A place were I can write...

My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



April 13, 2026

No FEAR!

Pope Leo: “I Have No Fear” of Trump

The president issued a disturbing, insult-driven attack against the pope, labeling the Catholic leader “weak” and “terrible.”

Inae Oh

Following an extraordinary attack against Pope Leo XIV that featured President Trump insulting the Catholic leader as “weak on crime” and “terrible,” Leo told reporters on Monday that he was not afraid of the Trump administration.

“I have no fear of the Trump administration, or speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do,” Leo said en route to Algeria for a papal visit to Africa.

“We are not politicians,” he continued. “We don’t deal with foreign policy with the same perspective he might understand it. But I do believe in the message of the Gospel, as a peacemaker.”

When asked about the Truth Social attack, Leo said, “It’s ironic, the name of the site itself. Say no more.”

Leo’s defiant message came after Trump issued a lengthy, ego-driven rant against the pope on Sunday, claiming that Leo would not have been elected had it not been for Trump’s presidency. “If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the Vatican,” he wrote.

Elsewhere in the post, Trump complained: “I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE.”

The president then posted a bizarre image that appeared to portray him as a Jesus-like figure healing the sick while surrounded by patriotic imagery. The image prompted rare disapproval among some of MAGA’s most faithful, including the anti-trans activist Riley Gaines, who wrote on social media: “Seriously, I cannot understand why he’d post this. Is he looking for a response? Does he actually think this?”

Though Leo has generally avoided mentioning Trump by name, the pope has been increasingly vocal in his criticism of Trump’s war in Iran, telling reporters as recently as last week that the president’s threat to destroy “a whole civilization” was “truly unacceptable.”

In a late March sermon widely viewed as a rebuke of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s framing of the war as divinely sanctioned, Leo condemned leaders who have “hands full of blood.”

Just fucking insane........

Trump deletes social media post depicting him as Jesus but refuses to apologize amid tension with pope

By Adam Cancryn

President Donald Trump is backing away from a social media post depicting himself as Jesus — but not from the broader war of words he’s still waging against Pope Leo XIV.

Trump on Monday deleted an image of him as Jesus from his Truth Social account amid intense backlash, telling reporters that he thought it was meant to portray him as a doctor.

“I thought it was me as a doctor and had to do with Red Cross,” he said outside the West Wing. “It’s supposed to be me as a doctor making people better. And I do make people better.”

Yet pressed on whether he also disavowed a separate post in which he slammed the pope as “WEAK on Crime” and accused him of “catering to the Radical Left,” Trump stood his ground.

“Pope Leo said things that are wrong,” Trump said, adding that he wouldn’t apologize for his social media post. “We believe strongly in law and order, and he seemed to have a problem with that, so there’s nothing to apologize for.”

The pope first earned Trump’s ire last year over comments seen as critical of the administration’s mass deportation policies. Leo has since clashed with Trump over the US and Israel’s war with Iran, urging the sides to seek a peaceful resolution and then more explicitly rejecting the president’s threats to wipe out “a whole civilization” if Tehran didn’t bend to his demands.

Trump’s tensions with the papacy come despite the president surrounding himself with several prominent Catholics, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and first lady Melania Trump. Vance and Rubio met with the pope last year but have not taken any public steps to ease relations between Trump and the Vatican in recent days.

Sunday — went too far. The image showing him in white and red robes and composed in the style of religious art prompted criticism from several Republicans and conservative commentators who saw it as anti-Christian.

“I cannot understand why he’d post this,” Riley Gaines, a conservative activist who has served as a key cheerleader for the administration’s restrictive policies on transgender athletes, wrote on X. “Either way, two things are true. 1) a little humility would serve him well 2) God shall not be mocked.”

The post was gone by Monday morning, with the president later telling reporters that “I just heard” about the controversy and acknowledging that he made the initial decision to put up the post. It was a comparatively rare and rapid walkback for Trump, who frequently reposts a range of AI-generated videos and images to his Truth Social platform and has previously dodged responsibility for their content.

In February, for instance, Trump shared a racist video depicting former President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama as apes, which remained online for nearly 12 hours before it was deleted. The White House ultimately blamed a staffer for the post and Trump declined to apologize.

Tosses another one.........

Judge tosses Trump’s Wall Street Journal defamation lawsuit, gives him chance to refile

By Brian Stelter, Andrew Kirell

A federal judge on Monday dismissed President Donald Trump’s defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal over its reporting on a lewd birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein bearing Trump’s name.

US District Judge Darrin P. Gayles ruled that Trump failed to plausibly allege the Rupert Murdoch-owned newspaper acted with “actual malice” when it reported the story.

Gayles dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice, meaning the saga is not over: Trump’s camp now has until April 27 to file an amended complaint addressing the judge’s concerns.

In order to proceed, Gayles wrote, Trump must adequately allege that the Journal knowingly published false information or acted with reckless disregard for the truth.

But Gayles said the original complaint instead relied on “formulaic” claims about malice and how the newspaper “knew or should have known” the story was false — coming “nowhere close” to the court’s standards for claiming defamation for a public figure such as Trump.

The judge also pointed to the Journal’s reporting process, noting that the article included Trump’s denial and reflected its efforts to seek comment from the White House, the Justice Department and the FBI.

“President Trump will follow Judge Gayles’s ruling and guidance to refile this powerhouse lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal and all of the other Defendants,” a spokesman for Trump’s legal team told CNN in a statement. “The President will continue to hold accountable those who traffic in Fake News to mislead the American People.”

Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit, filed last summer, was an extraordinary escalation of his ongoing legal campaign against media companies he views as opponents.

