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April 20, 2026

Petro-Imperialism

Trump’s “Petro-Imperialism” Is Pushing the US and Iran to the Brink

A botched bombing campaign, a naval blockade, and threats against civilian infrastructure have cornered Iran into a fight it can’t back down from.

Alex Nguyen

Petro-imperialism is back in a big way.

On Monday, Iran’s military vowed to execute “necessary action” against US forces after it fired at and seized an Iranian-flagged ship the day before—destroying any hope for renewed peace negotiations in the near future.

While a spokesperson for Iran’s military called the US’ capture of the Iranian cargo ship trying to pass through a US blockade “blatant aggression,” they said the country’s first priority was to ensure the safety of crew members and their families on board. These developments are a drastic escalation of the fight for control over the Strait of Hormuz.

The Strait of Hormuz is a key waterway in the Persian Gulf through which approximately 20 percent of global crude oil and natural gas flowed—at least before the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran starting in February. Iran announced the re-opening of the strait after a 10-day truce between Israel and Lebanon. (Israel continued its indiscriminate bombing campaign against Lebanon even after the ceasefire agreement between the two countries).

But according to Al Jazeera, Iran reversed its decision on Saturday, stating that the strait will remain closed until the US withdraws its blockade on all ships entering and leaving Iranian ports. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s parliamentary speaker, said in a television interview that the blockade, which began last Monday, was “a clumsy and ignorant decision” and violated their ceasefire agreement with the US.

Since then, Iran has reportedly fired at ships with Indian flags attempting to cross the strait and President Donald Trump has threatened to commit war crimes against Iran again by decimating civilian infrastructure—including power plants and bridges—if Iran didn’t agree to re-open the strait in a new deal to end the war. Iran is, of course, not cooperating as the US has persisted with their naval blockade on their shipping ports. 

Thus, the two countries are at a stalemate. According to CNN, JD Vance is expected to travel to Pakistan on Tuesday to discuss next steps with Iran, but the vice president isn’t exactly a skilled negotiator. 

As Jeff Colgan, a political science professor and Director of the Climate Solutions Lab the Watson Institute for Public and International Affairs at Brown University, told me last month, during which the US and Iran were largely in the same place regarding control of the strait, the Trump administration’s poor planning and foresight to the lasting impacts of their bombing campaign with Israel has brought us to this situation.

More than 3,000 people in Iran have been killed as of April 9 and Iran’s “backs are to the wall”—they have no other realistic option to defend themselves, especially as the US has intervened in Iran’s oil trade since the 1950s.

The Trump administration has returned to what Colgan calls “petro-imperalism,” interventionist policies that not only affect Iran but have also led to the recent attacks on Venezuela.

Has Again Struck a Deal

The Onion Says It Has Again Struck a Deal to Take Over Infowars

The move would allow the satire site to turn Alex Jones’ conspiracist creation into a parody of itself. 

Anna Merlan

Infowars could finally have a new owner: Global Tetrahedron, the Chicago-based company that owns the satirical news outlet The Onion. The news was first reported by journalist and podcaster Pablo Torre, and also announced by Onion CEO Ben Collins, who wrote on Bluesky, “With the help of the Sandy Hook families, The Onion has reached a long-awaited deal to take over InfoWars.” Collins also said on Bluesky that Infowars’ new creative director will be comedian Tim Heidecker.

This is the Onion’s second attempt to acquire Infowars.

Collins also posted a link to a statement purportedly put out by Global Tetrahedron’s fake owner, Bryce P. Tetraeder. “Today I can finally say the sweetest nine or 10 words in the English language: Global Tetrahedron has completed its plan to control InfoWars,” the statement read. “With this new InfoWars, we will democratize psychological torture, welcoming brutal and sadistic ideas from everyone, even the very stupidest among us. It will be like the Manhattan Project, only instead of a bomb, we will be building a website.”

According to the New York Times, the Onion has reached a deal with the bankruptcy receiver overseeing Infowars, Gregory S. Milligan, to license the website from Milligan. Despite the Onion‘s description of the deal, its bid must still be approved by Judge Maya Guerra Gamble in a Texas district court.

This is the Onion’s second attempt to acquire Infowars. While Global Tetrahedron won a 2024 bankruptcy auction to buy the company while promising to turn the site into a parody of itself, a bankruptcy judge voided the results, saying that he wasn’t convinced the company’s bid had more value than one offered by allies of Jones. The announcement is the latest installment in an endless series of legal skirmishes that began in 2018, when the families of people killed during the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School sued Jones for defamation. Jones repeatedly claimed on-air that the shootings were a hoax; he lost all the lawsuits filed against him in Texas and Connecticut by default after failing to meaningfully participate in discovery. 

If the past is any guide, Jones’ public response will likely involve a good deal of shouting and a vow to remain on-air, no matter what. During a live broadcast on Monday, after a viewer called to ask about the news, Jones said a “new thing” would soon be in place. Since 2024, Jones has been directing his viewers to buy supplements and donate money at a new site, the Alex Jones Store, which is currently hawking a “last-stand super sale” of Infowars products, billed as a “fundraiser” to keep the company alive. Jones has also said that if Infowars is shut down, he’ll immediately begin broadcasting from the Alex Jones Network, a website which currently broadcasts a mirror of Infowars content.

“Rumors of my death have been greatly exaggerated,” Jones added. “The media is going to run around and call this a victory. They already are. It’s all going to blow up in their face.”

