Queen Camilla, King Charles III, President Trump and First Lady Melania at the White House Tuesday. [Official Website of the Royal Family]
Up for discussion on this Big News day:
•SCOTUS further weakens 1965 Voting Rights Act
•Powell’s Fed holds interest rates steady
•Return of The Apprentice?
Trump War Action Imminent? – Axios scoops Thursday morning that President Trump will receive a briefing on a new plan for potential military action against Iran from CENTCOM Commander Adm. Brad Cooper, according to two sources with knowledge. According to the scoop this signals Trump is “seriously considering” major combat operations either in an attempt to break the logjam in negotiations to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or to pound Iran hard before ending the war.
The scoop comes about a week after The Atlantic reported that military commanders avoid presenting Trump with battle plan updates on a daily basis. That report says war/Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth typically schedules daily briefings for 8 a.m., when the president will be watching Fox and Friends instead.
Hegseth testifies Thursday before the Senate Armed Services Committee, a day after appearing before the House Armed Services Committee, where he said the US has spent $25 billion on the war on Iran so far and fought with committee Democrats over the whole we’ve won the war but now we’re removing the nuclear arms capability that we obliterated in last year’s attack on Iranthing.
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Price Matches Date – On April 30 the national average price of a gallon of unleaded regular has hit $4.30, according to the AAA. That’s up 7.1 cents over Wednesday’s price and $1.318 over February 27. Diesel is $5.496, up 3.2 cents for the day and up $1.732 per gallon from just before the US-Iran war began.
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Jim Crow Redux? – The Supreme Court began eroding the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act in 2013, and its 6-3 ruling Wednesday that struck down a congressional map in Louisiana a group of self-described “non-African Americans” had challenged as the result of unconstitutional racial gerrymandering appears to have completed the job. SCOTUS’ decision on Louisiana v. Callais upholds a federal court ruling that banned Louisiana from using the new map, which would have created a second majority-Black district in the state, according to SCOTUSblog.
SCOTUS did not specifically strike down the protection clause of the Voting Rights Act, though Elena Kagan in her dissent of the majority opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, wrote the provision is “all but dead letter.”
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Steady Powell – And defiant, to paraphrase Fortune magazine in its report on outgoing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s announcement Wednesday that the board’s Open Market Committee has voted for the third consecutive meeting to hold interest rates steady at 3.5% to 3.75% in the face of President Trump’s persistent demands for a sharp reduction.
Powell is set to step down as Fed chair, but not as an FOMC member when the Senate likely confirms Trump’s choice for a replacement, Kevin Warsh. The White House removed Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) as an obstacle, as he held up Warsh’s confirmation until the Justice Department dropped an investigation of Powell and the Fed’s long-planned renovation of its Washington headquarters.
Powell’s term on the Fed board ends in 2028. If he were to step down early, Trump would have the opportunity to nominate a fourth board member, giving the White House a majority on the FOMC.
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In Case Melania Wasn’t Enough – Amazon is discussing a reboot of the television show that propelled Donald J. Trump past the pages of Spy magazine into the national consciousness, The Apprentice, potentially with Don Jr. as host, according to an exclusive in The Wall Street Journal.
Apparently, paying the first lady $40 million for the Melania “documentary” was not enough.
Discussions are in the early stages according to the report, which notes that Amazon Prime Video owns the original 14 seasons of The Apprentice on NBC-TV starring Donald Sr. since 2022, when Amazon acquired the back catalog of MGM’s film and television studio.
An Amazon spokesperson told the WSJ; “Since our acquisition of MGM, we have had preliminary internal discussions about what’s next for The Apprentice as a property.” –TL
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All The King’s President – Brilliantly the King of England, who has no real power in his own country, was able to manipulate President Trump’s royal obsequiousness to tell Congress Tuesday that the US must stick with NATO, support Ukraine over Russia and generally restore itself as the bulwark for global democracy.
On Wednesday, King Charles III and Lady Camilla visit the 9/11 memorial in Trump’s hometown a day after the King reminded in his address the president that the attack on the US stands as the single example that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization invoked Article Five. An armed attack against one is an armed attack against all.
Herewith, some of His Royal Highness’ key points from his speech to Congress, directed to Trump-obsequious Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) …
On America First: “Drawing on these values and traditions, time and again, our two countries have always found ways to come together. And by Jove, Mr. Speaker, when we have found that way to agree, what great change is brought about – not just for the benefit of our peoples, but of all peoples.”