Legal experts consulted by CNN said they could not recall any past instances of a sitting president suing a news outlet over a story.

For Trump, though, it was a continuation of a pattern that dates back decades. He has frequently garnered publicity for filing lawsuits that ultimately fall apart in court.

After targeting the Journal last July, he filed suit against The New York Times last September, claiming The Times defamed him and unfairly questioned his success. That suit was almost immediately dismissed by a judge who called it “improper and impermissible” and gave him a chance to refile.

Trump’s lawyers did, indeed, file a revised complaint against The Times, and the parties have been ordered to pursue mediation before the case moves forward. Trump has also lodged a defamation lawsuit against the BBC, which has said it will defend itself.

Analysts speculated that Trump might have filed suit against the Journal to muddy the waters about the Epstein birthday book; to pressure Journal parent News Corp into a settlement payment; or to goad Murdoch in other ways.

Trump struck settlement deals with several other media companies after winning reelection. Murdoch’s camp, however, said it would not go the settlement route and has vigorously contested Trump’s claims in court.

At the same time, the 95-year-old Murdoch has maintained a cozy if complicated relationship with the president, including multiple meetings at the White House in recent months.

The Wall Street Journal did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Populist touch gone...

Orbán just lost his populist touch

The Hungarian PM misread his electorate by bashing the EU and Ukraine. Instead, people cared more about his cronyism and economic mismanagement.

By Jamie Dettmer

Not even the gaming of the electoral playing field — or state capture rolled out over a decade-and-half in power — could save Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán from a crushing defeat on Sunday. 

Nor did the high-decibel support of Orbán’s MAGA friends, including U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, who went all in for their most loyal European ideological ally, breaking the taboo against politicians campaigning in other people’s elections. 

Incumbency has its advantages, especially when brazenly exploited to rig the system, but it can also turn into an albatross. It did for Orbán this election. Voters were restless, and increasingly tired of him and his ruling Fidesz party, which they associated with the cronyism and corruption that is helping sink the economy.

But Orbán had no fresh response to the shifting popular mood. He stuck resolutely to a playbook he used in the previous three elections portraying himself as the only man capable of protecting Hungarian interests, and conjured up external threats. In this campaign, Orbán accused his rival of dragging the country toward war by aligning with two of his eternal bogeymen: the EU and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.  

But the geopolitical scaremongering wasn’t working any more. It was a bread-and-butter election.

Orbán’s misreading of the electorate helped compensate his challenger Péter Magyar for the unfair edge the prime minister has engineered through gerrymandered constituencies, a captive media landscape and vote-buying. It gave Magyar’s center-right Tisza party the opening it needed. 

The great populist had mislaid his popular touch and failed to appreciate that he was being undermined by some of the same failures that have weakened strongmen the world over: rampant corruption and cronyism, a kleptocratic ruling class, and deteriorating infrastructure. They all served to strengthen Magyar’s hand and intensify his challenge.

“You could see it and sense it at the campaign rallies, where there was a tangible enthusiasm at the opposition rallies, but not at the government ones,” Orbán’s biographer Pál Dániel Rényi told POLITICO.

It also meant that the outside interference of MAGA and European populists, such as France’s Marine Le Pen, the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders and Italy’s Matteo Salvini, who like Vance turned up in Budapest to campaign for Orbán, was just a wasted effort. So too the endorsement by Germany’s Alice Weidel, co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), who had told Hungarians in a video: “Europe needs Viktor Orbán.”

It’s the economy, stupid

Despite their nativist and sovereigntist principles, and advocacy of countries “taking back control” of their political and cultural destinies, there was absolutely no holding back by global far-right luminaries as they issued ever bleaker and more frantic warnings of what would befall Hungary in the event voters had the temerity to vote for change and end Orbán’s goulash populism.

But these grand appeals and lectures fell flat with a Hungarian electorate that had more parochial concerns about paying bills, getting jobs and receiving decent medical care.

“The foreign meddling just didn’t matter,” said Márton Tompos, an opposition lawmaker with the centrist Momentum party, which stood aside in this election to give Magyar’s Tisza party a clear, unencumbered run against Orbán. 

“Take Vance: He’s absolutely unknown to the Hungarian public, so thinking his presence would change anything was naive at best,” Tompos told POLITICO. The display of transatlantic loyalty was never going to alter the political equation in Hungary, where disapproval of the ruling Fidesz party revolved around the country’s internal rot.

Maybe calling in the American cavalry wasn’t naive, but an act of desperation. Orbán was out of other ideas in his battle with Magyar, a Fidesz defector who unlike previous challengers understood the system Orbán had built and refused to give ground when it came to patriotism and embracing national symbols. Magyar urged his supporters to bring national flags to campaign rallies. He sometimes wore traditional embroidered Hungarian shirts. He turned up as a spectator to soccer matches and, unlike Orbán, shunned the VIP boxes and sat with ordinary fans in the stands.

He was also succinct in dealing with foreign interference, arguing that any meddling whether from Washington, Brussels or Moscow was unwelcome: Hungarians would make up their own minds. It was a strong patriotic line that made Orbán look more like the stooge.

And come what may, Magyar remained laser-focused in his campaigning on bread-and-butter issues while hammering Fidesz over corruption, noting how Orbán’s family, business cronies and inner circle have grown ever richer as ordinary Hungarians have just got poorer. 

What really concerned voters — inflation, economic malaise and endemic corruption — all remained front and center in Magyar’s campaign, according to Mátyás Bódi, an election geographer affiliated with Budapest’s Eötvös Loránd University. And they played well for him, explained Bódi, who analyzed raw local polling data from independent pollsters throughout the election campaign.