The Onion’s CEO Ben Collins did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Voyager 1

The Little Probe That Could: Why Voyager 1 Matters, and Why NASA Just Switched Part of It Off

By Willem Marx

Nearly half a century ago, a spacecraft roughly the size of a small car set off from the Florida coast atop a rocket to begin what was supposed to be a five-year journey. This week, NASA announced it had shut down one of that spacecraft's remaining science instruments — not because the mission has failed, but to keep it alive a little longer.

Voyager 1, the most distant human-made object ever built, is running out of power. And the engineers who tend to it, from offices at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California, are doing everything they can to delay the inevitable.

A spacecraft built for five years that has lasted nearly fifty

Voyager 1 is a robotic space probe, launched on September 5, 1977, from Cape Canaveral aboard a Titan-Centaur rocket. It weighs about 1,797 pounds — roughly the mass of a mid-size sedan — and carries a 12-foot-wide dish antenna that keeps it pointed toward Earth so it can send and receive signals. It was built at JPL, a federally funded research center managed by the California Institute of Technology. And it has been operating ever since, almost without interruption, for nearly 49 years.

Its mission's origins lie in an astronomical coincidence: In the late 1960s, engineers and scientists recognized that the outer planets — Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune — were drifting into a rare alignment that would not repeat for roughly 175 years. That configuration made it possible for a spacecraft to use each planet's gravity as a kind of slingshot, gaining speed and redirecting course without burning extra fuel, in a technique known as gravity assist.

NASA originally envisioned an ambitious exploration of all the outer planets known as the "Grand Tour," though budget constraints eventually scaled that back. The renamed Voyager program was ultimately funded for a simpler, intensive fly-by of just Jupiter and Saturn, with the two spacecraft involved designed to last five years. They have now lasted nearly ten times that.

Voyager 1 swung past Jupiter in March 1979, revealing active volcanoes on the moon Io, which was the first time volcanic activity had been observed anywhere beyond Earth. It then reached Saturn in November 1980, offering up-close studies of the planet's rings and its giant moon Titan, in unprecedented detail. That close Titan encounter tilted Voyager 1's trajectory upward, out of the plane of the solar system, ending its planetary tour but sending it on a path toward the stars.

In 1990, NASA extended the spacecraft's effort under the Voyager Interstellar Mission banner, with a new objective: reach and study the very edge of the Sun's influence, and the space beyond it. On August 25, 2012, Voyager 1 crossed the heliopause — the boundary where the Sun's charged-particle wind gives way to interstellar space — becoming the first human-made object to enter the space between the stars. Its twin, Voyager 2, followed in 2018.

More than 15 billion miles away, on borrowed power

As of this spring, Voyager 1 is more than 15 billion miles from Earth. At that distance, a radio signal traveling at the speed of light takes more than 23 hours to reach the probe one way. Every command engineers send, every piece of data they receive, crosses that vast gulf.

The spacecraft runs on a radioisotope thermoelectric generator — a device that converts heat from decaying plutonium into electricity. It carries no solar panels, no rechargeable batteries. Just the slow, steady release of nuclear warmth, which diminishes by about 4 watts each year. After nearly five decades, that decline has become critical.

During a routine maneuver in late February, Voyager 1's power levels fell unexpectedly, bringing the probe dangerously close to triggering an automatic fault-protection shutdown — a self-preservation response that would have forced engineers into a lengthy and risky recovery process. The team needed to act first.

Switching off a piece of history to preserve the whole

On April 17, mission engineers sent a sequence of commands to deactivate the Low-energy Charged Particles experiment, known as the LECP, which is one of Voyager 1's remaining science instruments. The LECP has measured ions, electrons, and cosmic rays originating from both our solar system and the galaxy beyond it, helping scientists map the structure of interstellar space in a way no other instrument could. Its counterpart on Voyager 2 was turned off in March 2025.

Years ago, the Voyager science and engineering teams jointly agreed on the order in which instruments would be switched off, to conserve power while preserving the most scientifically valuable capabilities. The LECP was next on that list. "While shutting down a science instrument is not anybody's preference, it is the best option available," said Kareem Badaruddin, Voyager mission manager at JPL, in a blog entry published by NASA Friday.

Voyager 1 now carries two operational science instruments: one that listens for plasma waves, and one that measures magnetic fields. Engineers believe the latest shutdown could buy the mission roughly another year of breathing room.

The team is also developing a more sweeping power conservation plan they informally call "the Big Bang" — a coordinated swap of several powered components all at once, trading older systems for lower-power alternatives. If testing on Voyager 2, planned for May and June 2026, goes well, the same procedure will be attempted on Voyager 1 no sooner than July. If it works, there is even a slim chance the LECP could once more continue to work.

The engineers say they hope to keep at least one instrument operating on each spacecraft into the 2030s. It would leave both still reporting from places no machine has ever gone before.

Again

Trump Threatens War Crimes in Iran Again

The president: “NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

Alex Nguyen

President Donald Trump is walking from right to left as he leaves a press conference. He is wearing a dark suit and a light blue tie and we see his left side as he walks. A blue wall, a white column, and an American flag are in the background.
President Donald Trump departs after speaking with reporters about the war in Iran during a news conference in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Monday, April 6, 2026.Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

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In a Truth Social tirade on Sunday morning, President Donald Trump claimed that Iran violated their ceasefire agreement with the US by firing shots at ships in the Strait of Hormuz and again threatened to commit war crimes by taking out the country’s energy infrastructure. 

“Many of [the bullets] were aimed at a French Ship, and a Freighter from the United Kingdom,” Trump contended about Iran’s targeting of the ships, without evidence. “That wasn’t nice, was it?”

The US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire in early April. The agreement is set to expire later this week, and the US continues to negotiate next steps around access to the Strait—the world’s most important oil transit corridor. “We’re offering a very fair and reasonable DEAL, and I hope they take it,” Trump wrote in the same social media post. “If they don’t, the United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran. NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

International law experts consider strikes on infrastructure—even if they qualify as military targets—to be war crimes because they cause disproportionate harm to civilians. 

