Trent and Scott Jennings.
NewsNation “The Hill Sunday”: Rep. Haley Stevens (D-Mich.). Panel: Tia Mitchell, Robert Draper and Seth Mandel.
FOX “Fox News Sunday”: Sen. Katie Britt (R-Al.) … Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) … Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas). Panel: Horace Cooper, Yemisi Egbewole, Hans Nichols and Reince Priebus.
MS NOW “The Weekend”: Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) … Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.) … Rep. Joe Morelle (D-N.Y.) … Pete Buttigieg … Bishop Mariann Budde.
ABC “This Week”: Energy Secretary Chris Wright … Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) … Bill Maher. Panel: Donna Brazile, Sarah Isgur, Ramesh Ponnuru and Dana Milbank.
PBS “Compass Points”: James Verini.
Patrick Bestall’s INPUT:

#1.
Don't pray for a defiant person

Scripture calls this... "A HIGH HAND"!
Scripture Magnified

.PB


#2.
The Deadly Secret hiding in Canada's Trucking Industry
There's a place where the trucks are unsafe, the drivers are barely trained, and the truck yards are flat-out illegal — and every level of government ignores it.
It's called Caledon, Ont. And while Caledon is the epicentre we profile in this report, this lawlessness is spreading across Canada, from Vaughan to Brampton and well beyond.
I stood at the intersection of Highway 50 and Mayfield Road, where shipping containers are stacked six high on farmland that was never zoned for it.
Seven years ago, none of this existed.
Two remarkable women — Franca Pisani and Amanda Corbett of the Caledon Community Road Safety Advocacy Group (CCRSA) — took me on a not-so-scenic tour of the area.
What they showed me was staggering: phantom carriers, immigration fraud, toxic fluids dumped near well water, and 80 open investigations into illegal yards in Caledon alone.
And the reason their group exists at all? Because of an entirely preventable tragedy.

On our drive, the lawlessness was everywhere I looked.
Yards paved over illegally and only later "zoned into compliance" and drivers barely in control of their rigs, coming and going from yards that shouldn't exist.
As Franca and Amanda explained it, rogue operators pave over farmland, run for years, and when the courts finally catch up, they simply fold the numbered company and start again under a new name to avoid paying the fines.
Then there are the drivers themselves — some with just two or three days of "training," who can't back up a truck or make a left-hand turn.
It's terrifying. Residents are genuinely scared to leave their own homes.
The CCRSA was founded after the death of 23-year-old Adrianna McCauley, killed when a transport truck blew through a red light that had been red for a full 10 seconds.
The driver received a mere 55 days in jail and a $1,000 fine — and he's already been released, because he allegedly suffers psychological damage.
Remember the brutal crackdown that crushed peaceful, law-abiding truckers in 2022?
Tell me, where are the feds when it comes to this Wild West of lawlessness?
David MenziesRebel News
P.S. Exposing these operators — and the politicians who look the other way — is expensive, and Rebel News takes no government money to do it. If you want to see more reporting like this, please chip in to fund our journalism right here.
P.P.S. Do you know of an illegal truck yard, a dangerous operator, or something shady happening in your own community? Send us a tip here — help us hold these operators accountable.

Convoy protester through the ringer again:
Following over three years of court proceedings since charges were initially laid against Freedom Convoy protester Pat King, the Ontario Court of Appeal has ruled King guilty of intimidation.
The Ontario Court of Appeal has just ruled that Freedom Convoy protester Pat King is guilty of intimidation and ordered another sentencing hearing, more than three years after the charges were first laid.
King was among the individuals who joined the historic ‘Freedom Convoy Trucker Protest’ against vaccine mandates and government lockdowns during the COVID pandemic in February 2022
.PB
#3.
Endless Daylight?

California company gets approved to launch solar-reflection satellite to create endless daylight | Not the Bee
Sure that's not a ton of light, but if all goes well, they hope to have enough satellites in orbit by 2035 to have full daylight for hours through any given night.
.pb comments: David Copperfield goes into orbit.
.PB
#4.
Trump vs the Press