“What drove Orbán’s defeat was the cost of living, lack of economic opportunities and lack of jobs,” Bódi added. Magyar’s messaging about poor public services also resonated. “A key Magyar message was that the country just isn’t working. And if you look at health care, transportation, the education system, for ordinary people the average experience has been one of disrepair and increasing dysfunction.”

Capitalizing on voter frustration, Magyar’s promises to build a “modern, European Hungary” appealed not only to young voters but also to middle-aged male blue collar workers, an important segment of Fidesz’s own traditional electoral base, Bódi said.

In fact, the 45-year-old Magyar sounded a lot like Orbán did in 2010, when he campaigned with similar fervor on economic issues and pledged to improve the lot of ordinary Hungarians, according to Péter Molnár, a Hungarian academic who was a Fidesz lawmaker but quit in 1994 when Orbán dragged the party over to nativist illiberalism.

Disciplined campaigner

While Orbán campaigned on the risks of being sucked into the conflict in Ukraine and portrayed his challenger as a stooge of both Zelenskyy and the EU, Magyar remained unfazed, defying all efforts to goad him.

“Magyar was very disciplined,” Molnár told POLITICO. “And every time Orbán tried to push him off message, Magyar ignored the bait.” In a conversation he had with Molnár in February, Magyar told him he was conscious he couldn’t afford even one slip. “I am trying to avoid making a mistake,” he said.

But throughout the race, Magyar remained combative and forward-leaning and had no hesitation campaigning at pace in traditionally Fidesz-supporting towns and villages, something Orbán’s previous challengers never did. For every town Orbán visited, Magyar visited a half-dozen to highlight his accessibility. In his early tours of the countryside he carried with him a cardboard cutout of Orbán as a prop to illustrate how the PM was absent. 

Magyar’s highlighting of corruption was also telling, said Timothy Ash of Britain’s Chatham House. “People may go along with a kleptocracy for as long as an economy is doing well, but ultimately, if the economy starts failing, and they see all these guys lining their pockets, then you can expect a reaction.”

Kim Lane Scheppele, a professor at Princeton University and an expert on Hungarian elections, said: “Orbán was able to be continuously reelected as long as the Hungarian economy was strong and Orbán’s corruption remained hidden from the general public.”

“But the economy flatlined. Combine that with many exposés of Orbán’s corruption — the palatial estate nominally in the name of his father, the extraordinary wealth of his closest friends … and the public soured on him in a context in which ordinary Hungarians are finding it hard to make ends meet,” she told POLITICO.

But she noted too that Orbán appeared bewildered by how to handle Magyar, “a junior version of himself — a center-right anticorruption campaigner. That’s how Orbán appeared during the campaign that brought him to power in 2010.”

Those who have observed the Hungarian leader for years, like Rényi, said they felt Orbán sensed early in the election campaign that he would lose — which partly explains his often reckless stoking of tensions with Brussels and Zelenskyy, and his desperate goading of his opponents. He just hoped something would go his way.

“The way he was speaking, the language he used, his gestures, his body language, it all seemed different to me and I’ve been covering him for 16 years. He seemed deflated,” Rényi said.

“I think he knew that nothing lasts forever.”

It's called "Two Faced"...

The Trump ally cracking down on immigration in Washington — and bringing in foreign workers back home

Rep. Andy Harris is wielding his clout to expand the number of seasonal workers allowed into the U.S. as he also backs the Trump administration’s mass deportation agenda.

By Jennifer Scholtes

On Capitol Hill, Rep. Andy Harris is one of the most uncompromising advocates of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown. On the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay, the Maryland Republican is seen as a hero for securing foreign labor to power his state’s commercial seafood industry.

The 69-year-old lawmaker, who chairs the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus and the subcommittee that funds the Department of Agriculture, has leveraged his influence as one of Washington’s most prominent hard-liners to lobby the White House in favor of a robust influx of temporary foreign workers.

That meant convincing the Trump administration earlier this year to max out the number of guest workers allowed for the season, helping businesses throughout the country — including seafood producers in his district, who bring in workers from Mexico to hand-pick meat from the region’s blue crabs.

“I’ve been in long enough to know how to get things done, and we got it done,” Harris told Jack Brooks, owner of the J.M. Clayton crab company, on a recent afternoon outside his facility along the Choptank River.

It’s not just a parochial priority for Harris, who has grander ambitions to increase the number of seasonal workers who flow in and out of the country. He’s driving a debate within the Republican party about whether the president’s “America First” agenda means aggressively stemming the number of foreigners who enter the United States — both legally and illegally — or helping the U.S. economy with regulated foreign labor.

Harris told Brooks he plans to build on his success by working to guarantee longtime H-2B employers get the positions they seek regardless of their luck in a yearly lottery.

“We appreciate you out there battling on our behalf, for sure,” Brooks said to Harris. “I know you’re just one guy.”

The H-2B visa program Harris wants to expand is distinct from a separate temporary visa program for migrant farmworkers. It’s instead aimed at nonagricultural jobs such as landscaping, construction and, in this case, “crab picking.”

There is no conflict, Harris argues, between his endorsement of the president’s aggressive approach to illegal immigration and his support for more temporary foreign workers who return to their home countries each year.

At the same time, Harris — the son of immigrants from Central Europe — also consistently rails against amnesty policies that would create a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

“This is not an immigration issue — this is a temporary foreign worker issue,” Harris said in an interview. “Once we control the uncontrolled border crossing, let’s talk about how we can bring a foreign workforce in to boost the economy where it needs to be boosted.”