On Saturday, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations organization, developed by Britain’s Royal Navy, reported two incidents of ships being hit in the Strait of Hormuz. Those ships, along with several others, turned back. The two vessels appear to both belong to India, according to India’s ministry of external affairs. 

This reported attack took place the day after Iran re-established an effective closure of the strait on Saturday, overturning its announcement less than 24 hours before to “completely open” the shipping waterway during the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. 

According to Al Jazeera, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy explained on Saturday that the nation decided to close the strait until the US withdraws its blockade on all ships entering and leaving Iranian ports. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s parliamentary speaker, said in a television interview that the blockade, which began last week, was “a clumsy and ignorant decision” and violated the ceasefire agreement.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps threatened that ships attempting to cross the strait during Iran’s closure would be considered in “cooperation with the enemy” and “any violating vessels would be targeted.” That same day, reports began to come out of the two ships hit in the strait.

Trump announced in the same Truth Social message that US officials will arrive in Pakistan on Monday to resume negotiations with Iran. According to the Associated Press, Iran did not immediately confirm whether they would send representatives to meet the US delegation. If JD Vance’s failed negotiations with Iran last week are anything to go by, it doesn’t seem like an agreement will happen anytime soon.

More than 3,000 people have been killed in Iran as of April 9 since US and Israeli strikes began at the end of February, according to Iran’s forensic chief. The US military has confirmed 13 combat-related deaths in the region.

Falling into the shit bucket...

Trump’s Approval Rating Sinks to Lowest Point of His Second Term

NBC News found steep drops in support for the president’s performance on the economy and the war in Iran.

Alex Nguyen

According to the NBC News Decision Desk Poll released on Sunday, only 37 percent of adults approve of Trump’s work as president. Meanwhile, 63 percent disapprove, including 50 percent who disapprove strongly. Some of that strong disapproval comes from Trump’s handling of skyrocketing costs for most households: Among the over 32,000 American adults that NBC News surveyed over two weeks in March and April, 52 percent said they “strongly disapprove” and 16 percent “somewhat disapprove” of Trump’s handling of inflation and the cost of living. 

That’s a large disapproval jump compared to a few months ago. When NBC News asked the same inflation question to Americans last August, 45 percent noted they “strongly disapprove”—seven percentage points lower than this month’s results. 

The NBC results also suggest that Trump is beginning to lose his voter base. The number of Republicans who approve of Trump’s performance on inflation sank by 10 percentage points (from 83 to 73 percent) since last summer. The poll also found that overall support for the president dropped by four percentage points (from 87 to 83 percent) among his Republican support in just two months.

Inflation has taken a toll across the country: 40 percent of the NBC poll respondents said their personal finances were worse today than a year ago. That’s the highest response to that question of any poll by the network during Trump’s second term. 

The poll also found that approximately two-thirds of Americans disapprove of Trump’s war campaign in Iran. NBC News reported on Sunday that this percentage did not change significantly even after the US government announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran earlier in April. The agreement is set to expire this week. 

Notably, the Decision Desk poll recorded improvements in Trump’s approval rating on immigration and border security at 44 percent, a four percentage point increase from the previous survey in late January and early February. This comes after Trump removed Border Patrol commander-at-large Greg Bovino in late January and DHS secretary Kristi Noem in March.  

According to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a nonprofit and nonpartisan data research and distribution organization at Syracuse University, over 60,000 people are being detained by ICE as of April 4. About 70 percent of those detainees have no criminal convictions. Meanwhile, the number of immigrants who have died while in ICE custody has reached a record-high. Since last October, 29 people have died, according to NPR, exceeding the previous annual record.

With midterm elections coming up this fall, continuous drops in Trump’s approval ratings could impact key races across the country if Americans see them as a referendum on the failures of his administration.

Gives Putin a blow job on the house

US extends waiver on Russian oil sanctions to ease Iran war shortages despite Bessent denial

The extension underscores how the fallout from the Iran war has made it easier for Moscow to profit from its energy exports.

By Associated Press

The U.S. Treasury Department on Friday extended its pause on sanctions on Russian oil shipments to ease shortages from the Iran war, days after Secretary Scott Bessent ruled out such a move.

The so-called general license means U.S. sanctions will not apply for 30 days on deliveries of Russian oil that has been loaded on tankers as of Friday. It extended a similar 30-day license issued in March for Russian oil that had been loaded by March 11.

The extension underscores how the fallout from the Iran war has boosted Moscow’s ability to profit from its energy exports, which had been restrained since the invasion of Ukraine.

Speaking at the White House on Wednesday, Bessent ruled out extending the license.

“We will not be renewing the general license on Russian oil, and we will not be renewing the general license on Iranian oil,” he said.

The administration did not immediately explain the reversal.

Starting to worry about the Senate

Battleground Republicans are starting to worry about the Senate

Democrats still face serious challenges to flipping the chamber. But Republicans are no longer dismissing the threat as quickly as they once did.

By Erin Doherty, Lisa Kashinsky, Liz Crampton, Aaron Pellish and Myah Ward

There’s a growing anxiety gnawing at battleground Republicans: Maybe their Senate majority isn’t as safe as they once thought.

Democrats still face steep odds in their bid to flip the chamber, but interviews with nearly two dozen GOP operatives, party chairs and strategists across the country’s battlegrounds found a persistent concern that the longer the Iran war drags on and the economy sputters, the more it could complicate their path to keeping their majority in November.

