Plus: Biden’s 1,500 Troops Sent to Southern Border Are a ‘Welcome Wagon,’ Retired Border Patrol Agent Says
May 6 2023
Happy Friday from Washington, where after a year no one has been held accountable for leaking a Supreme Court opinion ending abortion on demand. Sen. Mike Lee doesn’t think it’s a tough case, Mary Margaret Olohan reports. The head of a key House GOP caucus tells our Fred Lucas that the bribery allegation against President Biden must be taken seriously. What’s behind the Left’s assault on the Supreme Court? Jarrett Stepman has thoughts. On the podcast, learn about a cyberattack focused on pro-life pediatricians. Plus: Montana goes all-out to strengthen families; Florida voters are the winners in an appeals court ruling; and the trouble with Bing. Ten years ago today, three women are rescued from a Cleveland house where police said an unemployed bus driver imprisoned them for years.
Impeachment is the only recourse if a government whistleblower’s allegation that President Biden was part of a bribery scheme is true, says Rep. Gary Palmer, R-Ala., chairman of the Republican Policy Committee.
Local media publishes scathing articles about a library board’s ordering “shelves emptied” in a project “expected to cost $300,000” and a “book banning policy.” None of those claims is true.
I took a few steps to the side. Next thing I knew, Tucker Carlson (and an accompaniment of men in suits I assumed were providing event security) was walking straight toward me.
Democrats whine on and on about “The Big Lie,” referring to their view of former President Trump’s 2020 claims. However, they’re mum about the Big Lie that slimed Joe Biden into the White House.
“It’s like Stockholm syndrome,” Gloria Alvarez says. “When you ask people, ‘Who should take care of health, education, football, arts, whatever?’ They always answer, ‘government.’”
America is a land of prosperity, a shining beacon. But the nation is plagued by a pervasive sickness that has tainted its essence for almost a decade. The way forward lies in our ability to heal.
Democrats and their allies have relentlessly accused the current Supreme Court of partisanship and bias, even warning certain justices not to make the “wrong” decisions in certain cases.