Under the “Buy American, Hire American” agenda Trump has pursued throughout his first and second terms, his administration has often resisted calls to issue the maximum number of H-2B visas Congress allows. This year, however, Harris traveled down Pennsylvania Avenue at a crucial moment to persuade the White House otherwise — quietly locking in roughly 65,000 positions for workers with H-2B visas for the current season, about 30,000 more than what the Trump administration had announced it would allow.

The White House’s decision to boost the number of visas followed the termination of work documents for 1.3 million undocumented immigrants, White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement. The Trump administration’s No. 1 priority, she said, “is protecting American jobs and wages” while meeting the demands of the president’s “rapidly growing economy.”

Harris pitched Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins in recent weeks on his ideas for embracing an influx of temporary foreign workers as Trump promises “a Golden Age of American agriculture” and a renaissance for U.S. manufacturing amid record tariffs and new Republican-led tax perks.

“I think they realized that — as we bring work back — we are going to have to provide the labor here,” Harris said.

The congressman also wants to impose a “buy American” mandate for SNAP food assistance to ensure the roughly $100 billion in federal aid each year is used to purchase food grown and produced in the United States. “But that means that you’re going to have to have workers here,” Harris explained.

Asked about the Trump administration’s reception of Harris’ ideas, a spokesperson for USDA said in a statement that the president “is putting America First” by “streamlining” visa policy and “prioritizing fixing programs farmers and ranchers rely on to produce the safest and most productive food supply in the world.”

To close followers of visa policy debate in Washington, it’s clear that Harris is “the ringleader” of the push to expand the pool of temporary foreign workers, said Daniel Costa, a director at the Economic Policy Institute, a group that is critical of the way workers are treated under the H-2B program.

While Harris’ stance is not “a paradox,” Costa said in an interview, it’s certainly in conflict with the MAGA vision of top Trump advisers, including Stephen Miller. Harris’ lobbying effort is reminiscent of the “fracture in the Republican coalition” last year when Elon Musk pressed the president to boost a separate visa program for high-skilled workers against the guidance of other close Trump allies, he added.

Back in Harris’ district, seafood processors on the Eastern Shore have for decades struggled to fill key gaps in their workforce. “Crab pickers” began moving into manufacturing and other jobs in the mid-1990s, forcing business owners in the region to start seeking seasonal foreign workers.

At that time, there were more than 50 crab producers in the area. Those businesses that didn’t bring in foreign employees quickly closed, followed in later years by those that had bad luck in the visa lottery. Local crab producers still standing estimate there are fewer than a dozen remaining.

Lindy’s Seafood, another producer on the Eastern Shore, was not awarded any foreign workers in this year’s initial federal lottery. But the company lucked out when the Trump administration opened up the supplemental visas Harris helped secure.

“It’s a scary thing to go through, when every year is kind of tossing the dice,” said Aubrey Vincent, the company’s owner.

Other Maryland lawmakers have tried to help. Democratic Sens. Chris Van Hollen and Angela Alsobrooks have joined with lawmakers from states with big seafood industries to push a bipartisan bill that would exempt seafood processors from the cap on H-2B visas.

“It’d be nice to have the Trump administration support this effort,” Van Hollen said in an interview. “But regardless, we’re going to push very hard to get it done.”

Maryland’s Democrats don’t have the same sway right now as Harris, the sole Republican in his state’s 10-member congressional delegation and the only Marylander on Capitol Hill who has the ear of Trump administration officials mostly disinterested in working across the aisle.

Before Harris was elected to Congress in 2011, Maryland’s crab producers had another powerful advocate: then-Sen. Barbara Mikulski, who later chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee. After the limit on H-2B visas was first imposed in 2005, Mikulski succeeded in excluding returning workers from the visa cap.

But when Mikulski retired in 2017, Senate support for that policy died. “As soon as you lost the bicameral advocacy for it, it just became difficult,” said Harris, who pushed the policy in the House while Mikulski championed it in the Senate.

In 2016, appropriators started adding language to the annual funding bills allowing DHS to issue about 65,000 extra H-2B visas per year — the quota Harris got the Trump administration to fulfill this year.

Now Harris is working alongside the Senate funding panel’s current chair, Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, to advocate for the visas, which she argues are essential to “temporarily fill the seasonal roles that many inns, restaurants, and hotels rely on” during the summer tourism boom in her home state, whose license plates read “Vacationland.”

For the upcoming fiscal year, Harris wants to add what he calls “certified employer” language to a full-year funding bill for DHS. That means businesses that have used the H-2B visa program to hire temporary foreign workers for several years could go through a process to guarantee they get the same number of seasonal employees each year.

Some of Harris’ colleagues suggest waiting for a comprehensive immigration overhaul package to make changes to the H-2B visa program, rather than tackle it piecemeal. But Congress hasn’t been able to achieve such a feat in 40 years, and Harris isn’t interested in waiting.

“It’s not going to be anytime soon,” Harris said. “So let’s just deal with the issue now.”

NGC 602

 


The clouds may look like an oyster, and the stars like pearls, but look beyond. Near the outskirts of the Small Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy some 200 thousand light-years distant, lies 5 million year young star cluster NGC 602. Surrounded by natal gas and dust, NGC 602 is featured in this stunning Hubble image of the region. Fantastic ridges and swept back shapes strongly suggest that energetic radiation and shock waves from NGC 602's massive young stars have eroded the dusty material and triggered a progression of star formation moving away from the cluster's center. At the estimated distance of the Small Magellanic Cloud, the featured picture spans about 200 light-years, but a tantalizing assortment of background galaxies are also visible in this sharp multi-colored view. The background galaxies are hundreds of millions of light-years or more beyond NGC 602.

It's like blocking a wall...

Trump announces Strait of Hormuz blockade after Iran talks collapse

In a pair of Truth Social posts, he also said the Navy would intercept any vessel that has paid tolls to Iran to transit the strait safely.