“Momentum has shifted to Democrats,” said Michigan-based GOP strategist Jason Roe.

“Republicans have the best candidates that they’ve had in a long time but are facing serious headwinds,” said New Hampshire GOP strategist Mike Dennehy.

“I wouldn’t say I feel warm and fuzzy about things right now,” said a Georgia Republican operative, granted anonymity to speak about party strategy, like others in this story.

The Senate wasn’t initially expected to be a concern for Republicans.

Even as typical midterm dynamics often dog the party in power, this year’s map strongly favored Republicans. Democrats need to hold onto all their seats — including defending Sen. Jon Ossoff in Georgia and an open seat in Michigan, states Trump won in 2024 — while flipping four Republican-held ones.

But Republicans across key Senate battlegrounds said that Democrats have fielded strong candidates, and a tough national environment — fueled by voter anxiety over rising costs and the ongoing Iran war — has made their path much more difficult than it once appeared.

Roe, an occasional Trump critic, warned of high gas prices as a result of the ongoing conflict in Iran angering Americans. Dennehy says things can turn around if “Trump shifts dramatically to improve his standing with voters.” The Georgia operative called a prolonged war “the exact opposite of what Senate Republicans need right now.”

“They do still have an uphill battle,” Roe said of the Democrats’ hopes for a majority, “but when you look at what the map looks like today and what we thought it would look like a few months ago, it’s very different.”

The Iran war and affordability

Republicans aren’t in full panic mode yet. Most don’t expect the war to stretch much longer and say there is plenty of time for financial pressures to ease before November — and for voters to start feeling economic relief.

“If combat operations are over in the summer, there’s plenty of time for the dislocation of gasoline prices, which I think is really the primary concern here. I think that will return to normal,” said a second Georgia-based GOP operative.

Uneasy Republicans breathed a sigh of relief after Iran’s announcement Friday that it was reopening the Strait of Hormuz for the remainder of a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, sending oil prices plummeting. But on Saturday, Iran’s military said it closed the strait again and that it will stay that way unless the U.S. lifts its blockade of Iranian ports, underscoring the fragile state of talks.

Negotiations to end the war remain tenuous, and economic experts warn that high gas prices are baked in for at least several more months as the global economy reels from the conflict. Republicans are also eager for Trump to refocus on the administration’s wins rather than the ongoing conflict or other possible distractions.

One Iowa-based strategist gave the White House’s midterms strategy a “C” rating so far, reflecting a frustration among some Republicans with the White House.

“They say the right things strategically, and then they don’t execute them where you want them to be better,” the strategist said.

The White House said Trump is focused both on Americans’ economic concerns and resolving the ongoing conflict in Iran. “While the U.S. Military and the President’s diplomatic team continue to make progress towards securing a deal with Iran and resolving temporary disruptions in energy markets, the rest of the Administration have never lost focus on implementing the President’s affordability and growth agenda on the home front,” spokesperson Kush Desai said in a statement.

“Once short-term disruptions from Operation Epic Fury are fully behind us,” he said, “Americans can count on more economic progress in store thanks to this Administration.”

Candidate recruitment and messy primaries have shifted the map

Republicans were seeing some cracks in their best-case-scenario map even before the war began.

Party operatives were originally bullish about holding North Carolina and Ohio and flipping Georgia. Then, Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) announced his retirement, leaving an open seat in a key battleground state. Republicans nominated former RNC Chair Michael Whatley, and Democrats countered with former Gov. Roy Cooper, who has wide name recognition and strong fundraising chops.

“This is a pretty close state, and it’s a close race,” said a GOP operative in the state. “But with the national environment looking as tough as it is right now for Republicans, and you already have an established governor like Roy Cooper, that’s why I think he’s got the advantage.”

Democrats scored another recruiting win in former Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown, another prolific fundraiser. Early public polling shows the three-term former senator running neck and neck with GOP Sen. Jon Husted, who was appointed to fill the vacancy left by JD Vance’s ascension to the vice presidency and suffers from lower name recognition than is typical for an incumbent.

“I think we’re back in 2018 where the headwinds were against Republicans,” said former Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Renacci, who unsuccessfully challenged Brown that year. “I mean, I ran against Sherrod Brown in 2018 and the national electorate was about a D plus 6 to 8. I think we’re getting about that same place in Ohio.”

In Georgia, a messy three-way GOP primary has Republicans increasingly uneasy about their prospects against Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff, who has amassed a massive war chest.

“Republicans really need to unify behind one candidate to beat Jon Ossoff,” Iowa-based GOP strategist Morgan Bonwell said. “I don’t think they can continue, or afford to continue, beating each other up.”

The National Republican Senatorial Committee said the Democrats in North Carolina, Ohio and Georgia are “wolves in sheep’s clothing who will obediently carry water for Democrats’ increasingly radical agenda.” The NRSC also attacked Democratic candidates’ records on crime, immigration and the economy.

The Republican leadership-aligned SLF pushed back on the notion the map is slipping, arguing the fundamentals are in their favor. The group raised $72 million in the first quarter, while its Democratic counterpart SMP brought in $56 million. In a statement, SLF Executive Director Alex Latcham also pointed to “bitter” Democratic primaries in Maine, Michigan and Iowa.

As some states become more competitive, Republicans are growing more focused on flipping Michigan. They argue former GOP Rep. Mike Rogers, who narrowly lost to Sen. Elissa Slotkin in 2024, is running a stronger campaign this time and will benefit from the three-way car crash of a primary on the Democratic side.

But Republicans who’ve watched Democrats overperform in a series of special elections are also starting to sweat about turnout — even in states they’re more confident in winning. Several state and local GOP party chairs told POLITICO the party has to stay laser-focused on keeping Trump voters engaged without the president on the ballot.