On shared democratic values founded in the Magna Carta and reinforced by the US Constitution: “Distinguished members of the 119th Congress, it is here in these very halls that this spirit of liberty and the promise of America’s founders is present in every session and every vote cast. Not by the will of one, but by the deliberation of many, representing the living mosaic of the United States. In both of our countries, it is the very fact of our vibrant, diverse and free societies that gives us our collective strength, including to support victims of some of the ills that, so tragically, exist in both our societies today.”
Support for British Prime Minister Kier Starmer, whom Trump decried as ‘no Winston Churchill’ when the PM refused to join the war on Iran: “As my Prime Minister said last month: ‘ours is an indispensable partnership. We must not disregard everything that has sustained us for the last eighty years. Instead, we must build on it.”
On Article 5 and Ukraine: “In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, when NATO invoked Article Five for the first time, and the United Nations Security Council was united in the face of terror, we answered the call together – as our people have done so for more than a century, shoulder to shoulder, through two World Wars, the Cold War, Afghanistan and moments that have defined our shared security. Today, Mr. Speaker, that same, unyielding resolve is needed for the defense of Ukraine and her most courageous people. It is needed in order to secure a truly just and lasting peace.”
However … President Trump Truth Socialed Wednesday morning that King Charles III agrees with him about the need to disarm Iran of its nuclear weapons, The Guardian reports.
“Iran can’t get their act together,” Trump wrote. “They don’t know how to sign a nuclear deal. They’d better get smart soon! President DJT.”
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Acting Like a Trump AG – Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche wants to become attorney general, and to that end the Justice Department indicted former FBI Director James Comey Tuesday for his Instagram post of seashells arranged on a beach to read; “8647.” DOJ alleges Comey was suggesting the “86” means “doing harm” to “47,” President Trump.
Comey quickly removed the post after that Trumpian interpretation, though “86” is more commonly taken to mean “get rid of” in the “kick out of the place” sense.
Speaking with NPR’s Steve Inskeep on Morning Edition Wednesday, Lawfare editor, Brookings Institute fellow and Friend of Jim Comey Benjamin Wittes noted that Amazon sells t-shirts reading “8646,” meaning, “kick Joe Biden out of the White House.” Dated as they may be, people wear them, protected by the First Amendment (if not by Jeff Bezos himself).
FOJC Wittes told Inskeep this second indictment of Comey is “even dumber” than the first, “about lies Jim Comey didn’t tell to Congress and this one is about a threat he didn’t make to the President of the United States.” It is based on the Supreme Court doctrine that a “true threat” is not First Amendment protected.
Comey’s attorneys have “several” opportunities to file for dismissal of the case, Wittes said.
First is “selective or vindictive” prosecution as in the first indictment. Second is First Amendment protected speech. Wittes expects motions for dismissal to be filed “relatively quickly.” Certainly before Blanche can become permanent US AG.
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Trump Wants to Stamp Your Passport – The Bulwark, a right-leaning never-Trumper publication since the first Trump administration, which we’ve often quoted, gets the scoop cred for reporting that President Trump plans to “plaster” his face on US passports in “celebration” of the nation’s 250th anniversary.
Like the Trump-Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (soon to be perhaps just the Trump Center), the Arc d’ Trump and Trump’s gilded ballroom, this would be no fleeting homage to the 45th/47th president. Apply for a Trump US passport today and it’s your passport to the rest of the world to date of application 2036.
According to its report, The Bulwark sought comment from the White House after consulting two independent sources on and obtaining photos of the new passport, and the White House asked The Bulwark to hold for comment while it passed on the news to the much more Trump-sympathetic Fox News, which reported it without all The Bulwark’s details.
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Gas Pains – After dipping toward the $4 mark earlier in the month gas prices are up again according to the AAA. National average for a gallon of unleaded regular hit $4.229 Wednesday, up $1.247 over February 27. Diesel, the fuel that drives much of our goods across the US averages $5.464, up $1.707 over February 27. –TL
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WHCD Shooting Suspect Charged – Cole Allen was charged with attempted assassination of the president of the United States over the shooting that disrupted the White House Correspondents Dinner at the Washington Hilton Saturday (The Wall Street Journal). Authorities are still trying to determine who, exactly fired the shot that wounded a Secret Service officer when a bullet bounced off his bullet-proof vest, according to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche.
Allen, 31, could face a life sentence on the first count. He also was charged with discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence and transportation of a firearm and ammunition in interstate commerce with intent to commit a felony.
One of Allen’s public defenders stressed that he is presumed innocent going into trial and noted he has no prior arrests or convictions on record.