By Megan Messerly

President Donald Trump on Sunday announced a U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and threatened to destroy “the little that is left of Iran” after peace talks in Islamabad fell apart overnight.

In a pair of Truth Social posts, Trump said the U.S. military would begin blockading ships entering or leaving the strait, and would also intercept any vessel that has paid tolls to Iran to transit it safely. He also said that any Iranian who fires on the U.S. military or other, peaceful vessels will be “BLOWN TO HELL” while the Navy works to de-mine the strait.

“THIS IS WORLD EXTORTION,” Trump wrote in one of the posts, “and Leaders of Countries, especially the United States of America, will never be extorted.”

The weekend talks, which were brokered by Pakistan and represented the highest level engagement between an American official and Iranians since the 1979 Islamic revolution, were aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz and resuming the flow of roughly a fifth of the world’s oil through it. Reopening the strait has become an economic imperative for Trump, whose approval ratings have sagged amid spiking oil prices and growing anxiety about the war’s toll on an already turbulent global economy.

But the talks ended early Sunday morning without movement on the question Trump said rendered the rest of the discussion moot.

“They have chosen not to accept our terms,” Vice President JD Vance told reporters in Islamabad before departing for Washington. “The simple fact is that we need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon.”

A U.S. official, granted anonymity to share details of the negotiations, said the two countries failed to reach agreement on six red-line issues for the U.S.: ending all uranium enrichment; retrieving highly enriched uranium; dismantling all major nuclear enrichment facilities; establishing a peace framework including regional allies; ending funding for Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis; and fully opening the strait, with no tolls for passage.

The official added that Vance went into the negotiations understanding the history of mistrust between the two countries and that one of the vice president’s goals was to ensure mutual understanding of each country’s objectives. The Iranians, the official said, did not understand at the start of the talks that the U.S.’s central goal is ensuring Iran never obtains a nuclear weapon, a misperception Vance corrected through the talks.

A second U.S. official, granted anonymity to speak candidly, said that no members of the negotiating team remain in Islamabad, including Jared Kushner, Steve Witkoff or members of the technical teams.

Vance’s departure, the first official said, is meant to be a signal that the U.S. has delivered a best and final offer. A deal is still on the table, the person said, though it is up to the Iranians if they choose to take it.

Iran, meanwhile, said the peace talks fell apart because of a lack of trust. Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf said in a post on X on Sunday that the U.S. “failed to gain the trust of the Iranian delegation” during the peace talks. He said that “due to the experiences of the two previous wars, we have no trust in the opposing side.”

The announcement of the blockade, which Trump said would begin “shortly,” also comes a day after CENTCOM confirmed that two U.S. destroyers transited the strait as part of a mine-clearing mission, the first such passage since fighting began six weeks ago. Iran declared the move a ceasefire violation and has separately moved forward with its plans to charge ships $1 per barrel of oil for safe passage through the strait.

Trump, in an interview with Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo on “Sunday Morning Futures,” said that he would resume attacks on Iran if the country does not give up its nuclear weapons program. But he also sought to frame the meeting as a productive one, saying that the points the two countries agreed to were better than the U.S. carrying out its plans to, as Trump has said, bomb Iran into the “stone ages.”

Already, some of the president’s allies are already arguing that the blockade represents a negotiating tactic — not an end to the fragile two-week ceasefire the president announced last week.

“I think he’s calling Iran’s bluff,” Nikki Haley, Trump’s former ambassador to the United Nations, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday morning. “This is a game of chicken. It’s who caves first. The Iranian regime is hoping that Trump will cave. Today, he showed he’s not.”

Trump himself seemed to hint at that in the interview with Bartiromo, characterizing his threat last week that “a whole civilization will die” as a bargaining chip to get Iran to the negotiating table.

“They haven’t left the bargaining table. I predict they come back and they give us everything we want,” Trump said. “And I tell my people, I want everything. I don’t want 90 percent, I don’t want 95 percent. I told them, ‘I want everything.’”

Still, he conceded that the military operation in Iran has likely come with a political cost — particularly on gas prices. He told Bartiromo that while he hoped gas prices would lower before the midterms, they may remain the same or even be “maybe a little bit higher.”

“I think this won’t be that much longer,” he said.

You mean the tax cut for the rich????

‘It’s all we have to run on’: GOP looks to tout tax cuts as war overtakes Hill agenda

The benefits of the ‘big, beautiful bill’ are at risk of being swamped by rising energy prices.

By Meredith Lee Hill

Republicans return to Washington this week eager to promote the pocketbook benefits of their nine-month-old megabill ahead of Tax Day. But the fallout from the war in the Middle East threatens to complicate that election-year message.

Explaining away rising gas prices and spiking inflation is not where GOP lawmakers wanted to be seven months before the midterms, but that is the challenge they face as a cease fire with Iran proves tenuous and there is scant evidence global energy flows will return to normal anytime soon. That’s not to mention the host of internal policy battles further distracting GOP lawmakers as they return from a two-week recess.

Still, they are seeking to rally this around the glue that has held their fractious coalition together — tax cuts — with Trump going on the road this week to tout the “big, beautiful bill” and House Republicans planning a Wednesday all-member news conference, according to two people granted anonymity to discuss the plans ahead of an announcement.

“My constituents are saving thousands of dollars and they know it,” Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.) said in an interview. “Republicans can and should take credit because the alternative would’ve been massive tax hikes under the Democrats had they won the 2024 election.”

She played down fears that the Iran conflict could weigh on the GOP’s tax-cut messaging, calling them “separate issues.” But GOP lawmakers have acknowledged concern that rising gas prices could make it harder for their party to claim it has made life more affordable for Americans.