“What we have to focus on here in Michigan — and I’m sure all the chairs are doing this across the nation — is really putting a strategy in place to turn out the Republican vote,” said Michigan Republican Party Chair Jim Runestad. “That will be the deciding factor.”

There is no fucking plan..........

GOP senators urge Trump to find Iran exit plan as energy prices rise: ‘The clock is ticking’

“I think our members are going to be very interested in what next steps are,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said.

By Jordain Carney

President Donald Trump promised a quick end to the war in Iran, but the ongoing conflict has kept energy costs high — and some Senate Republicans are starting to go public with their concerns.

GOP lawmakers who already feared November would be an increasingly tough battle are trying to nudge the president toward clearly defining his endgame after a surge in oil, gas and fertilizer prices. Trump warned the sticker shock might not completely recede by the time the November elections roll around, though news Friday that the Strait of Hormuz would reopen could begin to bring some relief if the agreement sticks.

Several GOP senators are warning the president could face growing pushback, including them not supporting military action against Iran after the conflict hits the 60-day mark at the end of the month, if he doesn’t articulate his plan. The White House could try to invoke a 30-day extension for national security reasons.

“I hope that we are arriving at an exit strategy here to bring this to a close to preserve our security interests and bring down the cost of gasoline,” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) told reporters this week, adding that the “clock is ticking” on the war.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said in an interview that she and a group of other senators are in the process of drafting an authorization for the use of military force against Iran, which would lay out when and how Trump could use force. She pointed to the 60-day threshold as a possible deadline for hammering out text, saying it would be “helpful” for it to be done by then.

Even senior Republicans are warning that if the administration wants Congress to greenlight tens of billions in additional war funding, Republicans are going to need to know more about the president’s ultimate Iran strategy beforehand.

“I think our members are going to be very interested in what next steps are,” said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, predicting that the administration’s forthcoming Iran war spending ask “will be an important inflection point if and when the administration submits their request.”

Thune, like most congressional Republicans, has been supportive of the administration’s Iran campaign but said the impact on gas and fertilizer prices is “a big deal” back in his home state of South Dakota.

“We’re in planting season so if you didn’t buy fertilizer ahead of time, you’re really feeling it, and obviously fuel is a critically important part of production, agriculture,” Thune said this week, prior to the Strait’s reopening.

Retiring Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) predicted his party would ultimately keep the Senate majority, but said the Iran war and the related spike in pricing could be a drag when they are already facing “headwinds.”

“The president has to help us get the vote out,” Tillis said. “But the base alone is not going to be able to do it. The way we’re going to get the other ones is addressing the energy challenges, particularly the price at the pump and some of the other affordability issues.”

Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), in an interview before Friday’s announcement, predicted that prices would come down after the strait’s reopening and that it would matter the most in September, when swing voters start tuning in for the midterms.

“If we’re going into September and, even more, October … with super high — you know gas prices over $4 — I mean it’s going to be a problem,” Cramer said.

There were early signs of celebration from Senate Republicans Friday over the announcement that the strait had reopened, even if it’s potentially only temporarily.

“Very glad to hear the Strait of Hormuz is open, at least for the remainder of the ceasefire,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) wrote on X.

Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio), also took a victory lap: “Will Dems be making comments about the massive drop in oil prices?” he asked.

Trump has suggested that he is eager to negotiate a deal to end the conflict. And GOP lawmakers have largely deferred to Trump so far — including defeating attempts in both chambers this week to limit the president’s ability to carry out additional military action without Congress.

But even with oil shipments through the strait set to resume now, some Republicans say generally, they want to see the president focusing more on affordability issues.

“I would like to see the president spend 70 percent of his time talking about all the things that we and he have done to reduce the cost of living and 30 percent of his time on other important stuff,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said in an interview.

A pattern....

Eric Swalwell Thought He Was Untouchable — Until He Wasn’t

The allegations that ended Swalwell’s gubernatorial bid fit a longstanding pattern of behavior.

By Melanie Mason, Jeremy B. White, Daniel Lippman and Riley Rogerson

The Toyota Corolla shuttling Eric Swalwell to the San Francisco airport was already running well over the speed limit. It wasn’t enough.

“‘Go as fast as you can. Go 90 or whatever,’” Dean Wallace, the staffer behind the wheel, recalled his boss telling him. “‘We’re not going to get in trouble. Just keep going.’”

That ride to the airport more than 13 years ago, when Swalwell was about to miss his flight to Washington for his new membership orientation, was no one-off. As an ascendant Democratic House member, he would push his staff to drive so dangerously from one appointment to the next that one former congressional aide said she racked up numerous tickets for speeding or running red lights and was once chewed out by Capitol Police after an especially reckless maneuver. As a candidate for California governor, he’d say of the navigation app, “Waze is just the start of a negotiation,” and encourage his driver to disregard traffic laws, according to a staffer familiar with his campaign travel.

It was an impulsive sense of urgency that reflected, almost too neatly, the ambitions and instincts that propelled Swalwell to the upper ranks of the Democratic Party and a credible shot at becoming California’s next governor. Not only was he willing to take risks to get to where he wanted to go, he was convinced — or at least, seemed to be — that he’d escape the consequences.

Until last week, when his political career collapsed entirely.

Swalwell has now been accused by multiple women of sexual assault; at least two others claim he harrassed them with unwanted come-ons and explicit photos. He faces criminal investigations into separate rape accusations in Manhattan and Los Angeles, and the Department of Justice also opened an investigation; he has denied all allegations of assault, though he has acknowledged “personal failings.” He withdrew from the governor’s race and resigned from Congress before his colleagues moved to expel him.