MIKE DAVIS
CBS went further, posting a “fact-check” rating Trump’s claims false while the speech was still underway and before the newly declassified records had been publicly reviewed.
This is pathetic. CBS is “fact-checking” the President during his speech on NEWLY declassified records. How the hell could CBS fact-check records it has never seen?
An FBI official wrote that she was running “a shadow government” to keep intelligence about China’s election meddling from becoming known and away from the press.
.PB
#5.
Big Insurance is our Wild Card!
Think your rights are being violated? Afraid of court costs? Corrupt or submissive judges? That can all go away with a whisper of two big words. "International Covenants". Here they are. Our oppressors know them, you should too. Because if any government employee or business that operates under a license is found to have violated any part of them, they would lose the ability to be insured.
There is no cost to file a violation complaint, a grievance, with the UN tribunal - and once they review the submitted complaint and agree that you have a good case, a good arguement, you would receive a letter that will grant you a hearing in the supreme court in Canada (or any country that has signed the covenant). It might cost 50$ to file, maxiumum.
So forget about your Sovereign Rights and Charter of Rights. You have duties to other individuals and to your community. You can assume responsibility to freely strive for the promotion and observance of the rights recognized in the two Covenants above. And everyone, even the Canadian Senate, has a duty to accommodate those needs.
You see, you have international cultural and Christian rights you didn't even know about! The UN doesn't make laws to protect those rights, but the UN acknowledges them, and when it looks like they have been violated, you get a free ride to the top of the legal ladder. Unless, of course, the court will quietly comply rather than take a chance of having your case draw attention in court and insurance records.
Anonymous
.PB
#6.
Oops, in my haste (Last Supper)
I sent you an email on June 25 at 9:17 pm which combined two ideas into one. They both pertained to the Last Supper, but I should have treated them as two different emails, because each revelation is so very, very important.
1. The message about what the Blood of Christ signifies can change the way you look at yourself. READ THE ATTACHED MESSAGE WHICH IS NOW EXPANDED INTO A FULL PAGE thanks to Rev. Deb. (You should read her whole sermon; and I can send it to you.)
2. The video message about "Jesus Spoke Aramaic - Here's What Got Lost in Translation" can change the way you look at your church.
The word "anamnesis" appears in Luke 22:19 and 1 Corinthians 11:24–25. Look it up in any Greek concordance — it's right there. The word translated "remembrance" in English carries a meaning that English simply doesn't have a word for: making a past event present again, not just recalling it.
The Passover Haggadah uses this same concept — "in every generation, see yourself as if YOU left Egypt." Not your ancestors. You. That is the world Jesus was speaking from when he said those words.
If this changed how you read the Last Supper, the next episode goes even deeper — what happened to Judas Iscariot after he left that room. The two accounts of his death appear to contradict each other directly. They don't. But you have to go back to the original Greek to see why.
Tx, Patrick for your INSIGHTS!
.PB
#7.
Local Radio is Dying

After receiving millions in taxpayer subsidies, Corus Entertainment, one of Canada’s largest media and news companies, announced incoming layoffs.
The company didn’t confirm how many employees would be affected, but it’s expected to hit both those with Corus Radio and Global News.
ONTARIO STATIONS AFFECTED
Southern & Southwestern Ontario
London: 980 CFPL (CFPL 980 AM) and FM96 (CFPL-FM 95.9 FM)
Kitchener: 107.5 Dave Rocks (CJDV 107.5 FM) and The Beat 91.5 (CKBT 91.5 FM)
Hamilton: Energy 95.3 (CING 95.3 FM)
Guelph: Magic 106.1 (CIMJ 106.1 FM) and 1460 CJOY (CJOY 1460 AM)
Woodstock: Country 104 (CKDK 103.9 FM)
Central & Eastern Ontario
Barrie: Fresh Radio 93.1 (CHAY 93.1 FM) and Big 101 (CIQB 101.1 FM)
Collingwood: The Peak 95.1 FM (CKCB 95.1 FM)
Kingston: Big 96.3 (CFMK 96.3 FM) and Fresh Radio 104.3 (CKWS 104.3 FM)
Peterborough: Fresh Radio 100.5 (CKRU 100.5 FM) and The Wolf 101.5 (CKWF 101.5 FM)
Toronto: 640 Toronto (CFIQ 640 AM) and Q107 (CILQ 107.1 FM)
Brampton: 102.1 The Edge (CFNY 102.1 FM)
.PB
RUMOUR:
RUMOURS Circulating out there...:
Disclaimer: All articles, videos, and images posted on Operation Disclosure were submitted by readers and/or handpicked by the site itself for informational and/or entertainment purposes. All statements, claims, views, and opinions that appear on this site are always presented as unverified and should be discerned by the reader. We do not endorse any opinions expressed on this website, and we do not support, represent or guarantee the completeness, truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any content posted on this website.
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What we think that we now know...
REPORT Today
The world keeps spinning, and now you’re caught up.
==========
Line In Sand Has Been Drawn: Action Steps Towards Justice “Activated”Election Fraud Exposure as the Linchpin
Trump’s July 16 primetime drop wasn’t theater. Declassified intel confirms Chinese actors accessed massive U.S. voter registration data 220 million files with names, addresses, preferences dating back to 2020 cycles. Intelligence community elements suppressed the scope to shield narratives and protect policy alignments.
This isn’t “debunked conspiracy”; it’s documented compromise of centralized databases, ripe for exploitation via foreign cutouts and domestic enablers. Venezuela’s Smartmatic/Dominion ecosystem ties, Serbian/Frankfurt packet routes, Caribbean LLC funding flows the RICO branches are visible if you stop swallowing the “no evidence” grift from legacy outlets.
Obama-era shadow ops, Biden holdovers, Wray’s FBI inertia, and burn-bag directives on evidence preservation aren’t fringe speculation. Declass streams reveal deliberate compartmentalization to keep forensic packages (Antrim algorithms, Fulton custody breaks, Denver/Smartmatic backends) buried.
These actors former officials rotating through think tanks like CFR, Atlantic Council, and Bilderberg-adjacent nodes facilitated the architecture. MI6 liaison overlaps, Mossad tech sharing on surveillance, CIA cutouts in election tech, FBI assets protecting foreign influence. The network is inbred, locations from Langley to London clubs to Swiss vaults.
SAVE America / Clarity Acts and Insurrection Act Vectors
House-passed SAVE America (photo ID, citizenship proof, mail-in limits) stalls in Senate due to filibuster math and turncoat defections. Trump’s address pressures the vote: pass it or own the exposure when military/Cyber Command oversight activates under stacked EOs and emergency provisions.
Midterms hardening via DHS/ICE integration isn’t fantasy election security as homeland security is explicit doctrine. Insurrection Act remains the backstop against engineered chaos (riots via proxies, cyber feints). Senate inaction forces executive route: optics of exhausting legislative paths before surgical intervention.
Read Full Article:

=======
And We Know
— 7.17.26: D Plus China, all Assets Deployed, MSM Treason, 220 Million Voter Records, Panic in DC
The integrity of a nation’s democratic process is the bedrock of its sovereignty. When that bedrock is threatened, the very survival of the republic hangs in the balance.
A detailed compilation of intelligence and classified documents has emerged, painting a disturbing picture of the 2020 U.S. presidential election. The findings point to a massive, coordinated compromise of America’s election infrastructure by foreign adversaries—most notably, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
From the theft of hundreds of millions of voter records to systemic cover-ups within U.S. intelligence agencies, this exposé pulls back the curtain on the vulnerabilities of the current voting system. It highlights the urgent domestic battle to restore security through legislative action.
At the heart of this intelligence briefing is a staggering statistic: over 220 million
American voter records were illicitly acquired by China. To put this in perspective, this figure represents the vast majority of registered voters in the United States.
According to the classified data, this was not a simple database leak; it was a highly targeted, multi-faceted cyber operation that exploited critical vulnerabilities across the entire spectrum of the U.S. election infrastructure.
By h--------g this data, foreign adversaries gained the blueprint needed to map out the American electorate, identify key battleground districts, and exploit systemic weaknesses to influence the outcome.
Perhaps more alarming than the foreign hacking itself is the domestic response—or lack thereof. The intelligence indicates that systematic suppression and weaponized cover-ups occurred within U.S. intelligence and government agencies.
Instead of raising the alarm to secure the homeland, key actors within these bureaucracies actively worked to hide these breaches from the public, Congress, and even the sitting president, Donald J. Trump.
In response to these security failures, President Donald J. Trump delivered a prime-time address to expose these deep-seated vulnerabilities to the American public. The address served as a call to action, demanding immediate, sweeping legislative reform.
“If you don’t have honest elections, you don’t have a country.”
The cornerstone of this reform movement is the Save America Act. This proposed legislation aims to close the glaring loopholes exploited in 2020 by implementing common-sense security measures nationwide.
A critical component of this ongoing crisis is the role of the mainstream media. The presentation heavily criticizes the corporate media’s refusal to report on these classified discoveries, characterizing their silence as collusion to maintain a narrative of “perfect security” and protect established political interests.
The revelations presented in this intelligence brief make one thing clear: election security is not a partisan issue; it is a national security mandate. Without transparent investigations, decisive legislative action, and strict institutional accountability, trust in the democratic process cannot be restored.
To secure future elections, citizens must demand transparency from their local election officials, support rigorous audits, and advocate for legislative safeguards like the Save America Act.
This article only scratches the surface of the extensive documentation, timelines, and intelligence reports surrounding this breach. For a comprehensive, visual breakdown of the evidence, the key players involved, and the classified documents behind these claims:
Watch the full video on YouTube from And We Know Official for further insights and information.
The END








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