Republicans, Malliotakis said, “need to ensure that the spike is only temporary and that we get those prices back down as soon as possible so we have all three: low taxes, affordable gas and a safer nation.”

The threat of rising prices was further underscored by new federal data published Friday showing inflation at its highest level in two years, with energy costs accounting for the bulk of the spike, as well as the collapse of peace talks with Iran over the weekend aimed at restoring oil flows through the Persian Gulf.

Directly tackling the issue, however, is not at the top of the congressional agenda at the moment. The Senate is set to restart debate on a sweeping elections bill most Republican members don’t think can pass, and the House is set to vote on a handful of measures rolling back environment regulations as well as an aviation safety bill and the renaming of several post offices.

House GOP leaders hope the deregulatory effort will help assuage some rank-and-file Republicans who want to do more to address cost-of-living issues ahead of the midterms. But they also have to face a pile of problems that have only grown more pressing in the two weeks since they broke for recess.

Those include a rapidly approaching deadline for the reauthorization of key surveillance powers and the ongoing furor over the Jeffrey Epstein files.

The former issue is caught in an internal GOP dispute between Trump’s wishes and those of conservative hard-liners, while the latter was turbocharged last week after first lady Melania Trump called on Congress to “uncover the truth” and hold a public hearing focused on survivors of the late convicted sex trafficker’s crimes.

Leaders also have to figure out how to deal with bipartisan demands to expel several members accused of personal misconduct — including Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), who is facing sexual assault allegations, and Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas), who admitted to an affair with a staffer who later died by suicide.

The tax cuts, however, are one issue that has proven able to bring the party together — even as members privately fret over whether that talking point will break through with voters.

“It’s all we have to run on,” said a House Republican granted anonymity to speak candidly about the party’s messaging. “Do you see us turning out other big-ticket legislation? This is it.”

The congressional GOP is also growing increasingly entangled with the six-week-old Iran war, which stands to cast a long shadow over the party agenda. Both chambers this week will likely be debating and voting on Democratic-led war powers resolutions. While the tentative cease fire has helped calm Republicans’ nerves, the White House is taking firm steps to ensure GOP members stay loyal.

The White House communications office sent talking points on the cease fire to GOP offices last week, arguing Trump had delivered “Peace Through Strength,” though much of that guidance referred to a possibility of a “broader peace agreement” that appeared kaput by Sunday morning.

“What’s left of the Iranian regime is desperate, dejected, and in denial,” the memo said.

But there were almost immediately sharp questions about how durable the cease fire might be, and the key factor in lowering energy prices — restoring the flow of oil and gas through the strait — remained wholly unsettled into the weekend.

Even some Republicans who backed Trump’s decision to strike are skeptical that a long-term peace agreement is within reach.

“Russia and China will help them rebuild their military,” Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska said in an interview. “We are safer today because Iran is significantly weakened. But the government is still in place and that means they’ll threaten us in the long term. We bought time.”

House and Senate Republicans also return to a toxic internal fight over how to end the nearly two-month-old Department of Homeland Security shutdown. House members left town after rejecting a Senate-approved deal funding most of the department, after Speaker Mike Johnson publicly trashed it. He then reversed course, infuriating members who hated the Senate’s two-track plan which leaves immigration enforcement funding for the party-line reconciliation process.

Despite endorsing the plan, Johnson does not intend to move forward on the Senate-approved DHS funding bill this week. The House GOP will instead wait until the Senate makes progress on the bill funding the remainder of the department through the partisan budget reconciliation process, according to four people granted anonymity to describe private plans.

But making progress on that bill is rife with complications. Senate Republicans are charging ahead with a plan not to find spending offsets to pay for the cost of the legislation, which would help keep Democrats from forcing tough Senate votes on a wide variety of hot-button issues as part of the reconciliation process.

But that decision will rankle House GOP fiscal hawks who wanted to include a raft of spending cuts and additional policies beyond immigration enforcement funding.

Some GOP leaders are counting on the possibility of yet another reconciliation bill that could happen later in the year incorporating the remaining items on the GOP wish list. Johnson suggested as much on a tense call with House Republicans over the recess.

That promise is not sitting well with scores of House Republicans who say they’re running out of time to notch GOP wins ahead of the midterms. Many want the next party-line bill to include a multitude of policies aimed at addressing affordability issues weighing on voters, while others want to include tens of billions of dollars for the Iran war the White House requested in its budget blueprint last week.

Johnson is also trying to wrangle a so-far intractable problem: how to extend the spy powers law ahead of its April 20 expiration.

He is planning to put a straight extension of the so-called Section 702 program on the floor this week, as the White House is demanding. But discussions continue with GOP hard-liners who want to vote amendments aimed at protecting American citizens from getting swept up in government surveillance — something that could upend Johnson’s plan.

Orbán’s Defeat

Orbán’s Defeat Shows What Trump’s Opponents Keep Doing Wrong

The Hungarian election was a setback for MAGA. But the winner’s campaign should be a wake-up call for Trump’s opponents.

By Alexander Burns

The defeat of Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, should deliver a sharp jolt to one of America’s two major political parties.

Oddly, it’s not the Republicans, deeply invested though they were in Orbán as a fellow traveler.

There is no question that Orbán’s downfall is a loss for MAGA-style politics and a reminder that even a developed system of so-called “illiberal democracy” has its limits. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance committed personal credibility and political capital to sustaining Orbán-ism, including by dispatching Vance to campaign for the premier in the final days of the election.

The outcome is a setback for the White House and a humiliation for its best friend in Europe.

But the sharpest message from Budapest should be for the Democrats, strange as that may sound.