Swalwell and his attorney did not respond to requests for comment.

His downfall, beyond prompting a reckoning on the Hill about how such a prominent politician could act with impunity for so long, has forced a reappraisal of Swalwell among his one-time friends and allies. POLITICO Magazine spoke with 30 people who had a front-row seat to his rise from the Bay Area to Washington, including lawmakers, staffers and consultants. Many were granted anonymity to speak candidly about the now-disgraced politician.

They describe a man with considerable talents, including a dogged work ethic, a natural camera presence fit for cable news and persuasion skills honed from his early days as a prosecutor. He projected a certainty that bordered on invincibility — and in some cases, imbued that sense in others.

“When you’re just living in D.C., politicians on the Hill almost create an alternate universe where they and their staffers feel like they can make up their own rules. You can create your own reality,” said the former staffer who said her reckless driving at Swalwell’s insistence saddled her with scores of tickets. “And that’s kind of how I felt when I was working for him, like the rules don’t apply. And we can make anything happen.”

Such was the mentality of a man who would run for governor despite allegedly having a history of sexual misconduct that could detonate his career at any moment. It’s a man whose grandiose ambitions included the presidency or, as a consolation prize, CIA director.

Before his ill-fated presidential run in 2019, which only lasted three months, Alex Evans, a former senior Swalwell adviser, put together an informal inventory of possible reasons he could lose.

The first word on the list: hubris.

Swalwell’s jump into national politics was audacious from its 2012 start. Here was a 31-year-old county prosecutor taking on Pete Stark, an East Bay Democrat who had represented the area since 1972. Swalwell had just been elected a city councilmember in Dublin, his hometown, where his signature achievement had been designating the city as part of the Livermore Valley Wine Region.

Stark was a liberal institution, but he was also pushing 80 and increasingly seen as abrasive and erratic. Swalwell, taking advantage of California’s new top-two primary system, saw a path as a moderate Democrat with law enforcement bona fides that could appeal to Republicans.

“The strategy was: pull a lot of the moderate Democrats in the Tri-Valley and get Republicans who really didn’t like Pete Stark to vote for him,” said Wallace, who was field manager for the campaign. “That was a real easy sell at the doors when it was a Dem-on-Dem.”

Swalwell outhustled the aging Stark, canvassing the district practically every night. The candidate, who was single at the time after divorcing his first wife in 2010, would also use his active dating life to supplement the campaign’s field program, Wallace recalled.

“There would be volunteers who would show up to knock on doors and it was clear they thought they had some sort of relationship with him, or would come out because they were romantically interested,” Wallace said. “And he would rope them in to knock doors and ignore them. They were confused, and it would happen a lot.”

Swalwell beat Stark by a convincing margin. And within a few years in Washington, he had cultivated a powerful ally: Nancy Pelosi. The top Democrat in the House, who had been facing pressure to bring fresh faces into leadership, took a liking to Swalwell and asked him to re-nominate her as House Democratic Leader in 2014. She elevated her fellow Californian to a powerful post on the House Democratic Steering Committee and coveted assignments on the Judiciary and Intelligence committees. He became a top Trump antagonist and played roles in both of the president’s impeachments, impressing fellow Democrats.

“I’ll never forget those days of working on impeachment as a team, as a real team with humility around the table, each of us taking our part,” said Rep. Madeleine Dean, a Pennsylvania Democrat. “The team feeling — I don’t think I’ll ever match it again. So it’s devastating to me that we are in this position.”

His colleagues were less impressed with his decision to run for president in 2019, which struck many of them as absurd. They were baffled that Swalwell, who had fostered an enviable alliance with Pelosi, would endanger that goodwill for a longshot bid.

“My God, it was an embarrassment,” one House Democrat said. “She had put him in important positions, and then he turns around and runs his delusional race for president.”

But Swalwell, who was 38 at the time, believed he could capitalize on his Iowa roots, having been born there, and his working-class upbringing in what was known as “Scrublin,” to distinguish himself as a regular-Joe millennial with relatable student debt. As he entered the primary, those who had followed his career from the Bay Area saw him shift away from his moderate, law-and-order persona.

“He moved further and further left as he was leaning into his presidential run,” said former state Sen. Steve Glazer, a Democrat who represented a nearby area. “When you change your political skin, it does make people more wary about where your heart is.”

Meanwhile, Swalwell, who married his wife Brittany in 2016, was getting noticed for his behavior toward women. One California-based campaign consultant recalled it was frequently a topic of discussion on the 2020 presidential trail.

“Everyone was coming up to me saying, ‘Oh, you’re from the Bay Area, do you know Eric Swalwell? He hit on my friend,’” the consultant said.

Among the people who worked for the short-lived presidential campaign was a young woman who joined his staff soon afterward. She said Swalwell, who was 17 years her senior, began coming onto her within weeks. That woman would later go on to share her experience, including alleging that he twice sexually assaulted her, with the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN — stories that would decimate his career.

If there was one constant in Swalwell’s trajectory, it was television.

“With Eric, it was always about TV time,” said Morgan King, who worked on Swalwell’s city council run and then his first congressional campaign. “He wanted to be on TV as much as possible.”

His appetite for media exposure became insatiable during the Trump era. Staffers became experts in finding places where he could film hits on quick turnaround: mobile studios, hotels, airports, even a local bookstore in his district. His motto for his staff working to get him on television was “ABP: Always Be Pitching.”

Swalwell spoke in aphorisms. He’d ask staffers “where’s the wow?” as they brainstormed new ideas to get attention. He encouraged out-of-the-box thinking, especially in digital communications. Swalwell’s media omnipresence could grate on fellow members of his caucus, but some on his staff felt empowered by his support to get beyond the cookie-cutter communications strategies that were commonplace on the Hill.