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What Has the President Been Told? – The Atlantic, which has had an unusual relationship with President Trump and the Pentagon since Pete Hegseth inadvertently let the magazine’s editor Jeffrey Goldberg in on a top-secret Signal chat reports in an exclusive that Vice President JD Vance has “repeatedly questioned” the way the Defense Department has depicted US successes in the war on Iran.
Vance, who has tried to stick to his isolationist guns in the face of the war, has questioned the accuracy of information provided to the president by the Pentagon, two senior administration officials told the magazine. He also is worried the US is running low on weapons as a result of the war.
Defense Secretary Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine have publicly claimed that stockpiles of US weapons are robust and damage to Iran's military is drastic.
Read the full story HERE. (Subscription required.) –TL
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Correspondents Dinner Attack – The Onion may want to adapt its recurring headline about school shootings, “’No way to prevent this,’ says only nation where this regularly happens” to political violence in America.
We are not the only such country of course, but it seems we are the only such nation that’s not part of the third world and/or in constant political turmoil.
After FBI agents and Secret Service wrestled teacher Cole Thomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, to the floor of the Washington Hilton for allegedly firing a shot during the White House Correspondents Dinner, CNN contributing commentator and bombastic Trump supporter Scott Jennings said that conservatives in the US are feeling the heat of political violence from the left. [There continues to be question and speculation that an agent saved by his bulletproof vest may have been struck by friendly fire rather than the suspect’s bullet.]
It should be noted that to date, there is little known about the motives and political leanings of Thomas Matthew Crooks, the 20-year-old killed after shooting at President Trump at his July 2024 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Same with Tyler Robinson, suspect in the shooting last September of Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk. Liberals note Robinson has Republican parents and a MAGA background, according to Newsweek.
Whatever the motives of Crooks and the Charlie Kirk suspect, it does not serve either side of the political aisle to claim singular victimhood from political violence, and it’s hard to ignore recent violent government crackdowns on immigration policy protestors by the federal government itself in Minneapolis and other cities recently. Not to mention the January 6, 2021 attack on the United States Capitol.
The WHCD suspect, Allen, “sent a chilling anti-President Trump manifesto to his family just before opening fire” calling himself the “Friendly federal assassin.” Allen’s manifesto was obtained from a family member by the New York Post, which reports that his alleged “targets” were administration officials except for FBI Director Kash Patel.
“I am no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes,” the manifesto says.
President Trump, who expressed some comradeship with journalists at the black-tie press conference immediately after the melee attacked CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell as a “disgrace” the next evening for asking on 60 Minutes about the pedophile, rapist, traitor accusations.
Meanwhile … As with they did in response to the Butler, Pennsylvania attempt, social media influencers, particularly from the left, are posting ridiculous conspiracy theories saying with absolutely no evidence that the WHCD attack was “staged,” The New York Times reports.
And yet, Trump potentially threw fuel on that fire Sunday morning – between the black-tie presser and his 60 Minutes appearance – that the attempted attack proves the need for his gilded White House East Wing ballroom.
“It’s got every single bell and whistle you can possibly have for security and safety,” Trump told The Sunday Briefing on Fox News.
“You can’t have a thousand rooms (above) or whatever. It’s a very big hotel on top of the ballroom and people come down the elevator, and they’re right next to the ballroom. Nobody’s blaming them. They’re good people … I’ve been in that room many times, but it’s had difficulty in the past and the new one is not to have that kind of thing.”
The White House ballroom WHCD will have to wait – Trump says he wants to see the White House Correspondents Association to reschedule within 30 days.
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Iran Has No Cards – President Trump will not send a US envoy to Islamabad, Pakistan, for peace talks with Iran, The Wall Street Journal reports. The president suggested on Fox News that if Iran wants peace talks, they could happen by telephone instead.
Iran has floated a proposal to the US in which it would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end the war with the US, with nuclear arms negotiations to come later, a US official and two other sources told Axios.
Meanwhile, the WSJ says that US forces have sent 38 Iranian tanker ships back to port in its blockade within Iran’s blockade.
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Tillis Wins – In what The New York Times called a “stunning reversal” the Justice Department said Friday it would call off its investigation into the Federal Reserve and its chairman Jerome Powell over renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters. Two days earlier, US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro vowed to continue investigating the case, but Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) had made it clear he would block President Trump’s nominee to replace Powell, Kevin Warsh, as long as the investigation plodded on.
After his term as Fed chair ends in May, Powell has two more years left on the Fed board. –Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa
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MONDAY 4/27/26