That is because Orbán’s ouster represents a new triumph for a particular brand of disruptive politics: one defined by reformist candidates who launch new parties and blow up old ones, winning elections by rendering traditional political structures obsolete. Hungary’s Peter Magyar, the leader of the anti-Orbán Tisza party, is the latest victor in this mold. There is no equivalent figure among Trump’s American opponents.

This is not just the electoral flavor of the moment in Hungary, an ex-Communist country with a population roughly the size of New Jersey’s — hardly a bellwether for the American electorate. Instead, Magyar joins an eclectic club of successful insurgents scattered from Paris and Rome and Ottawa to Buenos Aires and Seoul and Washington.

There is no ideological coherence to this group. It includes a technocratic former central banker, a conglomerate-bashing former labor lawyer, a chainsaw-wielding libertarian activist and a tariff-obsessed hotel developer-turned-reality TV star. Magyar, 45, was an obscure midlevel official in Orbán’s party before turning apostate in a spectacular defection, armed with a damning secret recording of his spouse who served in Orbán’s government.

What these politicians have in common is a path to power. And it is one that Democrats have resisted for a decade since Trump became the dominant figure in American politics, killing off the traditional Republican Party along the way.

Since then, Democrats have largely hewed to the command-and-control mindset that gave them Hillary Clinton’s coronation in 2016, the party’s abrupt flight to safety with Joe Biden in 2020 and the anointment of Kamala Harris in 2024 without even the pretense of a contested nomination. At least at the national level, Democrats’ political culture prizes order and nonconfrontation, deference to interest groups and demographic symbolism, reverence for norms over original thinking and big ideas.

This has been a bad match for an age of convulsion across the free world.

The American party system is heavily armored against disruption. It would be all but impossible to replicate here what Magyar has done in Hungary — or what France’s Emmanuel Macron and Argentina’s Javier Milei did before him — and turn a fledgling political organization into a personal vehicle and bring it to national power in a flash. We do not have secondary political parties that can surge to prominence in a single campaign, like Giorgia Meloni’s Fratelli d’Italia or Rob Jetten’s D66 in the Netherlands.

Yet as Trump himself has shown, it is possible to devour a major party from the inside — commandeering an old institution with grassroots support, casting aside its entrenched leaders, remaking it in a new image and earning a fresh look from voters who didn’t like the old version. Mark Carney has done something similar in Canada, with a very different political agenda. So has Lee Jae Myung in South Korea.

It takes a special kind of candidate to carry a political project like this, and probably not one likely to win popularity contests with members of a conventional party committee or legislative caucus. Magyar, my colleague Max Griera reported, is viewed by his peers as stubborn, imperious and self-absorbed, and also manifestly the most lethal rival Orbán ever faced. I remember hearing from a senior Canadian lawmaker that Carney was an academic stiff sure to flop in electoral politics, only a few months before he freed the Liberal Party from Justin Trudeau’s shadow and led it to an astonishing upset.

If Democrats want to take the hint, they’ll give a closer look to the leaders frustrating their peers in Washington and defying their home-state political bosses, and less time measuring the applause meter at various special-interest conventions and donor retreats.

And Republicans would be wise to do the same thing, instead of waiting for an unpopular president in his 80s to name his own heir sometime next year, as the Democrats did under Biden.

The strongest successor to Trump — from either party — would not be a ladder climber awaiting his or her turn, but rather someone ready to claim the role through disruption and combat.

April 02, 2026

Fuck you orange turd....

John Roberts told Donald Trump exactly what he thinks

By Joan Biskupic

When Chief Justice John Roberts and the eight associate justices took the Supreme Court bench on Wednesday for a fundamental debate over American identity, they did not acknowledge the presence of Donald Trump in the courtroom.

That was not unexpected: Wednesday marked the first time in modern history that the president of the United States attended an oral argument. But Trump was there as a litigant and spectator, not in any formal role.

Then, in a move that was surprising, Roberts showed his hand.

The chief justice can be cagey during arguments. In high-profile cases, he often sends mixed signals and keeps his options open.

But during the momentous session, Roberts made plain his skepticism for the Trump position that would upend more than a century of constitutional history and tradition. The chief justice cast doubt on the Trump administration’s alternative view of the reach of the 14th Amendment’s birthright citizenship guarantee.

Roberts particularly dismissed US Solicitor General John Sauer’s contention that contemporary immigration problems require a revision of the understanding that virtually all children born on US soil become American citizens, irrespective of their parents’ immigration status.

Echoing Trump assertions, Sauer argued that “a sprawling industry of birth tourism” has led to “uncounted thousands of foreigners from potentially hostile nations” arriving in the US to have their children here.

“We’re in a new world now,” Sauer told Roberts, “where 8 billion people are one plane ride away from having a child who’s a US citizen.”

“Well, it’s a new world,” Roberts rejoined. “It’s the same Constitution.”

The tone was especially biting for a chief justice known for his measured public comments. He was aware that the case was drawing inordinate interest. Television and radio networks aired the arguments live. All the courtroom seats, and extra chairs in the alcoves, were filled. Among the people in a special section reserved for spouses and guests of the nine justices was actor Robert De Niro, a Trump critic.

All told, over more than two hours of arguments, there appeared to be no majority among the justices to reinterpret the established view of the 14th Amendment, which dictates, “all persons born or naturalized in the United Sates, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.” Historically, only a few, specific categories of children were exempt, such as those born to foreign ambassadors or invading armies.

Appealing the widespread sentiment of lower court judges against the administration, Sauer latched onto the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction” and contended that anyone on US soil unlawfully or temporarily, such as on a student visa, is not sufficiently subject to US jurisdiction.