As communications became a focal point in his office, policy took a backseat. After Republicans booted Swalwell from the House Intelligence Committee in 2023, citing “national security concerns” over his years-old association with Christine Fang, a suspected Chinese intelligence operative, there was a notable change in Swalwell’s demeanor, a second former staffer said. (Swalwell cut off contact with Fang in 2015 after being alerted by the FBI; he was never accused of wrongdoing.)

“He loved it. It was a source of pride,” the staffer said of Swalwell’s work on the committee. After being yanked off, “he was less engaged in the work … he was pissed.”

Swalwell, like any lawmaker, had distinctive quirks and habits. He was a disciplined exerciser who insisted roughly 90 minutes of his schedule every day be blocked out for a workout, which he called “Fitness Caucus.” He gave his personal cell phone number out freely to journalists, influencers, celebrities, potential job-seekers and his constituents, fostering a sense of familiarity.

“It made people think, ‘My congressman cares about me. … I have a direct line to my congressman, my congressman that’s on the news every night, my congressman that’s leading the fight against Trump,’” said the second former staffer. “‘I have his cell phone. I can reach out to him whenever I want.’”

Some former staffers said they worried that Swalwell’s tendencies raised ethical concerns. He would have aides in his congressional office package gifts paid for by his campaign to send to supporters, according to two former staffers who saw the gifts — a potential violation of House rules forbidding official resources being used for political activity. He was also cavalier about posting content about his official duties on his campaign social media accounts and vice versa, sometimes brushing aside warnings from staff that this was against House rules.

Swalwell and his then-chief of staff Yardena Wolf would “aggressively” peddle a political fundraising start-up they co-founded, according to NOTUS, which said the pitches were potentially in violation of House ethics rules. The Swalwell campaign told the outlet that Swalwell and Wolf had consulted with the House Ethics Committee and that the lawmaker received no income from the company.

As Swalwell’s profile grew, so did his exposure to the trappings of the office. He embraced it all.

“It was a meteoric rise of the likes of which you don’t see very often,” said former Rep. Jackie Speier, a fellow California Democrat. “And one of the things that happens in Congress is people who start to feel that they’re empowered and untouchable take it to a level that reflects what we see over and over again, where they lose sight of what’s real and imagined.”

He was especially taken with the opulent luxury of Los Angeles and the glitz of Hollywood. He styled himself an industry insider, taking executive production credits on two films. (He removed himself from one after a labor dispute during filming put him crosswise with the unions he was courting for his gubernatorial bid.)

He became especially close with Stephen J. Cloobeck, a billionaire timeshare magnate who often hosted Swalwell at his Beverly Hills estate. Swalwell often taped media hits from Cloobeck’s home, displaying an access to wealth a working-class kid from “Scrublin” could only imagine. (Cloobeck has since said he’s cutting off ties with Swalwell and leaving the Democratic Party.)

Growing up, “he had to switch houses 11 or 13 times,” said a former campaign staffer. “Having that level of instability and then having this opportunity to play padel at this rich person’s house or pseudo-live in a rich person’s house and getting the privileges they might have — when he’s going to nice dinners and nice fundraisers, he started to get attuned to that.”

Throughout it all were the rumors that persisted about Swalwell and women. Female staffers on the Hill quietly warned each other about his late-night texts or his pursuit of subordinate employees. His reputation for being overly-familiar was well-established.

“It wasn’t just with me. It was with a lot of girls,” said one female Washington lobbyist. “Every time you met him, he was just very handsy. His hand would always be on your arm, or the hug would always last a little too long.”

Fellow members acknowledged hearing rumors about partying or indiscretions, but several said that nothing they heard rose to the level of a House Ethics infraction or, worse, criminal behavior. Nor would it be something they’d want to put on the radar of Swalwell’s most powerful ally, Pelosi.

“The rumors that we all began to hear about Eric are not the kind of things that people would talk to Nancy Pelosi about,” the House Democrat said. “She’s in a higher echelon. You don’t just sit around and gossip about people’s social life or extracurricular acts with Nancy Pelosi.”

During an interview at George Washington University this week, the former speaker said she had never before heard complaints or allegations about Swalwell’s behavior.

It was a “smart decision” for Swalwell to resign, she said. “Probably five times in the history of our country has anybody been ejected from the Congress. Why should you be the sixth? If you have a challenge that you have to address, it’s best addressed not as a candidate for governor and not as a member of Congress.”

Swalwell’s failed presidential run made it clear he saw himself as more than a House member. After Joe Biden won the White House in 2020, Swalwell fixed his sights on leading the CIA, and a staffer prepared a memo for him on the biographies of previous leaders of the agency.

His aide wrote a nine-page report, compiling the vast experience that top officials historically had. The unspoken subtext was that Swalwell held little of those qualifications. The staffer said they also told him bluntly that the allegations he had a relationship with Fang, a suspected Chinese intelligence operative, whether true or not, would foreclose any possibility of Swalwell becoming CIA director. The congressmember responded indignantly, the staffer said.

Despite his overt search for another job, some of his staffers were surprised when they heard he was considering a run for California governor. He had never mentioned any interest in the post before.

His lack of knowledge about the myriad complex policy issues in California meant that his campaign would be premised primarily on anti-Trump bromides. To the political class, his ignorance was sold as an asset, an opportunity to influence an incoming governor without rigid beliefs. But inside the campaign, staffers were troubled by his vagueness.

“At this stage of his career, to be a blank canvas is really odd,” a second former campaign staffer said.