Roberts and other key conservative justices challenged that constitutional rationale as well as the practicalities of a position that would require delving into children’s parentage.

“What would you do with what the common law called ‘foundlings,’” asked Justice Amy Coney Barrett. “The thing about this is then you have to adjudicate, if you’re looking at parents and if you’re looking at parents’ domicile, then you have to adjudicate both residence and intent to stay. What if you don’t know who the parents are?” (A concern for children who might be abandoned at birth arose in some of the religiously tinged briefs submitted in the case.)

“I think there are marginal cases,” Sauer said, as Barrett posed a series of difficult hypothetical scenarios.

Shifting around and leaving early

Trump’s presence on Wednesday lent him little special deference, from his seat in the courtroom to the apparent consensus on the bench.

When Trump arrived, about 10 minutes before the session was to begin, he was quietly escorted to the public section of the courtroom, behind the area reserved for members of the Supreme Court bar. Trump and his entourage, which included Attorney General Pam Bondi and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, were seated in the first row of the general public section. The courtroom is typically hushed, but spectators began buzzing and craned their necks as Trump, in a dark suit and signature red tie, took his place.

He wasn’t quite settled. He switched seats, from one end of the row, to the other, perhaps for a better view of the bench. As he waited for the session to begin, Trump looked around, seemingly taking in the elaborate setting, with its ornate rosette-patterned ceiling and intricate marble friezes of Moses, Solomon and other depicted “great lawgivers of history.”

Trump’s policies and personal conduct have been subject to major lawsuits since his first term in office, beginning with Trump v. Hawaii, early in his first term, involving his travel ban on certain majority-Muslim countries; Trump v. United States, testing his personal claim of immunity from criminal prosecution; then Trump v. Casa, regarding when lower court judges can issue wide-reaching injunctions against his challenged policies. (Trump won those cases.)

He did not witness any of those oral arguments, and while Trump had declared last November that he would attend the dispute over his sweeping tariffs on foreign goods, he decided against it at the last minute. (Trump lost that case.)

It was after February’s tariff decision that Trump fired off another set of public denunciations against the justices. “I’m ashamed of certain members of the court, absolutely ashamed for not having the courage to do what’s right for the country.”

Regarding Barrett and Justice Neil Gorsuch, two of his appointees who voted with the majority against him, Trump said they were an “embarrassment to their families.”

The birthright citizenship case may mean even more to Trump. He signed the order limiting the right on his first day back in office, in January 2025, and his presence at the court demonstrated his commitment to it.

The order represents the boldest move of his anti-immigrant agenda, striking at the core of American identity and recalling the era of Dred Scott v. Sandford, the infamous 1857 ruling that said Black people could not be citizens.

Trump remained in his seat for all of Sauer’s presentation, which lasted just over an hour. He then stayed for an early portion of the arguments by lawyer Cecillia Wang, of the American Civil Liberties Union, representing the challengers.

About seven minutes in, Trump abruptly stood up and began heading out of the courtroom. The justices continued addressing Wang and did not appear distracted.

Debate over ‘domiciled’

Before he left, Trump would have heard Roberts’ opening question to Wang, which involved the landmark Supreme Court precedent from 1898, United States v. Wong Kim Ark. In that case, the court found that a man born of Chinese nationals who were living in the US was an American citizen. That decision has long stood as an affirmation of the breadth of the 14th Amendment citizenship guarantee.

Sauer, however, had argued that an important element of the holding was that Wong Kim Ark’s parents were essentially permanent residents of the United States, that is, “domiciled,” or subject to the jurisdiction of the US. Sauer differentiated the situation to that of today’s temporary residents or people living in the US unlawfully.

Roberts followed up on that line of argument with Wang.

“We’ve heard a lot of talk about Wong Kim Ark, and you dismiss the use of the word ‘domicile’ in it,” Roberts began. “It appears in the opinion 20 different times and including in the question presented and in the actual legal holding. … Isn’t it at least something to be concerned about to say that since it’s discussed 20 different times and has that significant role in the opinion that you can just dismiss it as irrelevant?”

Wang urged Roberts and the other justices to consider the majority opinion in its entirety, including to understand the 14th Amendment’s “subject to the jurisdiction” phrasing.

She said the Wong Kim Ark decision “starts with a premise that in construing the 14th Amendment Citizenship Clause, we look to the English common law. … Under English common law, if you are born in the dominions of the sovereign, you owe natural allegiance, and those who are present in the dominions of the sovereign owe temporary allegiance for as long as they’re present.”

She acknowledged the few historic exceptions, such as for children of foreign ambassadors, and stressed, “The purpose of the 14th Amendment was to embrace that universal rule of birthright citizenship.”

Roberts did not go further with Wang, and his apparent satisfaction stood in contrast to his response to Sauer as the solicitor general contended the Trump administration could expand on the specific categories of foreigners exempted from birthright citizenship.

“You obviously put a lot of weight on ‘subject to the jurisdiction thereof,’ but the examples you give to support that strike me as very quirky,” Roberts told Sauer. “You know, children of ambassadors, children of enemies during a hostile invasion, children on warships. And then you expand it to a whole class of illegal aliens are here in the country.”

“I’m not quite sure how you can get to that big group from such tiny and sort of idiosyncratic examples,” Roberts added.

While in the courtroom, Trump was unable to say anything, as spectators are prohibited from bringing in phones or other electronic devices. But about an hour after leaving, he seemed to want the final word.

He repeated a prior false claim and said in a Truth Social post, “We are the only Country in the World STUPID enough to allow ‘Birthright’ Citizenship!”

About 30 other countries, in fact, also allow birthright citizenship. Most are in the Western Hemisphere, in North, South, and Central America.