Swalwell launched his campaign in November on Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show — an echo of him announcing his candidacy for president with a Stephen Colbert appearance seven years earlier. It was a remarkably late start to run in the nation’s most populous state, and at first, the campaign essentially operated out of two Cadillac Escalades, one in the Bay Area and one in Los Angeles.

He maintained some of his old habits — the daily workout of 90 minutes or more, the stays at luxury hotels — even though they strained the candidate’s time and the campaign’s budget. He also kept up his devotion to appearing on national news. But he was resistant to appearing on local television stations, even though they were one of the best ways to reach older, reliable voters. Among his reasons, according to staffers: The lighting for the local channels looked cheap.

Swalwell projected confidence the race would go his way, referring to himself constantly as the frontrunner even though most polls showed him locked in a three-way tie among the Democratic contenders. But he also at times revealed a siege mentality that forces were conspiring to bring him down.

“He would oftentimes say, ‘Tom Steyer put $100 million into ads just to come after me. Kash Patel is coming after me. Trump is coming after me,’” the first former campaign staffer said. “It’s funny — he said he was always on offense, but here you are acting like you’re the victim in every situation.”

Looking back, some on the campaign saw other red flags. One staffer recalled feeling suspicious when Rep. Jamie Raskin — whose backing Swalwell deeply coveted — abruptly halted an endorsement that was far along in the works. Raskin confirmed that Swalwell was looking for his support, but said he took his cues from Pelosi, who had still not endorsed her one-time protege.

“She also kept her counsel and hung back, which was a signal to me that we needed to wait to see how the dynamics of the race were going to unfold,” Raskin said.

Those dynamics are now well-known following a pair of bombshell reports that set off a chain reaction starting with rescinded endorsements and staff resignations.

Christine Pelosi, who had become friends with Swalwell when he was an upstart House member under her mother’s tutelage, was the first to tell the former speaker about the allegations.

“She was absolutely shocked when I told her,” the younger Pelosi said. Soon after, her mother called Swalwell and told him to step down from the governor’s race.

“A lot of us are going through it right now: ‘Why didn’t we know more? Why couldn’t we have protected people better?’” Christine Pelosi said. “You can only act on what you know. To the people that knew the rumors, you could have told us, the people close to him.”

Earlier that day, Swalwell had adamantly told his campaign staff that the as-yet-unpublished reports were false. They did not hear from him as a team again.

“He puts in his statements that he is sorry to his staff, but he has not reached out and apologized,” said the first ex-campaign staffer. “It feels performative to say ‘I am sorry to my staff’ in front of millions of people that are watching his statements or looking at his Instagram and social, but you’re not actually saying sorry to your staff when the doors are closed and the spotlight is not on you.”

Swalwell has maintained his public silence since then, communicating only through a statement on his social media, his resignation letter and his attorney. But around him is a clamor for a reckoning about a political culture that turns a blind eye to open secrets and failed to hold him accountable for so long. And there is an anger that one man’s personal failings could end up causing so much destruction.

“His behavior was, above all, a violation of these women’s rights and an assault on their integrity. It was also a major betrayal of his wife and his family,” Raskin said. “But a lot of colleagues feel as if we were betrayed too. You know, we’re in the fight of our lives to defend the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the rule of law. And Eric Swalwell was an active participant in all of these fights.”

Swalwell’s demise has raised many questions, including whether his behavior should have set alarms off sooner, when actions stop being gossip-fodder and instead become actionable, and whether Congress and other institutions are equipped for victims and others to flag problems before they become criminal. In California, many establishment Democrats are reeling from having come so close to helping elevate Swalwell to higher office despite the warning signs.

But one question is especially pervasive: How could Swalwell run for governor knowing a high-profile campaign could surface such damaging baggage?

To Evans, who saw Swalwell’s hubris as his biggest vulnerability, the answer was simple — that same boundary-pushing instinct, the same belief that he was untouchable, was still at work all these years later.

“It’s that risk tolerance that served him well for so long — that wasn’t going away,” Evans said. “That, or he believes what he’s been telling everyone.”

End EU-Israel association

Spain pushes to end EU-Israel association agreement

Madrid will propose the measure at a meeting of EU foreign ministers on Tuesday, said Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

By Gregorio Sorgi

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on Sunday urged the EU to end its association agreement with Israel.

In an escalation of his criticism against Israel, he said during a rally in Andalusia that “a government that violates international law or the principles of the EU cannot be its partner.”

Spain will formally propose the termination of the agreement at a meeting of EU foreign ministers on Tuesday in Luxembourg.

Sánchez has emerged as one of Israel’s most vocal critics in the EU. He accused Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of committing genocide in Gaza and denounced the joint U.S.-Israel strikes against Iran as an “immense error.”

Critics claim that Israel’s continued strikes against Lebanon are undermining a peace settlement in the broader region. During his speech in Andalusia, Sánchez called for an immediate end to the war in the Middle East that has led to a surge in global oil prices and mass displacement across the region.

The foreign ministers of Spain, Ireland and Slovenia accused Israel of breaching the association agreement with the EU in a letter to the bloc’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, on Saturday. They said that the approval of the death penalty by the Israeli parliament and violent action by Israeli settlers in the West Bank are violations of fundamental human rights.

Madrid’s proposal to end the association agreement, however, is unlikely to immediately succeed as it requires unanimity among the EU’s 27 member countries.

The idea is likely to be opposed by a German-led group of countries that have consistently voted against tougher measures. A European Commission proposal in September to sanction some Israeli ministers and suspend trade-related sections of the association agreement failed to reach a majority in the European Council.

Israel’s embassy to the EU did not immediately reply to a request for comment.